Teach Me What To Say
Job 37:19-20 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 37 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Job 37:19-20 shows a soul admitting it cannot order words before God because of darkness, and asking for guidance on what to say. It hints at humility and the limits of human speech before divine majesty.
Neville's Inner Vision
From the Neville vantage, the scene is not a distant ritual but a moment of inner apprenticeship with your I AM. God is not a judge of borrowed phrases but the awareness you are already; the 'darkness' is a state of consciousness that has forgotten that fact. When Job asks, 'Teach us what we shall say unto him,' he reveals the great truth that speech follows inner conviction. Before God speaks in the outer world, your inner sentence must be aligned with the truth you intend to witness. The cure is to revise your inner speech until it matches the reality of your I AM presence. Do not fear the words you think you cannot utter; instead assume the truth you wish to express as already true, feel it with certainty, and let that feeling travel to your mouth if speech is required, or simply rest in that alignment. As you maintain that inner certainty, the outward scene changes—quiet, confident speech, or speech unnecessary—because your consciousness has awakened to its own creative authority.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and revise your next address to God by silently declaring, 'I am present; I know what I shall say.' Then feel that truth as already real in your inner world.
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