Wandering Toward Inner Acceptance
Jeremiah 14:10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 14 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jeremiah 14:10 presents a divine indictment of a people who love to wander and refuse to stay grounded, promising that their sins will be remembered.
Neville's Inner Vision
To read Jeremiah 14:10 through Neville's vision is to see that the Lord of the chapter is the I AM within you, and 'this people' is the shifting states of consciousness that wander from the quiet center. Wander means to drift away from the awareness that you are the expression of God, to identify with lack, fear, or appearance. When the feet are not refrained—when attention keeps running after externals—God does not accept that wandering self because it pretends separation from the one source. Yet 'remembering iniquity' and 'visiting sins' are not punitive judgments but the habitual memory of thought patterns that replay as conditions in your life. The moment you notice you are wandering, you can revise in the imagination: you are not a separate self but the I AM, actively choosing harmony, abundance, and truth. Your acceptance is not earned but acknowledged in the inner sense that you are the living presence of God. In that light, the exile becomes a dream dissolved by a single conviction: I am always the I AM, and I am accepted here and now.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit quietly, declare 'I am the I AM; I am accepted now,' and feel the truth saturate your entire being until wandering thoughts fade.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









