Inner Strength of the Horse
Job 39:19 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 39 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse asks if strength and the boast of thunder are given by God, revealing a divine order behind natural power. It invites seeing strength as a gift and the animal's charge as an illustration of providence.
Neville's Inner Vision
Notice that the question about the horse's strength is really a question about your own inner capacity. The horse is a symbol of vital energy, yoked to your awareness by belief. If you accept that the I AM within you bestowed the horse with strength and clothed its neck with thunder, you are acknowledging the creative power of imagination. In Neville's terms, events in the outer world reflect your inner alignment. When you stand in the awareness that you are the source of energy—bracing yourself with the thunder of conviction—you enter a state where strength becomes habitual. The horse is your body energized by a renewed conviction: you act from the end, you assume the energy of the beast of burden as the energy of the soul, you see providence guiding your movement. The verse does not boast about nature so much as it reveals that your inner order commands the appearance of strength and motion. So you revise, feel it real, and dare to move in confidence as the I AM.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes, assume I AM as the source of your strength, and feel a surge of energy travel from spine to limbs. Dwell in the sensation as if thunder clothes your neck with conviction.
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