Inner Fields of Mercy
Jeremiah 39:10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 39 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Plain sense: In Jeremiah 39:10, the conqueror leaves the poor of Judah and grants them land and vineyards, signaling mercy and a surprising provision for the least as judgment passes. The emphasis is on mercy amid ruin, a quiet provisioning that follows destruction.
Neville's Inner Vision
In Neville's psychology, the outer event is a symbol of your inner state. Nebuzaradan is the guard of circumstance; the poor are your lack-consciousness. Leaving them behind in the land is a reversal of deprivation, a signal that abundance is already secured within your inner world. The act of giving vineyards and fields is imagination allocating resources to the state that believes in lack. When you acknowledge the I AM—your awareness—as the one who permits mercy to the neglected you, you unlock an inner economy: thoughts begin producing opportunities, time, and resources in harmony. The contrast between destruction and provisioning shows Providence as the steady movement of your inner weather; a crisis becomes grace when you revise the scene to reflect abundance. By identifying with the inner governor who grants, rather than the outer guard who deprives, you awaken soil within your mind where prosperity can grow in the present moment.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and revise the scene. I am the I AM, the guard stands aside, and the poor within me are provided for—vineyards and fields spring forth in conscious awareness.
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