Weeping as Inner Prayer

Jeremiah 9:18 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Jeremiah 9 in context

Scripture Focus

18And let them make haste, and take up a wailing for us, that our eyes may run down with tears, and our eyelids gush out with waters.
Jeremiah 9:18

Biblical Context

Jeremiah 9:18 urges a swift lament, so tears may flow as an outward sign of collective sorrow. It points toward a future hope beyond the suffering.

Neville's Inner Vision

Within Neville Goddard’s lens, the wailing is not a plea to fate but a signal of your inner state pressing for a new version of reality. The verse speaks of tears, yet the real motion is the movement of consciousness toward the I AM, the awareness that you are the creator of your world. When you sense the urge to cry, do not chase the echo of outer conditions; instead use that feeling to anchor a revision: declare quietly, 'I am the state already possessed.' See the scene you desire as if it were present now—health, peace, mercy, resolution—until the imagined scene registers in your chest as a real sensation. The outward crying becomes a ritual that accompanies the inward taking of your attention away from lack and onto the abundant I AM. In this way the urgent call to weep becomes a gentle discipline, turning trial into a doorway for transformation. Your present tears are the weather; your inner assumption is the sun behind it, gradually warming the world into your new reality.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Close your eyes, breathe, and feel the I AM holding the desired state; repeat, 'I am the state now.' Then revise a current situation by imagining it already resolved, and let that feeling sink into your body.

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