The Inner Pharaoh's Greatness
Ezekiel 31:2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 31 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Pharaoh's boastful greatness is challenged. Ezekiel asks him to compare his power to others, exposing pride as an inner state that governs outward events.
Neville's Inner Vision
Pharaoh is not a distant king but a state of consciousness within you—a gilded image of power that believes it stands apart from God. Ezekiel's question, 'Whom art thou like in thy greatness?' nudges you to look inward at the I AM that animates every scene. The cedar of Lebanon symbolizes a mind-constructed grandeur that feeds pride rather than truth. Yet the inner ruler remains the I AM, forgotten only by the habit of identification with outer forms. When you hear the challenge, answer as the I AM: there is no one like the I AM within me; I am the source of all power. Then revise the image from external dominion to inward awareness. Live from that state until outward kingdoms recede and you stand in the living I AM, sovereign in consciousness.
Practice This Now
Assume the state: I AM the sole power in this scene. Then feel the outer grandeur fading as the inner awareness remains.
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