Inner City of Guilt Unveiled
Ezekiel 24:6-8 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 24 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage warns of a 'bloody city' and urges that guilt be exposed and removed, not hidden or covered. It links inner wrongdoing to divine judgment, insisting that the guilty be confronted openly so vengeance can be avoided by confession.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within this Ezekiel oracle, the 'bloody city' is a state of consciousness in which guilt remains unaddressed. The scum in the pot stands for impure thoughts and actions kept in the dark, horrified at exposure, yet never dissolved. When God says to bring the blood out and set it on the rock, He reveals that the interior process can only be cleansed by conscious awareness, not by external ritual. In Neville's terms, the I AM—your living awareness—must witness every fragment of memory, every buried motive, until it is seen for what it is and released. The 'top of a rock' denotes a fixed vantage point of consciousness from which you observe your inner weather without flinching; the urge to cover or forget is the very impulse creating fury. To reinterpret, you mirror the action of exposing the inner scum to the light of now, permitting judgment to move through you and away from you. The consequence of such witnessing is not punishment but a clarified, untangled energy returning to its source.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes and assume 'I AM' is fully aware of this inner state. Picture the pot, its scum, and the blood being moved from concealment to the rock of present awareness, then dissolving in its light.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









