Inner Memory And Projections
Ezekiel 16:43-44 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 16 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage rebukes neglecting the original, innocent state of consciousness and fretting over external matters. It also shows how inner patterns repeat outwardly, as expressed by the 'mother and daughter' proverb.
Neville's Inner Vision
Remember, Ezekiel is not condemning a distant God, but awakening you to the fact that you are the I AM behind every act. When you forget the days of thy youth—your pristine, childlike awareness—you begin fretting the self and charging life with guilt, and you reap the results in your own mind as recompense upon your head. The line 'as is the mother, so is her daughter' speaks to the loops of inner habit that run from one generation of consciousness to the next; the outward life mirrors the inner state you refuse to revise. The remedy is not struggle but a change of state: assume the natural memory of your initial innocence as your current possibility. Enter the feeling of your true youth-state and dwell there until it becomes the dominant mood; the outer circumstances then rearrange to reflect that new inner image. Your present acts and appearances are the echo of a forgotten truth; return to the I AM, and the memory will rewrite your world.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit in quiet stillness and re-evoke the original awareness of your youth; feel it present now. Then revise by declaring, I AM that I AM, and dwell in that assumption until it feels real.
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