Inner Repentance for His Name
Jeremiah 14:7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 14 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jeremiah 14:7 presents a confession of sins and backslidings, asking God to act for His name's sake. It invites inner turning that moves us toward mercy and reconciliation.
Neville's Inner Vision
Your confession isn't begging an external judge; it is a declaration to the I AM within: I recognize the state you have worn, and I insist that the I AM act for its own name's sake, revealing mercy through alignment. The backslidings you call sins are simply states of consciousness you have worn. You now acknowledge them and, with a quiet, sovereign awareness, revise them by assuming a higher state. The I AM, within you, does not demand punishment; it desires to be recognized as the reality you live. When you align your heart with that I AM and declare, not from fear but from faith, 'Let the divine nature act in me for its name,' the inner record begins to shift. Mercy pours in as you dwell in the truth that you are loved, forgiven, and made new by the very awareness you call God. The act of turning is the inner movement of consciousness responding to that Name.
Practice This Now
Sit in stillness, breathe, and revise your inner record by declaring: 'I am the I AM; I forgive and am forgiven; I move now in grace.' Then feel the shift as your sense of self softens into mercy.
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