Inner Dialogue of Job 9:14-16

Job 9:14-16 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 9 in context

Scripture Focus

14How much less shall I answer him, and choose out my words to reason with him?
15Whom, though I were righteous, yet would I not answer, but I would make supplication to my judge.
16If I had called, and he had answered me; yet would I not believe that he had hearkened unto my voice.
Job 9:14-16

Biblical Context

Job 9:14-16 shows a speaker who refuses to argue with the divine and instead chooses supplication, acknowledging the limits of human reasoning before God.

Neville's Inner Vision

See the scene as your inner theatre. The word God stands not as a distant court but as the I AM you are aware of. The question, How shall I answer? reveals a mind clinging to argument rather than awakening to its own presiding consciousness. In this Neville-gateway, the so-called judge is your inner habit-patterns, the part of you that insists on proving and measuring outcomes. Job would not answer if he could be righteous as a performance; instead, he would turn to supplication, which is the soul’s alignment with the living presence. If the voice had answered, he would still not concede that the answer is external, for the I AM within already knows and approves. The teaching is simple: stop measuring whether you are heard by turning outward. Assume you are heard, and let your feeling attest the event even before the world yields. When you revise your stance from debate to communion, you allow the inner movement to translate into outer form. You are invited to trust, to petition as if settled, and to watch belief become your immediate experience rather than a future event.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes, rest in the I AM, and silently affirm: I am heard now; my petition is granted. Feel the relief as if the answer is already mine.

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