Inner Judgment and Idolatry
Ezekiel 23:44-45 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 23 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse pictures spiritual adultery and judgment. People chase idols and imitate the behavior of a harlot, and the judgment that follows mirrors those acts, with guilt indicated by blood on the hands.
Neville's Inner Vision
Viewed through the Neville lens, the scene is not about distant nations but about your own inner states. Aholah and Aholibah stand for two persistent habits of longing—the pull toward images that promise life apart from the I AM. Going in unto them is the mind's capitulation to seductive pictures, a temporary alignment with a belief that a different object can complete you. The righteous men who will judge—your inner standards—do so after the manner of adulteresses, revealing that judgment arises from the same energy that fed the idols: the habit of condemning or excusing yourself by outer measures rather than aligning with the I AM. Blood on their hands marks the consequence of living by appearances rather than by truth. In Neville's practice, you reverse this by turning the gaze inward: refuse to worship a separate object and affirm that you as I AM are complete, here and now. The inner judge becomes your ally when you treat it as a faithful manifestation, not a sheriff of guilt, and you awaken to true worship within.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and imagine the I AM as your true governor. Visualize Aholah and Aholibah dissolving into light as the inner judge rests in your wholeness.
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