Job 9:28 Fear and the I Am

Job 9:28 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Job 9 in context

Scripture Focus

28I am afraid of all my sorrows, I know that thou wilt not hold me innocent.
Job 9:28

Biblical Context

Job expresses fear that his sorrows will condemn him and that he will not be found innocent. This reveals a mindset of guilt seeking assurance.

Neville's Inner Vision

I hear Job's fear as a map of the soul's present state: the belief that sorrow comes with condemnation and that innocence is outside your reach. In Neville's glow you do not confront God as judge, but the I AM within you, the consciousness that makes all appear. Fear is not punishment outside you; it is the movement of a mind convinced it has stepped away from the one life. When you acknowledge that you are never separated from the source of being, the apparent sorrows are only thoughts arising in your own awareness. The verse does not threaten you with guilt; it reveals the habit of mind clinging to outcome and fearing accountability. To reclaim innocence, you must assume a new state and revise your sense of self until the feeling of being innocent is real. Imagination creates reality; therefore imagine the moment you rest in the I AM, forgiven, protected, and loved, and let that sensation permeate your day. The old fear dissolves as you inhabit the truth that you are the I AM.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and revise your state by declaring, 'I am the I AM, and I am innocent now.' Dwell in that feeling until it feels real.

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