Walls, Spoils, and Inner Provision
Ezekiel 26:12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 26 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse depicts enemies spoiling riches, destroying merchandise, and breaking walls. It also shows stones, timber, and dust cast into the water.
Neville's Inner Vision
To the observer within, Ezekiel's ruin is not a catastrophe but a clearing of old forms. The spoil and the prey are the remnants of cherished identities your present awareness no longer requires. The walls that fall and the pleasant houses that vanish are the dissolution of former definitions of security. The stones, timber, and dust laid in the midst of the water signify that the external, tangible forms are being dissolved into the flow of life so your mind can recompose itself anew. Remember, in this system God is I AM—the living awareness that never diminishes even as forms dissolve. The destruction of the outward city is the inner invitation to re-create from the ground up: you are not losing wealth but reordering consciousness. Wealth becomes confidence, provision becomes imagination, and the exile you experience is the mind’s temporary withdrawal from old identifications. Embrace the change; revise your assumption about self and world, and feel the end you desire already present in your I AM. When you claim that end as now, the inner walls are rebuilt according to your renewed conviction.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Close your eyes, assume the end is already true, and feel it as real in your body. Bless your inner walls as they rise anew from the energy of I AM.
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