Inner Dungeon, Inner King
Jeremiah 38:9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 38 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jeremiah has been cast into the dungeon and is starving. The city is without bread to feed him.
Neville's Inner Vision
Let the dungeon be the state of your mind that believes you are trapped and powerless. The men who cast Jeremiah into the pit are your fears and condemning judgments; they do evil when you listen to them. The phrase no bread in the city points to lack in your inner world, the sense that your supply and purpose have vanished. Yet Jeremiah—your true self, the prophet within—does not die; he waits for you to revise the state. The king in you is the I AM, the awareness that can rise above circumstance. By assuming a new state, you feed Jeremiah with assurance and the city with abundance. When you dwell in the feeling that you are the I AM, the dungeon dissolves, hunger becomes possibility, and the inner king asserts his sovereignty over every perceived famine. Practice this shift now: entertain the belief that you are unconditioned and supplied, and watch the external scene bend to your inner certainty.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and revise the scene by declaring, 'I am the king of my city; I revoke lack.' Then feel the sense of nourishment flowing through your being.
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