Inner Intercession in Jeremiah 11:14
Jeremiah 11:14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse forbids interceding for this people, and cautions against crying out for them because God will not hear them when they call in trouble. It marks a boundary of accountability and a turning point in prophecy.
Neville's Inner Vision
Where the mind reads a people as separate from you, Jeremiah speaks the harsh decree: cease praying for them, for their cry will not be heard. Yet in the Neville lens this is not about others out there; it is about your own inner states. The 'people' are the habits, beliefs, and conditions you have not yet owned as in your own consciousness. The prohibition to intercede points to a shift from petitioning the world to awakening your awareness. When you feel the impulse to plead for others, notice that you are feeling lack as a belief in separation. The remedy is not more begging, but a revision: assume the state that you already hear and answer from within—the I AM that you are. Hear your own call and know that the answer is already present in you, not coming from outside. The time they cry for trouble becomes the moment you realize your reality arises from your inner conviction, and you may choose to revise it into a scene where God’s response is the steady, silent acknowledgment of consciousness. Thus the verse becomes an invitation to claim sovereignty in awareness, and to pray as the state itself that is always heard.
Practice This Now
Act: Sit quietly, close your eyes, and assume you are the I AM, listening to your own inner voice. Revise a looming intercession into an affirmation that you are already heard and whole.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









