Endings of Form, I AM
Ecclesiastes 12:6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ecclesiastes 12 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Ecclesiastes 12:6 presents end-times imagery—the silver cord, the golden bowl, the pitcher, and the wheel—announcing the approaching end of life and its familiar supports. It invites reflection on the fragility of what we rely on.
Neville's Inner Vision
To the reader, the imagery is not about death as a fact, but about a shift in consciousness. The silver cord, the golden bowl, the pitcher, the wheel—these are the supports by which you have believed your life was carried. When you awake to your I AM, you discover that these images announce the loosening of your old sense of self; the end of a chapter is simply the end of an old mode of identification. The end is not tragedy; it is the completion of one state and the birth of another. In the Neville mode, you're not waiting for external events but performing an inner act: assume a state where you are the life within every form—the I AM—and feel the renewal as the new vessel of your experience. The seemingly broken vessels become channels through which inner wisdom flows, guiding you through trials toward a future built on lasting awareness rather than fading appearances.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and declare, 'I am the I AM now; the old self dies to reveal the new.' Feel the release of every attachment as a fresh life-force courses through you.
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