Facing The Inner Leviathan

Job 41:13-14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 41 in context

Scripture Focus

13Who can discover the face of his garment? or who can come to him with his double bridle?
14Who can open the doors of his face? his teeth are terrible round about.
Job 41:13-14

Biblical Context

Plain-sense paraphrase: It describes an immense, unknowable power—God's face and teeth—that cannot be approached or forced; it marks a holy boundary between human effort and divine presence.

Neville's Inner Vision

Beloved, this is not a riddle about distance but a map of your inner state. The 'face of his garment' and the 'double bridle' denote the boundary your consciousness must respect before it becomes the living I AM. Those doors are not barriers to crush you; they are the orderly channels through which God—your own I AM—expresses creation. The teeth that encircle the image are the restless thoughts of fear, control, and pride that arise at the edge of awareness. They remind you that power exists within a discipline of consciousness. In Neville's language, God is not somewhere far away but the I AM within you; when you assume the reality of that Presence, you walk through the imagined doors as if they opened to your claim. The leviathan imagery serves as a warning that the outer world reflects your inner order. As you keep returning to the feeling of I AM—loving, complete, unconditioned—your world rearranges itself to match your new consciousness, and what once seemed terrible becomes a doorway to holiness and coherent order.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Close your eyes, breathe in the I AM, and declare, I AM God in me. Then revise your sense of self to a boundless, holy Presence and feel the doors of perception open in response.

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