Inner Turning Jeremiah 30:15
Jeremiah 30:15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 30 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse questions your weeping over suffering and says your sorrow is born from many iniquities; your actions have shaped the pain you endure. It implies you must turn inward and revise your state of consciousness to change the outer conditions.
Neville's Inner Vision
In this scripture the cry of affliction is the voice of a state of consciousness, not a mere event on the calendar. When Jeremiah says your sorrow is incurable because of the multitude of iniquities, he is pointing to the belief that you are separate from your I AM and bound to a chain of reactions you call fate. God is the I AM within you, not an external judge; the 'I' that acknowledges, imagines, and endures. The so-called punishment is the inner momentum of thoughts and feelings you have refused to revise. By imagining anew, by assuming a different state of being, you reverse the script. If you decide in the present moment that you are whole, just, and free, the outer circumstances must come to reflect your inner harmony. The phrase 'I have done these things unto thee' is prophetic of your current inner cause and its effects; take responsibility but do not identify with the blame—use it as a lever to shift your inner stance. Practice mindful revision: dwell in the truth of your unity with the I AM, and let that conscious assumption dissolve the old pain.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes; feel the I AM as your own awareness and declare, 'I am whole, I am free, and I now dwell in a state that dissolves all sorrow.' Then rest in that feeling as if the new state has already occurred.
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