Inner Peace Against Dan's Horses
Jeremiah 8:15-16 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Jeremiah 8 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jeremiah declares that people looked for peace and health, but trouble came instead. The imagery of Dan's horses shows a land and city overwhelmed by invading forces.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the Neville Goddard fashion, the verses reveal a state of consciousness rather than a mere external event. The land, the city, and the “snorting of horses” are inner terrains—barriers in the mind that arise when fear governs perception. Peace and health are not guarantees handed by circumstance but states you either inhabit or abandon. The invasion represents the outward projection of inner thoughts—images of lack, threat, and urgency that you have consented to with attention. To reclaim sovereignty, you do not beg external conditions to change; you shift your inner assumption. Where Jeremiah reads signs of destruction, you read the proof of your own imagining. By affirming the I AM as your unshakable reality, you revise the scene from lack to fullness, until the sense of safety becomes undeniable. The practice is a mental act of faith: occupy the fulfilled state now, feel its stability bodily, and let the outer world align with that inner decree. Your true prophecy is the inner conviction that peace, health, and safety are already yours.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, breathe, and assume 'I am at peace now.' Dwell in that feeling until the sense of harmony saturates your body; then revise the scene by imagining the horses calmed and the land restored to health.
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