Inner Harvest and Return
Jeremiah 12:13-14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 12 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse contrasts outward labor with inner consequence: those who sow with effort yet reap only thorns will face shame, as the Lord’s fierce anger touches their profits. It frames the surrounding nations and Israel’s land as objects of divine action.
Neville's Inner Vision
To Jeremiah, the sowing of wheat and the reaping of thorns is not a history lesson but an admonition to the inner man. The 'neighbors' and the land that are touched by the Lord mirror states of consciousness we permit within us. When I tell you that God is your I AM, you begin to see that every outward chart of fortune or defeat is but the surface of an inner movement. The fierceness of the Lord's anger is the resistance you harbor toward your own creation; it reveals how you cling to a future you fear rather than a present you affirm. Yet the promise stands: even when others are purged from your inner inheritance, your true return is not external but inner alignment—the soul plucked back to its rightful peace. Practice is simple: assume you have already sowed in the right field of consciousness and are now reaping joy—let your feeling-tone confirm it until it feels real. In that moment, you enact the return Jeremiah foretold: your inner land becomes whole again as you dwell in the I AM.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume you have already sown in the right field of consciousness and are now reaping joy. Let your feeling-tone confirm the return to wholeness and dwell there in the I AM.
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