The Inner Lament of Moab

Jeremiah 48:31 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 48 in context

Scripture Focus

31Therefore will I howl for Moab, and I will cry out for all Moab; mine heart shall mourn for the men of Kirheres.
Jeremiah 48:31

Biblical Context

Jeremiah 48:31 speaks of a divine howl for Moab and a heart-mourning over Kirheres. It presents inner sorrow accompanying judgment as an outward expression of inner states.

Neville's Inner Vision

Jeremiah's cry is not about geography but about states of consciousness. When the I AM speaks through the passage—'I will howl for Moab'—it reveals that certain beliefs have run their course and moved into a new awareness. Moab stands for a sturdy, resisting pattern in the mind; Kirheres names the inner circles where such patterning has rooted itself. The lament is the psyche's recognition that a shift has occurred and old attachments must be released. This is not punishment; it is the wind of consciousness clearing the field for a higher awareness. As you listen to the cry, you are invited to identify with the I AM that feels the movement, to feel the sorrow without identifying with it, and to let it pass. In time, the inner voice that mourns becomes the faculty that returns to unity with the I AM. The whole passage, then, is a map: the awareness that feels the old self dissolves it, and the new self that remains is the truth of your being.

Practice This Now

Imaginative Act: Sit quietly, breathe, and pretend you are the I AM hearing the Moab lament inside. Revise by declaring, 'I am waking to one reality—the I AM,' and feel the old state dissolving as you hold the new sense of unity.

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