Inner Return, Break the Yoke

Jeremiah 28:4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 28 in context

Scripture Focus

4And I will bring again to this place Jeconiah the son of Jehoiakim king of Judah, with all the captives of Judah, that went into Babylon, saith the LORD: for I will break the yoke of the king of Babylon.
Jeremiah 28:4

Biblical Context

God promises to return Jeconiah and Judah’s captives. He will break the yoke of the king of Babylon.

Neville's Inner Vision

In this verse you are not merely reading a distant history; you are learning the language of your own consciousness. Jeconiah and the captives symbolize states of mind you have believed yourself to be, scattered and ruled by fear, limitation, and time-bound circumstances. When the text says, I will bring again to this place, it reveals that the “return” is an inner shift: the place is your current awareness, and the king of Babylon is the habit of perceiving separation from the I AM. The liberation promised is the undoing of the sense of bondage, realized not through external events but through a correction in imagination. Your inner world is the jurisdiction where all events are born; therefore, to break the yoke is to revise your assumption about limitation. When you align with the I AM—awareness that you are the authority of your experience—the captives of fear and absence release their hold, and you are brought back to the sovereign place within you that never left. This is deliverance as a present-tense realization, not a distant redemption.

Practice This Now

Assume you are already free now: quietly declare, 'I am free,' and feel the surrounding space re-oriented to your sovereign I AM. Visualize returning to your inner place as the yoke dissolves.

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