Desolate the Old Self Within

Ezekiel 35:7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Ezekiel 35 in context

Scripture Focus

7Thus will I make mount Seir most desolate, and cut off from it him that passeth out and him that returneth.
Ezekiel 35:7

Biblical Context

Mount Seir is made desolate, and those who pass out or return are cut off. The verse signals a decisive end to a pattern of leaving and returning.

Neville's Inner Vision

Mount Seir is not a place in the map but a stubborn pattern in your mind. When I declare that I will make Mount Seir desolate, I am speaking to the power of awareness to erase the conditions you have unconsciously fed by fear and division. The 'him that passeth out' and the 'him that returneth' are two aspects of the same old self—the impulse to go away and the urge to come back, both of which keep you tethered to a cycle. To desolate means to stop feeding that cycle with attention; to cut off means to refuse identification with either exit or return. As you dwell in the I Am, you offer a new orbit for your life, one in which the inner landscape is cleared of that old traffic. The desert becomes a doorway into the now; your consciousness stands sovereign, and restoration follows as a natural act of being.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Sit quietly, close your eyes, and assume the I AM has already desolated Mount Seir within you. Feel the peace as the old pattern of leaving and returning dissolves, and rest in the assurance that your consciousness is fixed in wholeness.

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