Inner Judgment of Job 34
Job 34:33-37 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 34 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
One speaker rebukes Job for speaking without knowledge, urging 'men of understanding' to weigh his words, and declaring Job’s answers as rebellion and noise against God.
Neville's Inner Vision
Job 34:33-37 reads as a scene in which the inner self turns on outward words. The voice insisting on 'what thou knowest' is not a distant accuser; it is your own waking state demanding alignment with the truth you already possess. When it says, 'Let men of understanding tell me,' feel how your mind seeks an authority outside to validate its thoughts. The charge 'Job hath spoken without knowledge' marks the moment you confuse surface chatter with inner certainty. The desire 'that Job may be tried' is the call to expose thoughts to the flame of discernment—the inner oven where ideas are weighed by consciousness, not by others. The closing image of 'rebellion' and 'multiplieth his words against God' points to the tendency to argue with the I AM rather than yield to the still, quiet awareness within. In Neville’s view, the entire passage invites you to revise your state: stop clinging to prideful interpretations and awaken to the one discernment that judges rightly—the inner wisdom that you are. Assume the state of the wise mind now, and let your thought-reasoning bow to the I AM that you are.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes and silently declare, 'I am the wise understander within; I release rebellion and let the inner I AM speak in me.' Momentarily feel the peace as you revise past judgments into present wisdom.
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