Untempered Mortar Fall

Ezekiel 13:11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Ezekiel 13 in context

Scripture Focus

11Say unto them which daub it with untempered morter, that it shall fall: there shall be an overflowing shower; and ye, O great hailstones, shall fall; and a stormy wind shall rend it.
Ezekiel 13:11

Biblical Context

The verse addresses those who cover truth with untempered mortar. Their false shelter will fall under a mighty storm.

Neville's Inner Vision

Notice that Ezekiel does not threaten an external enemy; he names a restless condition within the mind that pretends to be enduring wall. The daubing with untempered morter is a symbol of beliefs that have not been tested by the inner heat of awareness. In Neville's language, the 'I AM' is the only reality; you are not at the mercy of kingdoms, you are the experiencer whose consciousness forms the seen. When you cling to a structure built from uncertain premises, a stormy wind, overflowing shower, and great hailstones appear to rend it apart. These outward signs are only the inner movements you fail to witness clearly—your fears, doubts, and stories about lack. The moment you recognize that the wall is only a belief and not your essential self, you can withdraw your identification from the unstable mortar and rest in the steady consciousness of I AM. The prophecy becomes a promise: as you align with truth inside, the external form dissolves, and the life you live flows from a single, unshakable state.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Assume the I AM as your permanent state of awareness and revise any belief that you are protected by a structure of uncertain beliefs. Then feel the storm recede as you rest in the living truth within you.

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