Inner Tears, Inner Restoration

Jeremiah 14:17 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 14 in context

Scripture Focus

17Therefore thou shalt say this word unto them; Let mine eyes run down with tears night and day, and let them not cease: for the virgin daughter of my people is broken with a great breach, with a very grievous blow.
Jeremiah 14:17

Biblical Context

Jeremiah is commanded to speak a word and let his eyes run with tears day and night because the virgin daughter of his people is broken by a great breach.

Neville's Inner Vision

In the Neville Goddard mold, the tears are not outward mourning but the sustained attention of your I AM to a perceived misalignment. The 'virgin daughter of my people' symbolizes your inner state of wholeness and potential, now felt as broken by fear or discouragement. The directive to utter this word becomes a practice in consciousness: observe the inner drama without denying it, then revise it by assuming a truer story. The breach is a movement of belief, not a fixed fact in the world. By declaring from the I AM that the state is healed—'I am the awareness in which wholeness resides; I am restored now'—you align your inner condition with the truth you intend to manifest. The external is not the cause but the effect of an inner assumption. When you persist in this felt-reality, the inner image completes and the outer scene follows the inner conviction.

Practice This Now

Sit quietly, acknowledge the inner lament as a signal to revise. Then speak from the end: 'I am whole; the inner daughter is restored,' and feel the reality of that restoration as now.

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