Weeping for Inner Renewal

Jeremiah 9:1 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 9 in context

Scripture Focus

1Oh that my head were waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears, that I might weep day and night for the slain of the daughter of my people!
Jeremiah 9:1

Biblical Context

Jeremiah 9:1 voices a prophet's longing to mourn the devastation of his people. The cry is a felt interior landscape of compassion that invites inner transformation.

Neville's Inner Vision

That verse is a vivid portrait of your inner weather. The head as waters and the eyes a fountain of tears are symbols of a consciousness overflowed with compassion. You are not lamenting a distant history; you are tuning your inner state to the truth that all life is one I AM presence. When you accept the I AM as the source of every image, that sorrow begins to loosen the grip of fear simply by moving through you. The slain refer to the old self-images and beliefs that perish when faced with the light of awareness. Let your imagination mourn them into release; let the tears wash away the belief in separation and scarcity. In doing so, you awaken to a continuous presence that remains steady beneath shifting appearances. Picture a future where the people live and prosper, and feel that vision already real in your consciousness. The act of mourning becomes a doorway to renewal, not a retreat into pain, because you are the I AM that never ceases to be.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and, as the I AM, imagine your head as waters and your eyes as a fountain of tears; then revise the scene by feeling the tears dissolving limiting beliefs, awakening a fresh sense of presence.

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