Supplication Over Self-Judgment

Job 9:15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 9 in context

Scripture Focus

15Whom, though I were righteous, yet would I not answer, but I would make supplication to my judge.
Job 9:15

Biblical Context

Job says that even if he were righteous, he would not answer; he would instead make supplication to his judge. He elevates supplication over debate, trusting an inner order that can be revised through prayer.

Neville's Inner Vision

Job 9:15 invites you into a sovereign inner stance: the outer judge is not a real separate adversary but a projection of your own inner state. Even righteousness does not compel argument; instead you turn to the I AM within and petition from the end you desire. See the inner judge as a doorway to a revised consciousness, not a verdict upon your worth. When you imagine yourself already righteous and accepted, you shift from striving to being—your thoughts align with the truth you intend to inhabit. Practice quiet assurance, not debate; the act of supplication becomes your revision tool, rewriting your sense of self from fear to fellowship with the life that is always present. As you persist, outer circumstances bend to reflect the inner feeling of belonging and worth, because consciousness shapes reality and the I AM is the living reality at the core of you.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and imagine speaking to your inner judge as one who already approves you. Repeat I am accepted by the I AM and feel it as real.

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