Jeremiah's Inner Return

Jeremiah 29:10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 29 in context

Scripture Focus

10For thus saith the LORD, That after seventy years be accomplished at Babylon I will visit you, and perform my good word toward you, in causing you to return to this place.
Jeremiah 29:10

Biblical Context

The verse promises a future restoration after a period of exile, achieved by God visiting and fulfilling His word, returning His people to their land.

Neville's Inner Vision

Jeremiah 29:10 becomes a map of consciousness. The seventy years are not days in Babylon but a long habit of lack, a state of mind in which you have forgotten your true home in God. God’s promise to visit you and perform His good word is the arrival of a vivid idea into your awareness—the unmistakable sense that you are already where you long to be, right now. In Neville’s terms, exile is your present identification with limitation; return is the shift of I AM back to its native place of knowing. The ‘place’ to return to is not geography but the inner sanctuary of consciousness where the word of God resonates as fact. When you assume the end and feel the feeling of being already restored, you activate the very visitation described: a creative act of self that realigns your experience with your inner truth. Your life becomes the proof of the word fulfilled, here and now, in the continuous revelation of your true self.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and, in the crucible of stillness, assume the end: you are already back in your true place. Feel the relief, gratitude, and certainty that God has visited you and fulfilled His word; carry this feeling into your next moment.

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