Inner States of Justice Unveiled

Job 27:7-8 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 27 in context

Scripture Focus

7Let mine enemy be as the wicked, and he that riseth up against me as the unrighteous.
8For what is the hope of the hypocrite, though he hath gained, when God taketh away his soul?
Job 27:7-8

Biblical Context

Job states that his enemy should be like the wicked, and he asks what hope the hypocrite has when God takes away his life. The verse points to the emptiness of outward gain when true life is not aligned with righteousness.

Neville's Inner Vision

In the inner economy of Neville's teaching, these lines are not about foes out there but about states of consciousness within you. When Job speaks of an enemy as wicked and questions the hypocrite's hope, he exposes the inner mechanism by which any outer event is born. You do not meet a separate adversary; you meet a belief about yourself that projects opposition into your scene. The 'God' who takes away the hypocrite's soul is the I AM you use to name your life. If you inhabit a state of separation, fear, or judgment, your world will echo a Judgment Day in which enemies appear and seem to prosper; when you revise, the old self dissolves and the enemy loses its power. The practice is simple: assume the feeling of the state you desire—the state of righteousness, unity with God, the I AM as your own life—and dwell there until it feels real. Then the outer scene must reflect that inner form, and your future becomes a present certainty, not a distant reward.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and repeat: I am the I AM, the righteousness of God within me now. See the scene soften—enemies dissolve into ordinary persons, and your sense of future shifts into a present feeling of peace.

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