Inner Fire and Moral Judgment

Job 31:11-12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 31 in context

Scripture Focus

11For this is an heinous crime; yea, it is an iniquity to be punished by the judges.
12For it is a fire that consumeth to destruction, and would root out all mine increase.
Job 31:11-12

Biblical Context

Job declares the crime is heinous and punished, likening it to a consuming fire that would destroy all his increase.

Neville's Inner Vision

Within your own consciousness, the so-called crime is not an external deed but a belief that separates you from the I AM. The judges are your inner standards, the conscience that arises when you imagine yourself apart from divine order. The fire that consumes is the vivid force of thought when you identify with lack, fear, or guilt; it is not external punishment but a warning from your own assumed end. When you claim that such wrongdoing would obliterate your increase, you reveal a pattern of imagining loss as real, thereby burning away the vitality you seek. The message is to awaken to the truth that you are the one who must judge thoughts by living as I AM. Assume prosperity, revise every belief of separation, and feel the reality of abundance as already present. In that stance, the fire becomes warmth that refines rather than destroys, aligning your inner state with the abundance your awareness can sustain.

Practice This Now

Practice a brief inner revision: close your eyes and affirm, 'I AM the presence that sustains all increase.' Then imagine a scene where you enjoy abundant life, feeling it as your immediate reality. If thoughts of lack arise, revise them by returning to the assumed end of prosperity and dwell in that certainty.

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