Inner Lament for Tyre

Ezekiel 27:2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Ezekiel 27 in context

Scripture Focus

2Now, thou son of man, take up a lamentation for Tyrus;
Ezekiel 27:2

Biblical Context

Ezekiel is commanded to lament Tyre, turning the external city into a symbol of an inner condition.

Neville's Inner Vision

Tyre in Ezekiel's lament is not a distant city; it is a state of consciousness—pride, wealth, outward power clinging to form. When he is told to lament Tyre, you hear the invitation to revise that image from the mind within. The I AM, your true awareness, stands behind every thought, and the lament is the act of letting that old image die so a truer sense of being can be born. Feel the grip of Tyre loosening as you acknowledge that what you have worshiped as security is only a dream of separation; return to the I AM, to the fountain of life that animates all. The process is practical: you mourn the old form, not the city, and you replace it with the certainty that you are the living idea of God in you. The moment you presume a new state—wholeness, abundance, resilience—you discover that judgment yields to insight, exile to return, and exile within becomes a journey home to your true self. Remember: imagination creates reality; the lament is a revision of your inner weather toward peace.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and assume the stance of mourning Tyre as a false outer image; revise it by declaring, I am the I AM, and this old form has served its purpose, then feel the new inner state as real.

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