Return From Evil: Inner Reversal
Jeremiah 18:11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 18 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
God commands Judah to turn away from evil paths and reform their deeds. The outer crisis is presented as a call to awaken the inner turning toward good.
Neville's Inner Vision
Jeremiah's call is not a threat from an external judge but a mirror for your inner life. The 'evil' framed against you is the stubborn image you still carry about yourself when you forget who you are. The device is fear’s craft, the habitual thought that keeps you identified with lack. If you would truly return from the evil way, withdraw belief from the old self and assume a new center: I AM here and now, the one who chooses good. When you do, the outer scene shifts to match the new inner tone. The law is simple: your world follows your consciousness; the more you 'make your ways and your doings good' in imagination, the more you will live that goodness. Do not fight the outer; revise the inner. Feel the relief and authority of your new state, and let that feeling govern your steps as you move with integrity toward good.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and declare, 'I am returning from every evil way and I am doing good now.' See yourself living the revised path today, and feel it as already true.
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