Inner Hearing: Job 27:9-10

Job 27:9-10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 27 in context

Scripture Focus

9Will God hear his cry when trouble cometh upon him?
10Will he delight himself in the Almighty? will he always call upon God?
Job 27:9-10

Biblical Context

Job 27:9–10 asks whether God will hear a cry in trouble and whether a man will always call upon the Almighty. It highlights the tension between perceived abandonment and devout reliance.

Neville's Inner Vision

From the Neville vantage, the cry is not spoken to an external God, but to the state of your own consciousness. God is the I AM within, and hearing is the recognition that you are already attended by the divine presence. When you take up the posture of fear or doubt, you imagine trouble as separate and looming; you also insist that you must constantly appeal to God. Yet the Bible's question points to a habit of inner alignment: will you allow the Almighty to be your ongoing reality? Delighting in the Almighty is not a ritual but a reaffirmation of your unity with the I AM. If you feel abandoned by God, revise the scene: imagine you are the one who hears and is heard, that the trouble is simply the movement of consciousness asking to wake up. As you persist in this inner assumption, the exterior world begins to reflect your interior harmony, and the seemingly stubborn petition becomes a quiet, confident acknowledgment that you live in the Presence.

Practice This Now

Imaginative Act: Sit in silence and adopt the state that you are already heard by the I AM. Repeat 'I am heard by God now' until the sense of separation dissolves and your inner reality aligns with presence.

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