Valley Of Inner Treasure
Jeremiah 49:4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 49 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jeremiah 49:4 rebukes a prideful reliance on wealth, boasting in valleys and treasures. It reveals a mindset that asks, 'Who shall come unto me?' when the true source resides within.
Neville's Inner Vision
Jeremiah's line about the backsliding daughter is a parable of the mind that glories in external displays of security. The valleys and treasures are not distant lands but states of consciousness that pretend safety comes from coins, possessions, or status. When you trust in such things, you separate from the I AM who is the sole-provision and the source of all movement. The question, 'Who shall come unto me?' becomes a prayer to outer means, a futile attempt to summon help from without. In Neville’s practice, you reverse the scene: acknowledge that the inner I AM is already the supplier and inviter of every good. Real wealth is the awareness that I am the wealth that seeks you; outer treasures merely reflect your inner sovereignty back to you. As you revise this belief, you stop feeding pride with external assurances and instead dwell in the conviction, 'I am abundance incarnate.' With that shift, the inner life becomes a magnet; circumstances rearrange to match the renewed sense of being. The outer world then serves your inner state, not the other way around.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume the feeling, 'I am the abundance I seek'; repeat for a minute or two and imagine treasures dissolving into awareness of I AM.
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