Substituted Fuel for Bread
Ezekiel 4:15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 4 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
God commands a substitution: cow's dung will be used for man's dung to prepare bread. This occurs within exile, signaling constraint but also divine provisioning.
Neville's Inner Vision
Beloved, in Ezekiel the decree is outward, yet its meaning is inward: the bread you eat in exile is prepared with cow’s dung, a substitute allowed by the I AM. This is not a judgment to chastise your purity, but a demonstration that life can be nourished with the materials at hand when consciousness cooperates. In Neville’s psychology, places are inner dispositions and events are inner movements; the substitute points to the truth that your state of mind governs what passeth through your senses. If you insist on the 'man's dung' of self-importance, you keep your bread from entering your mouth of experience. When you accept the humble fuel, you awaken to the I AM’s provision operating through circumstance. The seeming deficiency reveals abundance when viewed as your own revision of reality. So, imagine that the bread is already baked from the substance that surrounds you—grace enacted in the material world—and feel gratitude as the meal of your life is served by your inner I AM.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume the bread is baked from present substance, nourished by humble fuel. Feel gratitude as the I AM supplies your need now.
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