Proclaim the Inner Covenant
Jeremiah 11:6-7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
God bids Jeremiah to proclaim the covenant in every city and street, inviting people to hear and do its words. It recalls the ancient protest of urging obedience to the voice.
Neville's Inner Vision
Consider the scene as a mirror of your inner life. The cities and streets signify the manifold thoughts and feelings you carry; the words of this covenant are the alignments you choose to obey in consciousness. When the text says hear ye the words of this covenant and do them, hear and do become the inward verdict of your I AM: an unshakable commitment to your own inner command. The “I brought them up out of Egypt” refers to awakenings of old patterns, not a distant history, and the rising early protest is the disciplined attention you bring to your day, refusing to let fear override your inner decree. Obey my voice is not obedience to an external law but compliance with the living law within you—the truth that you are consciousness making experience. Proclaiming these words becomes an inner declaration that your outer world must reflect the covenant you have already accepted in feeling. By holding to this alignment, you soften resistance, and the apparent “Egypts” dissolve as you step into the habit of faithful listening and faithful action, until life itself fulfills the stated covenant.
Practice This Now
Assume you are already hearing and obeying your inner voice today. When doubt arises, revise by repeating, 'I hear and obey,' until the sense of covenant becomes your baseline.
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