Inner Invasion and Mercy
Jeremiah 5:15-18 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 5 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jeremiah speaks of a distant nation arising against Israel, devouring harvest and wealth, yet promising not to bring a total end.
Neville's Inner Vision
Consider the 'nation from far' as a projection of your own unfamiliar thoughts—beliefs you call foreign, yet which border your inner kingdom. The language you do not understand is the unfamiliar dialect of fear, doubt, and deprivation that slips into your awareness when you forget the I AM. The quiver as an open sepulchre is the weaponry of old thoughts that promise to pierce your peace; know these are not separate powers but current states of consciousness you have invited through attention. When they sweep through your harvest, your bread, your vines, they reveal where you have identified with lack. Yet the LORD’s statement, 'Nevertheless in those days, I will not make a full end with you,' is the assurance that your essential self remains intact; the invading scene is a call to re-choose, not a verdict of final doom. Return to the awareness that you are the I AM, the source of all you perceive. By a deliberate shift in assumption, you convert the adversary into a signpost that invites you back to abundance.
Practice This Now
Impose an immediate practice: Sit quietly, declare 'I am the I AM; this consciousness is my only reality.' Feel the truth of that statement spreading through you, then imagine the invading nation bowing out and your fields restored.
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