Moab's Derision Within: Inner Breakthrough

Jeremiah 48:39 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 48 in context

Scripture Focus

39They shall howl, saying, How is it broken down! how hath Moab turned the back with shame! so shall Moab be a derision and a dismaying to all them about him.
Jeremiah 48:39

Biblical Context

The verse depicts Moab's collapse and shame, showing it as a derision to all around.

Neville's Inner Vision

I tell you, Moab is not a nation; it is the stubborn pride within you that clings to separate self-sufficiency. When the inner image that sustained the ego is broken—the back turned in shame—the mind cries out in derision, as the outer world mirrors the inner movement. The verse does not threaten you; it reveals the natural law: every state that cannot accept its true identity dissolves into derision as it loses belief in itself. But the derision is not punishment; it is the clearing wind that reveals the underlying I AM, the awareness that remains when all images crumble. Therefore, you need not fear the cry of others; use it as a cue to revise your inner scene. Assume the feeling that you are already whole, that you have never left your source, and that the "Moab" you cherish—your pride, your dependence on separation—has fallen away. In that revised state, the world will reflect confidence rather than derision, and the scattered around you will become encouragement, even return to you as peace.

Practice This Now

Assume the state of wholeness now; feel the I AM as your core awareness. Revise the scene of breakdown into steadfast inner peace and dwell in that feeling until it is real.

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