Liberation Reversed: Inner Freedom

Jeremiah 34:11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 34 in context

Scripture Focus

11But afterward they turned, and caused the servants and the handmaids, whom they had let go free, to return, and brought them into subjection for servants and for handmaids.
Jeremiah 34:11

Biblical Context

They freed the servants and handmaids, then later forced them back into subjection.

Neville's Inner Vision

In the inner drama of this line, the outward reversal mirrors a shift in your state of consciousness. The act of letting go represents a genuine act of your I AM releasing fear, guilt, and limitation; yet the subsequent return to bondage signals a lingering belief that freedom is earned or preserved by conditions outside you. You, the reader, are both the liberator of your own servants and the magistrate who fears a return to chaos; thus you imagine a reversal because you have not yet settled the inner belief that all beings, all faculties, are eternally free in the one consciousness you call God. The key is to realize that the power to bind and to loose resides in your imagination. If you insist that release is provisional, you invite a relapse into bondage. Instead, dwell in the assumption that the release was permanent and that the inner order established by your I AM cannot be overturned by memory or habit. When you embrace this truth—feeling it, imagining it, and acting from it—the inner servants remain free, and justice becomes a natural expression of your conscious state.

Practice This Now

Assume the release is permanent; revise the memory of reversal and feel it real by declaring, 'I am free now, forever,' then live from that state today.

The Bible Through Neville

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