Inner Strength in Job 6:11-12
Job 6:11-12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 6 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Job questions what sustains him and how long he can endure, wondering if his strength is as durable as stone or his flesh brass, signaling the fragility of mortal endurance.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within Job’s question lies the door to the inner weather of consciousness. Strength is not the hard surface of the body or the length of a life measured by time, but the attitude of awareness you dwell in. If you hear Job ask, Is my strength the strength of stones? you are hearing your own mind trembling before circumstances. The I AM, not the body, is the rock and brass only insofar as you identify with creation as a separate scene. When you answer with a revision, you answer with a change of state. Begin from the assumption that the I AM within you is unassailable; that the same life that animates Job’s voice now animates your own. In this moment, your endurance becomes not a physical quality but a steady state of consciousness—imperturbable, timeless, and quietly joyful. By anchoring your attention in the I AM and imagining the end as already accomplished, you align with a life that endures beyond outward appearances. Your present secures its future by the conviction that you are one with the eternal perceiver who never fails.
Practice This Now
Imaginative_act: Close your eyes, dwell in the I AM, and quietly assume: 'My life and strength are the unchanging awareness within me.' Feel that assurance as real and present now.
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