Inner Clouds of Change
Jeremiah 4:13 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 4 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jeremiah 4:13 speaks of swift, overwhelming judgment arriving like clouds and a whirlwind. The cry of 'Woe unto us' marks the ruin that follows a people moved by fear and separation.
Neville's Inner Vision
Picture Jeremiah’s oracle not as distant verdict but as a mirror of your own inner motion. The coming clouds, the whirlwind chariots, and the swifter-than-eagles horses are not external forces but the rapid movements of your own imagined states. Where you feel blown by fear, limitation, or guilt—that is the spoiled condition Jeremiah names. Yet the I AM, your true awareness, remains untouched, observing these appearances without surrender. When you insist that you are separate from life or at the mercy of circumstance, you feed the chariots and woe becomes your experienced reality. The remedy is to reverse the assumption: assume that you live in a universal I AM that sees all, and that you are the operator of that I AM through imagination. By dwelling in this consciousness, you "call" the clouds to reform, the whirlwind to calm, and the swift horses into patient, purposeful directions. Through feeling-it-real belief, you invite a change that matches your inner stance. You are not ruined; you are reconstituting your inner state, and the outer world follows the revised feeling.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit quietly, declare 'I AM' as the unchanging awareness behind every appearance, and revise a troubling sense as 'I am the authority that shapes my world.' Feel it fully for two minutes, then watch the outer conditions align.
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