Inner Famine, Inner Deliverance
Ezekiel 14:12-14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 14 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage shows that when the land sins grievously, God will unleash famine and, eventually, cut off life. Even the righteous Noah, Daniel, and Job would save only their own souls by their righteousness.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within Ezekiel, the land is a state of consciousness. When you claim the land sins against me by trespassing grievously, you are naming a misalignment in your own mind. The famine you sense is a call to revise your assumptions, not a punishment upon you. The 'staff of bread' is the idea you lean on—the sense of supply that feeds your life. If you seek relief from outside events alone, you sever yourself from the inner source. The mention of Noah, Daniel, and Job teaches that even the best in you will save only their own souls by righteousness, which is the continuous conversion of fear into trust, lack into abundance, and doubt into the I AM presence. Deliverance comes when your inner state changes; you awaken to the fact that I AM is your bread and your security. You are the righteous agent within your own mind; through that alignment the famine of limitation dissolves. Thus the outer world mirrors your inner conviction: a steady, unshakable sense that you are sustained and intact by your own inner righteousness.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume the feeling 'I AM the bread of my life,' dwell in the consciousness that sustains all beings. Feel-it-real by repeating silently until the inner image of plenty becomes a fact.
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