Two Baskets Before the Temple

Jeremiah 24:1 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 24 in context

Scripture Focus

1The LORD shewed me, and, behold, two baskets of figs were set before the temple of the LORD, after that Nebuchadrezzar king of Babylon had carried away captive Jeconiah the son of Jehoiakim king of Judah, and the princes of Judah, with the carpenters and smiths, from Jerusalem, and had brought them to Babylon.
Jeremiah 24:1

Biblical Context

Jeremiah is shown two baskets of figs set before the temple, after exile began, signaling two possible inner conditions facing Judah.

Neville's Inner Vision

Before the temple of your awareness, the two baskets appear as portraits of your inner weather. The exile in the narrative becomes a moment of inner displacement, a shift in consciousness rather than a decree of fate. One basket holds figs that signify vitality and return—an inner alignment with your I AM and a future shaped by faith in restoration. The other basket harbors fruit born of doubt and fear, a conditioning you could carry as ongoing loss. Neville would tell you that these baskets are not external objects but two movements of mind you entertain in the moment of attention: you choose what your inner focus feeds. By watching them without judgment, you endow the mind with authority to decide which state you inhabit. The Lord’s vision asks you to see that your consciousness is the temple and that your imagining creates reality; exile dissolves when you align with the inner kingdom already present in I AM. Your return is not a place but a remembered sense of wholeness you now assume.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Sit quietly, imagine two baskets before your temple. Decide now to fill the first with the feeling 'I am returned' and let that feeling flood your body.

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