Sighs as Inner Change
Ezekiel 21:6-7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 21 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
In Ezekiel 21:6–7, the prophet sighs with bitter emotion as a sign that coming news will change things. When people ask why, he says the tidings are coming, and fear will give way to weakness.
Neville's Inner Vision
Viewed through the I AM, Ezekiel’s sigh is not a cry of doom but the inward contraction of a consciousness poised for transformation. The breaking of the loins and bitter sigh are symbols of old beliefs yielding to a newer state of awareness. When the question is asked—why do you sigh?—your answer is not about external events but about your inner decree: it cometh because you have already allowed a change to take root in your imagination. As you align with the I AM, the heart that melts and the knees that tremble reveal the old structures surrendering to the new order you are now feeling. The coming of the tidings is the moment when your inner state matches the reality you desire; the outer signs merely confirm what you have allowed to exist in consciousness. The verse invites you to treat change as a guaranteed result of your inner state, to refuse to identify with fear, and to hold the end you seek as already real. When you do, you will find the tremor yields to an effortless, radiant certainty, and your world begins to reflect that inner pivot.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and revise by assuming the end you desire is already real; feel the relief as your I AM welcomes the coming change. Then silently declare, 'It cometh,' letting that certainty settle into your chest.
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