Swift Days, Rich Inner Life

Job 9:25 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 9 in context

Scripture Focus

25Now my days are swifter than a post: they flee away, they see no good.
Job 9:25

Biblical Context

Job laments that days pass swiftly and seem to bring no good. It hints that what we call time and luck reflect an inner state of consciousness.

Neville's Inner Vision

Job’s line about days running swifter than a post reveals the inner truth: time is the movement of your consciousness when you identify with lack. The outer scene—days speeding by, a sense of no good—speaks of a state, not a calendar. When you assume you are the I AM, the constant awareness behind thinking, you revise the velocity of life. The swift post becomes a symbol of how beliefs race through attention when you dwell in absence. By turning to the imagination—feeling it real that good is present now—you align with the inner kingdom where all favorable states dwell. The shift is not to chase new events but to cultivate a new inner condition: you quiet the mind, declare I AM the presence of good, and let perception reflect that order. As you sustain that state, time loosens its grip and the sense of futility dissolves into a natural arising of good. The verse invites you to rewrite your day by reimagining it from the consciousness that never leaves the truth of abundance.

Practice This Now

Practice: Sit quietly, breathe, and assume I am now living in abundant good. Visualize a day unfolding with ease, each moment filled.

The Bible Through Neville

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