Inner Roar of the I AM
Jeremiah 25:30-31 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 25 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The Lord roars from on high and contends with all nations, signaling a universal judgment. Neville's reading sees this as an inner movement within consciousness, inviting you to purify thoughts and align with your true nature.
Neville's Inner Vision
Jeremiah 25:30-31 unveils a roar from on high and a controversy with the nations. In the Neville sense, this roar is the piercing consciousness of the I AM arising within you, declaring that you are not governed by fear or habit but by the sovereign you already are. The 'nations' are the many aspects of your own mind—doubt, desire, memory, stubborn habit—engaged in debate with your true nature. The fierce proclamation to 'give them that are wicked to the sword' signifies the inner act of pruning beliefs that do not serve wholeness; the 'treading of the grapes' depicts the extraction of life-force from every experience by violent, transforming energy, turning experience into wisdom. The expression 'to the ends of the earth' suggests that the effects of this inner decree extend through every circumstance. The holy habitation is the sanctum of awareness in which you, as I AM, adjudicate and harmonize every part of self. When you accept that the I AM roars within, the outer world rearranges to reflect justice, and the long-expected judgment becomes the release of what no longer serves your true nature.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, breathe deeply, and imagine the I AM roaring within your chest; then declare, 'I am the I AM, and all thoughts and circumstances must align with justice.' Repeat with feeling until the sense of limitation falls away.
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