The Inner Prophet Silence Within
Jeremiah 23:30-32 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 23 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jeremiah 23:30-32 condemns prophets who steal God’s words from others, claim divine authority, and speak false dreams to mislead the people. God declares He is against such voices and that they profit the people nothing.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within the pages of Jeremiah, the true reader discovers that the 'voices' spoken as 'Thus saith the Lord' are not distant judges but the reflections of your own inner state. God says He is against those who steal My words from their neighbor, against those who mouth 'He saith' without living the living I AM. In Neville's world, the scene is a drama of consciousness: every prophet, every dream, is a projection of your present level of awareness. If you are identified with fear, vanity, or the need to be right, you will conjure voices that mislead, just as the deceivers mislead the people. But your true prophecy arises when you choose to awaken in the I AM, to regard every word as a suggestion from your own higher self. Instead of chasing outward signs, revise your inner dream by assuming that truth already within you and that your thoughts are shaped by your own creative consciousness. When you do, the counterfeit 'dreams' lose their power, and you hear the gentle guidance that leads to fidelity and peace.
Practice This Now
Sit quietly, close your eyes, and assume the I AM is the author of every word you utter. Feel the truth of your own inner guidance as you revise a recent troubling dream into a constructive, truthful message.
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