Inner Justice for the Poor
Job 24:9-10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 24 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage portrays the fatherless and the poor being deprived of basic sustenance and clothing. It points to the inner roots of injustice.
Neville's Inner Vision
In Neville's terms, the 'they' who pluck and strip are not distant villains but images of a mind ruled by lack. The fatherless and the poor symbolize states of consciousness hungry for nourishment, dignity, and safety. When you hear 'they take away the sheaf from the hungry,' hear it as a judgment rendered by a consciousness that forgets the I AM. The true I AM is not an external tyrant but the living awareness that supplies all; the outer world’s cold acts reveal how your inner scenes have assumed poverty. To heal it is to revise the scene from lack to abundance through imagination. If you remain identified with scarcity—fear, bargaining, denial—the outer will reproduce those inner motions. But when you assert, as the I AM, that provision flows to all beings and you feel that prosperous order is real now, the oppressive image dissolves. Righteousness and justice arise not as verdicts but as harmonies within your own consciousness, aligning with mercy and love of neighbor. Restore the image of abundance and the outer life will follow.
Practice This Now
Assume the feeling that universal supply is now available to all; imagine the fatherless clothed and fed; rest in the I AM and know it is real.
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