Isles, Kings, and Inner Renewal
Ezekiel 27:35-36 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 27 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage shows an outward power—like the isles' astonishment and the king's fear—leading to ruin for the old image. It suggests that when the inner state changes, the external identity cannot endure and is removed.
Neville's Inner Vision
To me this scene mirrors the drama of consciousness. The inhabitants of the isles are the many voices within you—habits, opinions, memories—shaped by the old self. The kings who tremble are the moments your awareness encounters a newer you, and they recoil because the old order senses it cannot rule you any longer. When Ezekiel speaks of becoming a terror and never being again, he is not forecasting a punishment upon others, but describing a transformation of your inner weather. The old persona, the image you protected in the outer world, dissolves as the I AM—your constant awareness—steps forth. The outside tremors and hissings fade because you realize you write the world through consciousness, not the other way around. Judgment and exile thus become promises: you can leave behind the fallen self and dwell in a steadfast, living presence. This is the moment the inner and outer align, and your reality shifts in the fire of your attention.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume the I AM as your sole reality; revise the old self as already dissolved and feel the new, steadfast presence rise. Let the isles and merchants look on in astonishment as fear dissolves into certainty.
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