Inner Temple Reclaimed
2 Chronicles 36:19-20 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 2 Chronicles 36 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Jerusalem's temple is burned, its walls broken, and the vessels destroyed. The survivors are carried away to Babylon and become servants there.
Neville's Inner Vision
From the Neville vantage, the burnt house of God is not a history lesson but a mirror of a mind in upheaval. The walls that came down are the inner barriers—doubt, grievance, separation—falling away under the heat of imagined reality. The vessels burned signify worn-out ideas of value, the outdated patterns by which you once measured yourself. The exile to Babylon is the soul’s temporary relocation from familiar conditioned thoughts; it is not punishment but a rearrangement of consciousness, a shifting of the I AM from one focus to another. When the heart ceases to identify with outer forms, a higher ruling presence—Persia as a symbol of a new inner government—begins to reign in the inner city. Destruction precedes freedom: the material world thins so you can awaken to the truth that you are always the I AM imagining yourself. The practical path is revision: declare the inner temple safe now; bless the vessels you choose with spiritual qualities through imagination. Your state of consciousness becomes the city that endures the fire.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes. Picture the inner temple intact and feel the I AM sovereign over your mind. Revise the memory of destruction by imagining a rebuilt temple now.
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