Inner Cry, Renewal of Self

Jeremiah 48:3-4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 48 in context

Scripture Focus

3A voice of crying shall be from Horonaim, spoiling and great destruction.
4Moab is destroyed; her little ones have caused a cry to be heard.
Jeremiah 48:3-4

Biblical Context

A cry rises from Horonaim as spoil and destruction sweep through Moab. It speaks of judgment and the collapse of outward security.

Neville's Inner Vision

Let the cries be read as your inner weather chart, not as doom but as a signal that consciousness is rearranging itself. Horonaim is the atmosphere of fear and attachment within you; its cry marks the moment when the old themes of lack and limitation begin to give way. Moab's destruction stands for the breaking of every identity you have trusted for security—the self that thinks you are defined by circumstances, by others, by past outcomes. The little ones are the small habits and thoughts that scream when the grand picture shifts. Yet notice who hears the cry: the I AM, the aware self that remains present through every collapse. If you identify with the cry, you will feel defeat; if you identify with awareness, you will feel release. The inner law is unchanging: imagination is the cause, awareness the stage, and feeling the reality the instrument of change. So revise your state now: declare that the old Moab has dissolved, and that you awaken to a new, stable self whose peace cannot be shaken by outer events.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Sit quietly and assume the feeling of your renewed Self as present reality. Revise the old story by declaring the Moab is dissolved and you are the I AM, unshaken.

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