Jeremiah 17:18 Inner Confession Transformed

Jeremiah 17:18 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 17 in context

Scripture Focus

18Let them be confounded that persecute me, but let not me be confounded: let them be dismayed, but let not me be dismayed: bring upon them the day of evil, and destroy them with double destruction.
Jeremiah 17:18

Biblical Context

The verse calls for those who persecute me to be confounded while I remain unshaken, and for trouble to come upon the persecutors themselves.

Neville's Inner Vision

From the Neville vantage, this declaration is not a call for harm but a doorway into the inner weather. Persecutors are not distant enemies; they are projections of fear, doubt, and old beliefs within you. When you say, Let them be confounded that persecute me, you are naming your own wakefulness to the fact that the ‘they’ outside mirror the unreconciled parts of your consciousness. Let them be dismayed, but let not me be dismayed, becomes a vow to keep your I AM steady regardless of appearances. The day of evil is the moment when those unconscious thoughts rise to the surface for inspection; its “destruction” is the clearing away of their power through awareness. Double destruction signifies dissolving fear and its habitual projections in tandem—the former source and the latter consequence of your old narrative. In practice, you do not fight; you awaken. Align with the I AM, and every scene of persecution collapses into illumination, revealing your true, undisturbed presence within God.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and assume the I AM as your only state of consciousness. Revise silently: I am not confounded by appearances; the old fears dissolve in the light of God, and I stand unmoved as the observer and ruler of my world.

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