Inner Hunger Divine Nourishment

Ezekiel 4:17 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Ezekiel 4 in context

Scripture Focus

17That they may want bread and water, and be astonied one with another, and consume away for their iniquity.
Ezekiel 4:17

Biblical Context

The verse depicts a people hungry and thirsty, astonished by one another, and wasting away because of iniquity. It points to an inner cause behind apparent famine.

Neville's Inner Vision

Consider Ezekiel 4:17 as a revelation about your inner weather. The famine described is not a distant famine but a state of consciousness—lack that arises when the I AM is not recognized as your source. Bread and water symbolize nourishment supplied by awareness itself. When the mind indulges in misalignment—what the Bible calls iniquity—the heart grows anxious, and people gaze at one another with bewilderment instead of turning inward. The result is energy wasted in fear, in conjecture, and in blaming others; a mutual astonishment that drains vitality and leaves the psyche depleted. Neville's practice asks you to reverse this picture: assume the feeling of your wish fulfilled; revise the belief that you are separated from supply; and dwell in the realization that I AM is the ever-present bread and living water. In that inner state you become the exiled soul returning to self, restored by a quiet abundance that precedes any external sign. By changing the inner measure, the outer scene shifts, and famine yields to a feast of awareness.

Practice This Now

Sit quietly, close your eyes, and imagine you are already fed—bread and water flowing from your I AM. Feel the nourishment as a present reality and repeat, 'I AM nourished by my own awareness' until lack dissolves.

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