Inside Covenant Awakening
Jeremiah 3:4-5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 3 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage invites call to God as Father and guide, questions whether divine anger will endure, and exposes the people's evil deeds.
Neville's Inner Vision
Jeremiah's words are not a mere history but a map of your inner life. 'Wilt thou not from this time cry unto me, My father' invites you to address your I AM as Father—the inner guide that looks after your youth. The question 'Will he reserve his anger for ever?' is your awareness of lingering resistance to change, a habitual inner judge you rehearse. 'Will he keep it to the end?' echoes the fear that a fixed image of self-punishment could endure. And 'Behold, thou hast spoken and done evil things as thou couldest' shows how you once believed a crippling thought, projecting it outward. The invitation is to awaken to the covenant within: to treat imagination as the creative power and to revise the past as memory in motion. The inner Father is not wrathful but inviting, urging you to move from condemnation to conscious creation. When you align with the I AM, accountability becomes a loving guardrail to your supreme identity.
Practice This Now
Assume you are speaking to your inner Father now and declare, 'I am loyal to the I AM within me.' Then revise any sense of guilt or anger by tasting the feeling of a renewed present, as if the old record were erased.
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