Inner Winds of Judgment
Jeremiah 4:11-13 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 4 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jeremiah 4:11-13 describes a wind from the wilderness that brings judgment on the people, with clouds and a whirlwind signaling their spoilage.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the inner economy, the dry wind is not punishment from a distant deity, but a drama of your own consciousness—the weather you have allowed to define you. The wind arises from the wilderness of belief—habits, fears, a sense of separation—and comes to expose the places you have not truly seen. When you read of judgment and sentence, hear it as a call to revise your inner weather, to cleanse by awakening to I AM, the constant awareness that cannot be spoiled. The clouds that rise and the chariots that move swiftly are thoughts arising as you entertain a belief in lack or failure. Do not fight them; use them as a signal to return to the feeling of the wish fulfilled. Assume you are already the man or woman who is untroubled, intact, and restored—even while the wind roars outside. The moment you inhabit that state, the external sign of judgment softens and dissolves, and you discover the kingdom is not coming but is now already the reality of your own mind.
Practice This Now
Practically: close your eyes, assume the feeling of I AM as your constant awareness. Revise the scene by declaring, 'I am not spoiled; I am whole now.'
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