Inner Gate of Jeremiah

Jeremiah 37:13 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 37 in context

Scripture Focus

13And when he was in the gate of Benjamin, a captain of the ward was there, whose name was Irijah, the son of Shelemiah, the son of Hananiah; and he took Jeremiah the prophet, saying, Thou fallest away to the Chaldeans.
Jeremiah 37:13

Biblical Context

Jeremiah is seized at the gate by a captain who accuses him of defecting to the Chaldeans.

Neville's Inner Vision

At the gate of Benjamin, Jeremiah is seized by a ward captain who brands him a traitor to the Chaldeans. Neville would read this as a scene inside your own mind: the gate as the boundary where you choose the story you will inhabit. The captain is not a person out there; he is a voice in your state of consciousness, a fear-guardian of the outer mind declaring that you have defected from the security of the known world. To you, the accusation reveals the test of loyalty to your I AM, your innermost awareness. If you accept the projection—if you yield to the belief that you are under judgment or exile—you align with the Chaldeans of limitation. Yet the truth of prophecy and return remains intact: you are always free to revise the scene by knowing that you are not defined by appearances. The I AM within you remains faithful to the divine pattern, and the apparent arrest is only a momentary misperception that dissolves as you practice living from awareness rather than reaction. In this moment you choose to return to the inner kingdom through faith, obedience, and the consistent assumption of your true self.

Practice This Now

Assume the I AM is the gatekeeper of your mind. Declare: I AM faithful to the inner truth, and feel it real as the gate dissolves into a calm horizon.

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