Inner Voice, Outer Proclamation

Ezekiel 2:7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Ezekiel 2 in context

Scripture Focus

7And thou shalt speak my words unto them, whether they will hear, or whether they will forbear: for they are most rebellious.
Ezekiel 2:7

Biblical Context

God instructs Ezekiel to speak His words to the rebellious people, whether they listen or not. The emphasis is on obeying the inner word, regardless of outward reception.

Neville's Inner Vision

Here the command is not about geography or audience; it is a correction of consciousness. The 'voice' you hear is God within—the I AM—speaking as your own awareness. The 'people' who resist are your outer conditions, habits, and beliefs that insist your inner truth must stay private or change to please others. By commanding you to speak anyway, the text invites you to hold steady the assumed reality of that inner Word. When you assume the Word is spoken through you, you align with your true nature as creator of experience. Your Ezekiel is the inner you, who declares 'I am the Word, and the world reflects that conviction.' The more you persist in acting from that inner 'Yes,' the less power the outer rebellion has to shape you. The practice is an exercise in faith: you revise your sense of self and speak the divine Word into your day until it becomes your lived experience.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes, place a hand on your chest, and declare, 'I am speaking the Word now.' Persist in the feeling of it real until your inner sense shifts toward the Word you know you are.

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