Inner Valley of Hamongog
Ezekiel 39:11-12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 39 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
On that day, graves are prepared for Gog and his multitude in Israel, and seven months are spent burying them to cleanse the land. The act of burial signals purification, removing the remnants of violence from the land.
Neville's Inner Vision
As I read Ezekiel in this light, Gog appears not as a distant foe but as a stubborn belief in limitation within you. The grave-place in Israel becomes a conscious decision to lay to rest the image of yourself that fears the world, the 'multitude' of old thoughts that pile up in your mind. The valley called Hamon-Gog is a symbolic doorway inside the mind—east of the sea marking a boundary you choose to cross by attention and feeling. The seven months of burying are the disciplined days of revision: you do not argue with the old story but bury it, stopping its odor from polluting the senses of others in your life. As you permit this inner burial, you cleanse your land—your thoughts, emotions, and habits—so that the I AM can emerge more fully. The act is not punishment but release: you are removing the memory of defeat to invite fresh power and harmony through imagination.
Practice This Now
Practice: Sit in quiet and revise one limiting belief—say, 'The old self is buried in Hamongog.' Feel it real for seven breaths, then imagine the inner land becoming clear and ready for new life.
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