Escape Into Your Inner Judah

Jeremiah 44:14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 44 in context

Scripture Focus

14So that none of the remnant of Judah, which are gone into the land of Egypt to sojourn there, shall escape or remain, that they should return into the land of Judah, to the which they have a desire to return to dwell there: for none shall return but such as shall escape.
Jeremiah 44:14

Biblical Context

It states the remnant in Egypt cannot escape exile or return to Judah. Only those who escape the dream of exile will actually return.

Neville's Inner Vision

In the present reading, exile is a state of consciousness rather than a geographical fact. The 'remnant' in Egypt is your current pattern of thought that keeps you distant from the 'land of Judah'—the state of awareness in which you know yourself as the I AM. The command that none shall return except those who escape reveals that outward return is not a matter of physical travel but of inner revision. To you, the reader, Egypt is a familiar thought-system: fear, lack, limitation; Judah is the remembered identity of wholeness and praise. The moment you cease identifying with the dream of exile and choose to awaken to the inner homeland, you have escaped. The line 'to which they have a desire to return' is the inner pull toward the place you already are, in principle, when you imagine from the end. Your imagination is the vehicle by which you defy the decree of finality and re-sow the soil of your true kingdom. It is not punishment but instruction: shift your assumption, and the outer evidence follows.

Practice This Now

Imaginative Act: Sit quietly and revise the scene. Assume, 'I am already in the land I desire,' and feel the air, the light, and the confident calm of Judah, as if the exile never occurred.

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