Jeremiah 14:19 Inner Healing

Jeremiah 14:19 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 14 in context

Scripture Focus

19Hast thou utterly rejected Judah? hath thy soul lothed Zion? why hast thou smitten us, and there is no healing for us? we looked for peace, and there is no good; and for the time of healing, and behold trouble!
Jeremiah 14:19

Biblical Context

Jeremiah laments what seems like divine rejection of Judah and Zion, and asks why healing and peace appear unavailable amid trouble. It points to a mental state of lack that longs for restoration.

Neville's Inner Vision

In the Neville Goddard voice, the prophet’s cry translates into a revelation about consciousness. Judah and Zion are inner dispositions—loyalty to a remembered self and the holy place of awareness within. When the mind is smitten by trouble, the belief arises that healing does not belong to us; yet healing is not external to I AM, it is the steady presence of the Self. The appearance of rejection is a mis-tuning of consciousness, a mistaken identification with lack. The scriptural crisis becomes a turn-key: you can reclaim healing by shifting your state. Decide that the time of healing is now, not someday, and dwell in the I AM that witnesses wholeness. From this vantage, peace becomes your natural mood, and restoration appears as a rebuilt interior city—an inner Zion restored by the imagination that chooses unity, health, and harmony here and now.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Assume the feeling of healing now—say I AM healing now—and give attention to a sense of peace flooding your inner landscape; imagine Zion restored within.

The Bible Through Neville

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