Turn Ye From Your Ways
Ezekiel 33:10-11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 33 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage says that if Israel feels weighed down by sin, they should turn away from their evil ways; God declares he has no pleasure in the death of the wicked and calls them to repent so they may live.
Neville's Inner Vision
Here is God’s invitation dressed as inner psychology: the 'wicked' are not a condemning figure but a habit of mind clinging to transgressions. When Ezekiel asks, you wonder how you shall live under the weight of blame; the answer comes as a declaration of your own I AM. God says, I live; not in judgment, but in the livingness of awareness. To turn from your way is to revise the mental image you hold of yourself. You must not beg for mercy from an outer tribunal, but freely choose a new script inside your own mind and feel it as real. If you persist in the old ways, you pine away; if you choose a new life, you live now by the power of your assumption. The call to 'turn' is a call to abandon death-thinking and embrace life-thinking. Your change of scenery is interior; the body follows the shift of consciousness. So, proclaim, 'I turn from my old thoughts and live,' and let the inner atmosphere rearrange your outer experience. The moment you assume life, you are already there.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: In a quiet moment, declare 'I AM life within me' and 'I turn from my old thoughts now.' Feel the shift as a real, living sensation, and remain with that assumed state for a minute or two.
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