Inner Horses of Jeremiah

Jeremiah 8:16 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 8 in context

Scripture Focus

16The snorting of his horses was heard from Dan: the whole land trembled at the sound of the neighing of his strong ones; for they are come, and have devoured the land, and all that is in it; the city, and those that dwell therein.
Jeremiah 8:16

Biblical Context

Jeremiah 8:16 tells of horsemen from Dan whose thunder shakes the land and devours the city. It pictures external upheaval as a metaphor for inner disturbance within the psyche.

Neville's Inner Vision

To the I AM within, the snorting horses are not an army in the night but the roaring movements of a belief you have accepted as true. The land that trembles is your inner state, stirred by a perception of lack, danger, or loss, and the city represents your chosen identity under that impression. In Neville's terms, God is the I AM—the unchanging awareness that you are, here and now. When you allow the mind to be ruled by such images, you invite their power to devour the landscape of your life. Yet the true power lies in revision: you stand as the sovereign observer who commands the scene, disarming the horses by assuming a higher state. Imagine the horses falling back into their stalls, the land becoming still, and the city restored to harmony by your conscious assumption of wholeness. The invasion thus becomes a summons to awaken your inner dominion, to return to the constant presence of I AM where no external force can truly disturb you.

Practice This Now

Imaginative Act: Close your eyes and revise the scene—see the horses coming but now standing calm at your command; feel the land within as unmoved. Repeat softly, 'I AM that I AM; this world is my being I have created through imagination.'

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