Inner Famine, Inner Provision

Jeremiah 52:6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 52 in context

Scripture Focus

6And in the fourth month, in the ninth day of the month, the famine was sore in the city, so that there was no bread for the people of the land.
Jeremiah 52:6

Biblical Context

Jeremiah 52:6 paints a city under siege where famine is severe and bread is scarce. It marks a moment of collective hardship.

Neville's Inner Vision

The narrative is not about weathered walls and starved mouths alone; it is a parable of your inner atmosphere. The city is your mind, and the famine is the moment you believe there is not enough to go around. Bread becomes a symbol for nourishment, vitality, and the ease of life you have forgotten you can imagine into being. In this light, nothing is truly missing; what you call lack is a habit of attention. The I AM—the eternal aware self you truly are—rests beneath the scene, untouched by fear. To alter the outcome, you do not plead with circumstances but revise your state of consciousness. Begin by choosing a new assumption: I am supplied; my inner world abundantly nourishes me now. Feel as if the loaf is already in your hand, the table is full, and all concerns soften into peace. As you dwell in that conviction, the inner movements shift before outward appearances do; freedom grows from within, and the siege of lack dissolves. Fourth-month scarcity becomes a signal to remember your power to imagine, and your reality follows your inner decree.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Close your eyes and assume, 'I am supplied now.' Feel the relief spreading through you; then picture a loaf on your table and share it with generosity, letting abundance rest in your body.

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