Inner Wound, Inner Healing
Jeremiah 30:12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 30 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jeremiah 30:12 declares an incurable bruise and grievous wound. In Neville’s view, this is a state of consciousness rather than a fixed external fact, awaiting inner revision.
Neville's Inner Vision
Think of the verse as a reflection of my inner weather. The 'bruise' and 'wound' are not a bodily injury but a lingering belief of limitation I have accepted as permanent. God’s word in this reading is not a verdict against me but a cue to awaken to the I AM within—the awareness that never fades. The prophet speaks to the inner judge that says, this problem cannot be healed. Yet the healed state already exists as my true being, and the moment I stop arguing with it and step into the assumption of wholeness, appearances begin to rearrange. The incurable label dissolves when I cease resenting the wound and begin feeling the presence of the I AM. My trials are the inner movements of a consciousness learning to turn toward its own source. The wound is grievous only if I fix my gaze on it; I turn my gaze to the indwelling Presence, and imagine it as already repaired, life flowing freely through my form. This is not magic separate from me; it is the recognition that imagination creates reality and that the I AM within me is the healer.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, place your hand on your heart, and silently affirm I am the healed I AM. Then imagine the wound dissolving and wholeness flooding your body here and now.
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