Job 33:31-33 Inner Teacher
Job 33:31-33 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 33 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
These lines urge Job to listen and keep silent, so the inner wisdom can speak rather than defend the self. If he speaks, it is to be justified; otherwise he should heed the speaker who will impart wisdom.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the inner workshop, Job’s dialogue is your own state of consciousness. 'Mark well, hearken unto me; hold thy peace' becomes the discipline of attention, a decision to quiet the mind so the inner I AM can articulate truth. The speaker that says 'If thou hast anything to say, answer me' is the old insistence of ego seeking justification, a voice you can hear but not obey if you want awakening. The counter-voice promises: 'If not, hearken unto me: hold thy peace, and I shall teach thee wisdom'—the invitation to yield to the wiser self. When you adopt this space, you are not surrendering to a person, but to the divine idea within you. The task is to listen until wisdom enters as felt truth, not as argument. Your imagination is the instrument; through quiet, you allow the I AM to teach you that you are already complete in God, and the apparent problem dissolves as you revise your sense of self into alignment with that wisdom.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit quietly, declare, 'I am listening to the inner I AM; speak, wisdom within me.' Then revise a current belief with, 'I am already justified by divine wisdom,' and feel that truth as real, here and now.
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