Inner Rescue Practice: Job 6:22-23
Job 6:22-23 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Job 6 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Job questions whether he ever urged others to bring him relief or reward. He longs for deliverance from his foes and redemption from the mighty.
Neville's Inner Vision
From the Neville vantage, the verse is a quiet confession of a man who still thinks rescue comes through others or through reward. The cry 'Did I say, Bring unto me?' exposes a habit of bargaining with appearances, while the line about deliverance and redemption points to a deeper truth: true relief arises not from external hands but from the inner I AM that animates your life. In this reading, the 'enemy's hand' and the 'hand of the mighty' symbolize impinging circumstances shaped by your own consciousness—fear, lack, limitation—rather than literal adversaries. The deliverer is your own awareness, the I AM, which can reverse the sense of lack by assuming the state of wholeness here and now. When you stop seeking favors and rewards from the outside and pause to imagine yourself already free, you align your inner state with the very condition you seek. The act of revision is a simple but radical shift: declare that deliverance is present, feel the release, and let your imagination close the gap between petition and possession. Imagination, rightly attended, creates the reality you inhabit.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and repeat, 'I am delivered now by the I AM within me,' then vividly imagine the scene of relief—conversations, light, ease—until it feels real.
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