Inner Babylon Restored
Jeremiah 50:11-13 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 50 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage condemns those who celebrate the ruin of what is sacred, prophesying that such pride will turn their land into a wilderness and leave them desolate. It invites a turn toward inner restoration instead of outward rejoicing.
Neville's Inner Vision
Your text is not about nations, but states of consciousness. The destroyers of mine heritage are the thoughts that celebrate separation and power over God within you. Babylon, therefore, is the accursed pride in your mind, a landscape where you rejoice in appearances and forget your true inheritance as I AM. When you feed that pride, the mother who bore you—the original consciousness—becomes ashamed, and the inner country becomes a wilderness: the hindermost of the nations, a land uninhabited by the living you. The wrath of the LORD is not punishment from a distant God, but a natural consequence of living by fear, doubt, and exterior standards. The moment you refuse that story and return to I AM, you invert the scene. Declare and feel that your true dwelling place is within, that your inner inheritance is secure in God within you. Then the wilderness dissolves and the city of awareness rises again in your mind. You inhabit it by assumption, revision, and the steady feeling that you are indeed the steward of your own inner empire.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Close your eyes, repeat 'I AM' until you feel the truth as yours, and revise the scene by picturing the desolate land turning to a garden, the city of awareness alive within you.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









