Restoring My Inner Tabernacle
Jeremiah 10:19-21 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 10 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jeremiah laments a grievous wound and a spoiled tabernacle, noting the leaders failed to seek the LORD, leading to prosperity failing and the flocks scattering. The passage points to a spiritual condition: neglect of inner guidance results in visible loss.
Neville's Inner Vision
Jeremiah’s cry is not a history lesson but a state of consciousness you must claim. The hurt and the ruined tabernacle are inner conditions: a sanctuary that has been neglected, cords broken, curtains unsettled, and a sense of home dissolved within. When the inner pastors fail to seek the LORD within, you experience the same consequence—prosperity departs and your inner flocks scatter into restless thoughts. Yet the divine within is neither distant nor punitive; it is the sustaining I AM awaiting your return to alignment. By turning this scene into a practice of inner reconstruction, you perform a revision: declare that the LORD is sought in your heart, that your inner tabernacle is restored, and that the cords are mended and the tents can be stretched again. In that assumption the distress resolves into a new order of awareness, where your thinking and feelings become obedient to the I AM. The past loss becomes a seed for the present restoration, and your inner kingdom can prosper as you dwell in the I AM.
Practice This Now
Sit comfortably, declare softly: I AM the LORD of my inner tabernacle; my cords are whole, my tents stand, and my flock returns within. Then feel the restoration as a vivid sensation of peace and renewed alignment with the I AM.
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