The Inner Arm Breaks
Ezekiel 30:20-22 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 30 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The text proclaims Pharaoh’s power is broken and cannot be healed. God’s opposition signals a coming deliverance.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within the scripture, the arm Pharaoh raises is not a limb but a stubborn state of mind—the belief that power resides in external force. When Ezekiel speaks of breaking the arm and it shall not be bound up to be healed, he points to a radical inner revision: the I AM, your awakened awareness, dissolves the old pattern rather than patching it. The sword that would have defended that false power falls from Pharaoh’s hand because the inner governor has changed its command. This is not geopolitical drama but a revelation of your inner kingdom: a belief that binds you to fear, competition, or control is broken and rendered unhealable by any past method. Judgment here is liberation: once you accept that the outer event cannot restore the broken arm, you invite the liberating action of God—your own higher self—to operate. As you live from the I AM, the external "Pharaoh" loses its grip, and doors of deliverance open in your present experience.
Practice This Now
Assume the feeling of a liberated I AM and revise the belief: 'I am free; the old pattern is broken and cannot heal.' In a quiet moment, visualize Pharaoh’s arm breaking and the sword falling from its grip, then rest in the newly awakened awareness.
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