Inner Harvest of Jeremiah

Jeremiah 49:9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 49 in context

Scripture Focus

9If grapegatherers come to thee, would they not leave some gleaning grapes? if thieves by night, they will destroy till they have enough.
Jeremiah 49:9

Biblical Context

Jeremiah 49:9 speaks of gleaners leaving leftovers and thieves destroying until satisfied, illustrating how provision can feel secured or unsettled in our inner life.

Neville's Inner Vision

From the Neville Goddard lens, Jeremiah 49:9 is a map of the mind's economy. Grapegatherers and thieves are not outside marauders but inner movements of consciousness, currents that sweep through the field of awareness. When you dwell in the I AM—the unwavering sense of 'I am' that is your true wealth—then the damage of night and hunger cannot monopolize your harvest; the gleaning you leave behind becomes the seed for your next creation. The question 'would they not leave some gleaning grapes?' invites you to expect that even in thought-forms of scarcity there remains a trace of abundance, a seed you can assume into reality. If fear-sensing thieves approach, recognize them as habits of lack that thrive only when you forget your divine provision. By assuming the truth of your I AM provision, you revise the scene: the thieves dissolve as your inner sense of enough prevails. This practice aligns with righteousness and generosity; as you live from abundance, you naturally extend care to neighbor, and wealth becomes provision for all. The inner harvest precedes outward plenty.

Practice This Now

Imaginative_act: Close your eyes and assume the feeling 'I AM abundance now'; dwell in that state for a few minutes, imagining a field of ripe grapes, and revise any lack thoughts with the certainty of the I AM.

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