Breath of God Within

Job 27:2-3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 27 in context

Scripture Focus

2As God liveth, who hath taken away my judgment; and the Almighty, who hath vexed my soul;
3All the while my breath is in me, and the spirit of God is in my nostrils;
Job 27:2-3

Biblical Context

Job declares that as long as there is breath in him and the Spirit of God in his nostrils, life is sustained by divine presence. This endurance persists despite outward judgment and suffering.

Neville's Inner Vision

Job’s words, when read through the I AM lens, reveal that the breath you call life and the Spirit you name God are not events happening to you, but your own inner states. The verse speaks of a divine livingness that does not depend on outer judgment or the storms of the soul; it is the constant awareness that you are, here and now, the one who lives as God. If God liveth in your awareness and the Spirit occupies your nostrils, then suffering and vexation are merely movements within consciousness, not permanent truths. Your 'judgment' is an outer opinion, and the Almighty’s vexation is an inner resistance you can revise by turning attention back to the I AM. In this perspective, the sustaining breath is the sign that you never left the divine presence; you merely forgot. By assuming the feeling of the I AM alive and the Spirit animating your life, you re-state your identity as consciousness, not circumstance. In that act, Job’s verses become a practice: the inner covenant of life, held steady by the breath that witnesses the divine within.

Practice This Now

Imaginative Act: Close your eyes and repeat, 'I AM, God within me breathes now.' Feel the breath as the living Spirit sustaining my life in this moment.

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