Inner Famine, Inner Deliverance
Ezekiel 14:13-14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 14 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Grievous sin invites famine and judgment in the land, and even the great righteous—Noah, Daniel, and Job—would deliver only their own souls by their righteousness. The verse points to inner responsibility rather than external rescue.
Neville's Inner Vision
Notice, I am the I AM addressing your dream of separation. When the land sins against me by trespassing grievously, my hand stretches forth and you feel famine in the realm of your thoughts. This famine is not punishment but a diagnostic signal for your inner economy. Noah, Daniel, and Job are not past ages; they are three steadfast states of consciousness—faith that refuses surrender, discernment that sees through fear, endurance that outlasts the storm. If these states dwell with you, they can only deliver their own souls by righteousness; you cannot borrow their righteousness to save another. So the famine invites you to revise your belief, to cease feeding on the old images of lack, and to awaken to a higher image of supply. The outer conditions reflect your inner conviction, and you are summoned to assume a new state where you are the source of bread—where the I AM, your true nature, sustains all life.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Assume the state of abundance is yours now. Feel it real by imagining the bread returning to your table and declaring, 'I am the I AM, and I am the supply.'
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