Inner Harvest Prophecy

Jeremiah 50:16 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 50 in context

Scripture Focus

16Cut off the sower from Babylon, and him that handleth the sickle in the time of harvest: for fear of the oppressing sword they shall turn every one to his people, and they shall flee every one to his own land.
Jeremiah 50:16

Biblical Context

Jeremiah 50:16 describes cutting off the sower and the harvester as fear drives people to retreat to their own land, signaling upheaval and judgment.

Neville's Inner Vision

Viewed through the Neville lens, the verse is a portrait of inner economy rather than a political scene. Babylon is a state of mind distracted by appearances; the sower and the one who handles the sickle are the patterns of thought that plant and reap in consciousness. When the fear of the oppressing sword arises, the mind turns away from joint action and threads back to its own territory—the land of awareness within. This is not punishment for others but a shift in your inner climate. The cut off sower is the moment you stop sowing in faith, and the harvest keeper is the trust you withhold from the present; fear dictates retreat to safety, and so events rearrange themselves to reflect that inner decree. Yet the law remains: you are the I AM, the one who imagines and thus manifests. Exile and return describe the oscillation of consciousness between doubt and realization. If you persist in the assumption that you are the ground of all supply, your external field appears renewed, even in the face of apparent destruction. The journey ends where it began—in the awareness that you are the land that yields.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Assume you are the sower and the harvest. Revise your state by affirming I am the land of my own consciousness and feel it real.

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