Inner Detachment as Spiritual Power

Ezekiel 24:16 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Ezekiel 24 in context

Scripture Focus

16Son of man, behold, I take away from thee the desire of thine eyes with a stroke: yet neither shalt thou mourn nor weep, neither shall thy tears run down.
Ezekiel 24:16

Biblical Context

God is described as removing the desire of the eyes and commanding that mourning not be shown. It signals an inner shift where loss is faced with awareness rather than emotion.

Neville's Inner Vision

Imagine Ezekiel’s stroke as the I AM pruning your attachment to the outward eye—the longing that makes loss feel like a verdict. The removal is not punishment but a shift of focus from form to the formless awareness you really are. You are not the mourning body; you are the I AM that observes it. When God says, 'I take away,' He speaks within you as a present tense certainty: the outer spectacle can change, yet your inward man remains unmoved. So, refuse to cry in the old sense; instead, revise the sense itself. In the state of imagining 'I am' unaltered and intact, the desiring energy loosens its grip and reappears as clarity, as deeper faith, as a steadier sense of being. Persevere in that inner vision; let judgment fall away and watch how the world responds to your inner endowment. The promise is simple: you are not diminished by loss; you are expanded by correcting your inner alignment with the I AM.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes, rest in the I AM, and assume the state 'I am free from attachment to outward things.' Feel the feeling of release as the desire dissolves, and declare 'I AM' to seal it.

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