Voice Restored From Inner Exile
Ezekiel 19:8-9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 19 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verses describe a figure pressed by hostile forces, trapped, and carried away, losing his voice on the mountains of Israel. In Neville's terms, this depicts the inner exile of fearful thoughts that bind the self from its true voice.
Neville's Inner Vision
Viewed through the I AM of consciousness, the one spoken of is not a nation’s captive but a state of awareness that has wandered from its own heights. The nations around him are competing thoughts and stories you accept about yourself; the net spread over him is the habit of limitation you have allowed into your psyche. Being taken into the pit and held in chains is the moment when imagination forgets its own sovereign power and yields to fear. The king of Babylon is the dominant external authority you have given to your narratives, your belief that life is ruled by forces outside your control, so your voice, once heard on the mountains of Israel, goes silent. Yet all of this is internal; it is a sequence of inner movements, not final facts. By assuming a new state of consciousness—the I AM that you are—you reverse the scene. Let the nets dissolve, the pit vanish, and the voice return to the mountains. Your invitation is to claim authority here and now, inside your own mind, and to hear your true vibration speak again.
Practice This Now
Assume you are unbound and heard. Revise the belief that your inner voice is silenced, and feel it real returning to the mountains of your awareness.
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