All Souls Are Mine

Ezekiel 18:4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Ezekiel 18 in context

Scripture Focus

4Behold, all souls are mine; as the soul of the father, so also the soul of the son is mine: the soul that sinneth, it shall die.
Ezekiel 18:4

Biblical Context

Ezekiel 18:4 declares that all souls belong to God and that responsibility and consequences follow from one's inner state; the father and son symbolize generations sharing the same divine source.

Neville's Inner Vision

Within us, the 'father' and the 'son' are not two beings but two states of consciousness under one Sovereign I AM. The phrase 'Behold, all souls are mine' asserts that the entire theater of experience originates in awareness; the law of life does not punish from outside, it moves from within as you identify with a given feeling or image. When you 'sin'—that is, when you accept a limited image as real—you die to that image, the sense of separation dissolves in consciousness, and the page of your life turns to reflect the new inner state. Ezekiel's law is not about external fate but about inner cause and effect: you can revise your life by returning to the I AM and choosing a truer self-state. The father and the son are simply the same I AM wearing different garments; if you condemn one generation, you condemn your own inner state. Rejoice: you are the I AM, and you can shift your world by imagining yourself already there, aligning feelings with the state you wish to inhabit.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Sit quietly, declare 'I am the I AM' and feel that you own every circumstance. For 3–5 minutes revise a current situation by imagining you already exist in the desired state.

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