Inner Remnant Awakening
Jeremiah 15:11-14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 15 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The LORD speaks of a faithful remnant who will be well even as enemies threaten and spoil comes. The passage also foresees exile into an unfamiliar land, brought about by God’s anger, as a purification.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within this text, the remnant is not a geographic locality but your persistent awareness—the I AM that cannot be diminished by outward spoil or border beyond. The 'enemy' and the times of evil are not distant powers; they are currents within your own consciousness, testing what you truly identify as you. When you ask whether 'iron can break iron,' you are asked to trust that your inner state of awareness is the stronger iron—unmoved by loss, untouched by threat, and capable of turning any circumstance to a revelation of your inward kingdom. The line about treasures being given to spoil reveals that possessions are mere outward props; their loss exposes the real coin of worth—the realization that you are not your belongings but the awareness that dwells beyond them. The 'land you know not' becomes a fresh field of experience opened by your decision to dwell in the presence of I AM. The fiery anger is not vengeance but the zeal of consciousness burning away attachment and fear, leaving you free to inhabit a stable, serene remnant that governs your world from within.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Assume the remnant now, rest in the awareness that you are the I AM. Feel the well-being as present and let that inner state govern your day.
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