Wicked Within: Reframing Enemies
Job 27:7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 27 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Job declares that his enemy should be treated as wicked, and the one who opposes him as unrighteous. He asserts his own righteousness amid the trials.
Neville's Inner Vision
From the Neville vantage, the verse is not about those outside you but about the state you entertain as you read it. 'Mine enemy' is the inner voice that opposes your action, the whisper of doubt that calls you unworthy. The terms 'wicked' and 'unrighteous' are not about persons, but about the habitual states you have accepted as true. When you affirm, 'Let mine enemy be as the wicked,' you are declaring that the very scene of opposition will take the shape of a known inner condition. Your imagination is not a spectator but the creator of experience; the I AM—your essential awareness—does not condemn but simply refuses to identify with limitation. Therefore, you may revise your state in the present, until the outer circumstances reflect your inner alignment. See the adversary as a mirror image of a belief you are ready to outgrow, not as a rival to destroy. By choosing to regard them as the falsity within you, you invite the dissolution of separation and the healing of judgment. The moment you anchor yourself in the I AM and feel the truth of unity, the so-called enemy loses power and the unrighteous cast dissolves into peace.
Practice This Now
Assume the I AM now; revise by mentally calling the opponent a reflection of a belief you will release; feel that you are one with the I AM; allow the imagined scene to shift.
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