Inner Freedom in Jeremiah

Jeremiah 2:14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 2 in context

Scripture Focus

14Is Israel a servant? is he a homeborn slave? why is he spoiled?
Jeremiah 2:14

Biblical Context

The verse asks whether Israel remains a servile people and why he is spoiled. It signals a call to examine inner condition rather than external fate.

Neville's Inner Vision

Israel is not a people apart from your own consciousness, but a state you entertain. The question of Israel as a servant becomes the moment you believe you are bound by circumstance. The query of whether he is a homeborn slave expresses your conviction that the birthright is compromised by fear, habit, or tradition. Why is he spoiled reveals the inner disarray that follows a mind that has forgotten its creative power. In this liturgy of self, Jeremiah speaks as your inner witness, reminding you that the I AM within is not a servant but the very source of freedom. When you imagine yourself as the I AM who can revise, you awaken from a dream of servitude. The spoiled state is simply a mistaken assumption about who you are; you can revise it by returning to awareness and choosing a new feeling-tone, the feeling of being already free, whole, and unthreatened by outside conditions. Your exiled self can return to the inner kingdom the moment you accept that you are not a slave to history but the ruler of your inner weather.

Practice This Now

Assume you are already free, and feel it real. Revise the belief of servitude into I AM freedom now and dwell in that sensation.

The Bible Through Neville

Neville Bible Sparks

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