Jeremiah Inner Peace Vision
Jeremiah 25:37-38 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 25 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage portrays a land emptied of peace by the LORD's fierce anger, a wilderness left desolate by oppression. It speaks of a forsaken covert and a land overrun by the oppressor's fear.
Neville's Inner Vision
Imagine this Jeremiah image as a map of your own mind. The desolate land is the state of consciousness that arises when you forget the I AM, the King who dwells in you. The peaceable habitations being cut down symbolize moments when you identify with fear, doubt, or anger and withdraw your attention from the inward sanctuary. The fierce anger of the LORD is not coming from without but from your insistence that you are separate from your own divine nature; the lion is the roar of the ego you feed with attention, and the oppressor is the habit of resisting what is true in the moment. Yet the words invite a reversal: you can restore the covert by turning attention inward and affirming that I AM is always present. When you imagine yourself as the observer who never leaves, the land responds—desolation yields to quiet, the covert reappears, and a new scene unfolds where peace flows like a river. You are not at the mercy of the text; you are awakening to the power of your own inner sovereignty.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, breathe, and assume the I AM is present within you now. Revise the inner scene to a peaceful covert where the lion rests and the land blossoms as you feel that calm as real.
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