Inner Prophecy Of Jeremiah 32:3

Jeremiah 32:3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 32 in context

Scripture Focus

3For Zedekiah king of Judah had shut him up, saying, Wherefore dost thou prophesy, and say, Thus saith the LORD, Behold, I will give this city into the hand of the king of Babylon, and he shall take it;
Jeremiah 32:3

Biblical Context

Zedekiah imprisoned Jeremiah for prophesying Jerusalem's fall to Babylon.

Neville's Inner Vision

Jeremiah 32:3 presents us with a scene in which the outer voice of fear locks away the truth I am ready to hear. But in Neville’s language, the city is a state of consciousness, and the king of Judah represents the old ego that says, ‘This shall be so because the world declares it.’ The prophet’s message, ‘Thus saith the LORD,’ is the inner command of the I AM, the silent ruler who dictates how the dream is to be seen. When I feel blocked—by doubt, by the belief that the city must fall—what I am really doing is resisting the fact that the vision of the inner kingdom already exists in consciousness. The moment I accept, I acknowledge that the Babylon of fear is a temporary adaptation of my extended sense of self, not an absolute law. I am asked to revise by returning to the assumption that I AM the only governor here, that truth flows through me as the living present tense. As I dwell in that awareness, the external events align with the inner decree, and the “fall” becomes a symbolic letting-go of old conditions, replaced by the sovereign beauty of divine order.

Practice This Now

Imaginative Act: Sit in quiet and assume I AM now; revise the belief that the city will fall by affirming the inner city is safe and governed by divine order.

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