Judging My Inner City
Ezekiel 22:1-2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 22 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
God's word comes to Ezekiel to judge the bloody city and reveal its abominations. The passage signals accountability and the turning of inner corruption toward light. This call invites you to examine your inner states and move toward purification.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within the terms of Ezekiel, the word of the LORD is not a distant command but the living I AM awakening in you. The 'bloody city' is your own stirred mind, the collection of fears, judgments, and self-punishments you carry as if they were external. When Ezekiel asks, 'wilt thou judge?' you are being invited to stand as the observer of your interior weather, to name what you do not want and to expose its source with loving clarity. To 'show her all her abominations' is not to punish your past, but to bring light to hidden patterns so they can be rewritten. The moment you refuse to identify with the noise—without condemning the self you once believed you were—the inner city begins to change. The I AM within you remains untouched by fear; through your aware attention, it reorganizes thought, feeling, and image toward wholeness. Thus judgment becomes a healing act: a refined discernment that purifies by revelation, not by retribution.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes and assume the I AM is judging your inner city with compassionate clarity. Name one pattern you would discard and revise it into its opposite, then feel that new state fully as real.
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