Inner Exposé and Return

Jeremiah 49:10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 49 in context

Scripture Focus

10But I have made Esau bare, I have uncovered his secret places, and he shall not be able to hide himself: his seed is spoiled, and his brethren, and his neighbours, and he is not.
Jeremiah 49:10

Biblical Context

Jeremiah 49:10 speaks of exposing hidden places and the spoilage of seed, inviting inner self-awareness and accountability for what lies within.

Neville's Inner Vision

Esau in Jeremiah stands for that part of you which hides, excuses, and blames. When the oracle declares, I have made Esau bare, it is an invitation to wake within: expose the secret places of thought you have trusted to separate you from others and from your own sense of worth. The 'seed' that seems spoiled is simply the unfertilized potential living behind the habit of denial. As you stop shielding it with numbness, the brethren and neighbors you once judged become symbols of your own latent powers waiting to be purified by discernment. In this light, judgment becomes accountability to your I AM, not punishment; exile becomes a turning inward, and return becomes a settled feeling of being at home in your true state. The divine justice that matters is your inner alignment with truth, your firm assertion that you are the thought that imagines your world. When you realize you are the I AM imagining, the hidden places dissolve into light, and your life reflects that truth, leaving you free and newly awake.

Practice This Now

Imaginative Act: Sit quietly, declare, 'I AM, reveal now,' and revise any fear as already dissolved; then imagine a light uncovering a hidden corner of your mind and feel the truth that you stand unhidden and free.

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