Inner Land Renewal: Jeremiah 12:4

Jeremiah 12:4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 12 in context

Scripture Focus

4How long shall the land mourn, and the herbs of every field wither, for the wickedness of them that dwell therein? the beasts are consumed, and the birds; because they said, He shall not see our last end.
Jeremiah 12:4

Biblical Context

Jeremiah 12:4 describes the land's mourning and the withering of fields due to the people's wickedness, signaling consequences for collective behavior.

Neville's Inner Vision

Your inner land is the stage where every thought and feeling grows into outward circumstance. The soil withers not because Fate is punitive, but because you have accepted a belief that the end of your life is fixed and obscured from awareness. The wickedness Jeremiah speaks of is the stubborn habit of identifying with lack, guilt, and future ruin. When you say 'He shall not see our last end,' you deny the living I AM within the scene, and thus you disconnect from the power that could turn the season. In Neville's terms, the land mourns as a mirror of your outer states of consciousness. Change the inner posture and the external shows change: assume a new end for the land—vitality, abundance, peace—then feel it as real, now. See the birds return, the herbs green, the beasts reimagined by creative sentient life. You are not pleading with God to intervene; you are awakening to the fact that you are the I AM, recognizing your own assumption as the cause, and your world as the effect.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Sit quietly, breathe, and declare, 'I AM the I AM; the end of my inner drought is now.' Then revise by imagining the land thriving—green fields, returning creatures—and feel that reality as real, here and now.

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