Inner Lament, Harvest Awakening
Jeremiah 48:31-32 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 48 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage expresses Moab's sorrow over lost vineyards and people, using a national lament to depict a deeper sense of ruin and disruption in life.
Neville's Inner Vision
Your Moab is a state of consciousness clinging to outer results and fixed stories about who you are. The weeping for Kirheres and the vine of Sibmah shows how the mind reveres attachments—plants carried to the sea, harvests spoiled—until the heart discovers that all such images are only movements within awareness. When you feel the spoilage, you are not banished from reality; you are invited to turn from the seen to the I AM that experiences the seeing. The 'spoiler' is not a punishment but a signal that identity can outgrow its possessive vineyards. Sit with this truth: you are not your vines, your fruits, or your geography; you are the consciousness in which every scene arises. In that stillness, you may find that the lament softens into gratitude, for the inner garden remains intact within awareness, ready to bear new fruit in a different sea. This is not denial but a reorientation: from what happens to you to who you are while it happens.
Practice This Now
Sit quietly, breathe, and declare: I AM the I that harvests in the garden of consciousness; envision the vines thriving in the sea of awareness and feel the abundance returning as your sense of self shifts.
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