Impartial Speech, Inner Truth

Job 32:21 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 32 in context

Scripture Focus

21Let me not, I pray you, accept any man's person, neither let me give flattering titles unto man.
Job 32:21

Biblical Context

Job 32:21 urges you to avoid acting according to any man's person or flattering titles, choosing instead truthful, unbiased speech. It presents speech as a reflection of inner integrity.

Neville's Inner Vision

Job 32:21 invites a shift from outer appearances to an inner law. In your inner theater, every person you meet is a symbol of your own states of consciousness. When you declare, 'let me not accept any man's person,' you refuse to let a character, rank, or flattery govern what you believe about the Self. The 'man' is not separate from you; he is a projection of thoughts and images you hold about life. To be impartial in speech is to maintain the I AM as your unalterable witness—your awareness that remains untouched by favor or blame. By honoring truth over titles, you stop feeding the ego's appetite for comparison and you begin to imagine reality as a consistent, single Presence expressing through all. The practice is simple: assume you are already the impartial observer, and revise any judgment as you would erase a mistaken impression. Feel it real that all voices you hear are only the echo of your own inner states becoming audible.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Tonight, assume the role of the impartial observer within and revise a recent judgment by affirming, 'I see only the Self in all; I am the witness, not the judge.' Feel the truth as if it already is.

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