The Iron Wall Inside You
Ezekiel 4:3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 4 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Ezekiel is commanded to set an iron pan as a wall between himself and the city, signaling an impending siege to the house of Israel.
Neville's Inner Vision
Think of the wall not as metal in space but as a fixed inner standpoint. In Neville’s language, the city is your outward circumstance; the siege is the outer effect of an inner conviction. The iron wall is a state you choose to hold, a boundary you press into with the I AM presence until the thought-feeling there becomes more real than the storm outside. When you set your face against the city, you are not resisting reality; you are refusing to identify with it. The sign is not a punishment but a symbol that your inner disposition has formed a gate through which a new Israel - your higher agreement with your true nature - may emerge. Judgment and accountability become tenderness: you acknowledge that you confirm your life by what you persistently imagine. The wall, therefore, becomes a boundary you consecrate with attention toward your desired state, not a barrier to escape. Exile is the old identity dissolving, and return is the felt sense of your new covenant in action. Your imagination is both siege and besieged, only by your choice of consciousness.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and imagine the I AM erecting an iron wall around your inner city. Then assume the feeling of the wish fulfilled - declare 'I AM free now' - and let that reality feel more real than the siege you see.
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