Hidden Guilt Seen by I AM

Jeremiah 41:4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 41 in context

Scripture Focus

4And it came to pass the second day after he had slain Gedaliah, and no man knew it,
Jeremiah 41:4

Biblical Context

Gedaliah was slain. The verse notes that on the next day, no one yet knows what happened.

Neville's Inner Vision

Notice that the second day after the deed is not a date in history but a moment in consciousness wherein the hidden act begins to reveal itself to the I AM. Gedaliah's murder in the past is only as real as the mind imagines it to be; in Neville's air, the world outside is the echo of an inner state. If a crime is hidden from the outer eye, it remains a private conviction until I decide otherwise. Therefore, I claim the right to revise: the crime exists no longer in my inner world, for I am the light that sees and forgives. I am the I AM that remembers nothing against itself, and every hidden act dissolves in the warm certainty of wholeness. By assuming the end as already complete, I feel the present truth—conflict dissolves, fear evaporates, and the inner scene shifts into harmony. When the memory loses its grip, the outward appearance aligns with the new inner certainty. The verse becomes a reminder that secrecy can only prevail where consciousness remains ignorant of its own godlike nature.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and imagine the second day dawn; revise the scene by declaring, 'In this I AM, nothing is hidden from me; I forgive and release all guilt.' Then surrender to the felt sense of wholeness.

The Bible Through Neville

Neville Bible Sparks

Loading...

Loading...
Video thumbnail
Loading video details...
🔗 View on YouTube

© 2025 The Bible Through Neville - A consciousness-based approach to Scripture