Inner Remembering and Covenant
Ezekiel 23:21 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 23 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse speaks of remembering the lewdness of youth and the bruising by the Egyptians, a symbolic memory of old loyalties and idolatrous cravings. It frames these memories as a test of covenant fidelity.
Neville's Inner Vision
Your memory of the lewdness of youth and the bruising by the Egyptians is not a decree of your past but a symbol of how you have allowed old loyalties and false worship to shape your sense of self. In the present reading, the Egyptians symbolize the habits, fears, and idolatrous scripts that have claimed your inner life. When you say 'I remember,' you are effectively calling forth a state of consciousness; that state can either bind you or be revised. The key is to realize that the I AM is always the witness within; you do not need to be defined by the script but can change it by an act of imagination. By choosing a new state—loyal to the covenant of your true being—you release the bruise and your nurture is returned to right use. The revising act is not denying the past but refusing its claim in the present. As you assume the feeling of the wish fulfilled and dwell in the inner light of the I AM, the old memory loses its power and your life aligns with holiness, separation from the old idolatries, and renewed loyalty to the divine within.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and recall the memory, then revise by declaring, 'I am the I AM; I revise that memory now; I am free from Egypt and loyal to the present covenant.' Feel this new state as already real.
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