Inner Gates, Inner Replenishment

Ezekiel 26:2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Ezekiel 26 in context

Scripture Focus

2Son of man, because that Tyrus hath said against Jerusalem, Aha, she is broken that was the gates of the people: she is turned unto me: I shall be replenished, now she is laid waste:
Ezekiel 26:2

Biblical Context

Tyre taunts Jerusalem's ruin, boasting that its gates were broken and that it will be replenished by external power; the verse frames ruin and restoration as a test of belief and outer pressure.

Neville's Inner Vision

Imagine Tyre’s boast as a counterfeit self, a voice within the mind declaring, 'Now I shall be replenished by outside powers.' Ezekiel is not addressing a city so much as unveiling a state of consciousness that depends on external supply. When Tyre says, 'Aha, she is broken... she is turned unto me,' it speaks of a belief in separation—the inner gates of the soul as things that can be looted by pride or fear. In Neville’s psychology, God is the I AM, the living awareness that cannot be diminished by appearances. The true replenishment comes not from Tyre's boast but from an inner alignment: the gates of consciousness opened by the realization that I am the source, the keeper of the gates, and the one who is replenished by the I AM. Exile and ruin then stand as turning points in the dream of lack, dissolving as you assume a state of fullness. The technique is simple: revise the scene in your mind until the sense of being supplied arises as a present fact, not a future hope.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes, revise the scene: 'I am replenished by the I AM,' and feel your inner gates opening to endless supply.

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