Inner Alarm, Inner Trumpet

Jeremiah 4:19 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 4 in context

Scripture Focus

19My bowels, my bowels! I am pained at my very heart; my heart maketh a noise in me; I cannot hold my peace, because thou hast heard, O my soul, the sound of the trumpet, the alarm of war.
Jeremiah 4:19

Biblical Context

Jeremiah 4:19 portrays the speaker’s inner distress as if his gut and heart cry out while the trumpet of alarm sounds within. It shows how external calamity mirrors an unsettled state of mind that longs for transformation.

Neville's Inner Vision

Within this line the bowels and heart stand for the psyche in motion, not mere anatomy. The trumpet is a sign that a state of consciousness must yield to a higher order. You are not threatened by a war; you are being reminded that you have believed in separation and lack, and that belief creates its own sounds within your inner chamber. The sound of the trumpet is a vibration that calls you to revise the scene. When you hear it, do not fight the alarm; welcome it as feedback that your old state must go. You can choose to remain in fear, or you can perform the simple act of assuming the end: you are the I AM, spacious, unafraid, unbroken; you imagine, feel, and dwell as if healing and restoration are already completed. By entertaining that fulfilled state in place of the alarm you redirect the energy, creating alignment between inner conviction and outer experience. The trumpet thus becomes a guide toward the kingdom within, where peace replaces war.

Practice This Now

Imaginatively assume the end now: I AM calm and whole. Feel that shift as real for a minute, then carry the peaceful state into the next moment, letting restoration replace the alarm.

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