Inner Healing of Jeremiah 30
Jeremiah 30:12-15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 30 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jeremiah 30:12-15 speaks of an incurable wound and a grievous pain with no one to plead the case, signaling a crisis of affliction. It points to a deeper truth: healing comes not from outward helpers but from inner awareness.
Neville's Inner Vision
Jeremiah 30:12-15 reveals a wound described as incurable, a cry for help that endures when the mind has forgotten the inner healer. In Neville’s practice, this wound is a state of consciousness, not a body’s malady. God is the I AM behind every thought, and imagination is the means by which we rearrange appearances. The 'I have wounded thee' line can be read as a dare to alter the script you have been living, for the chastisement you call ‘sin’ is simply the mind’s habitual state that misreads itself. The 'lovers' who forget thee are the outward supports you once trusted; they fail when you doubt your own divine interior. Turn inward and assume the healed state now: feel the breath of the I AM as if the pain never existed; imagine a physician within restoring each cell, binding up the wounded places. By this revision you withdraw your attention from lack and place it on the presence that you are. The day you persist in this felt reality, healing appears in your experience, and suffering recedes as a shadow.
Practice This Now
Assume you are already healed and feel it now; place a hand on your heart and silently declare, 'I AM whole.' Then imagine the wound being bound up by a compassionate inner physician and hold that sensation for a few minutes.
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