Ezekiel's Inner Temple
Ezekiel 41:11-14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 41 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage describes the side-chamber doors facing the remaining space and the measured proportions of the temple. It emphasizes disciplined boundaries for what is holy.
Neville's Inner Vision
The doors, walls, and measures are not brick-and-mortar in an external temple; they are the map of your inner life. The 'place left' and the directions north and south mirror the directions of your attention. The hundred-cubit length and the five-cubit thickness describe the discipline and integrity of your awareness, the boundaries by which consciousness knows itself as Presence. When you see the temple as your own mind, God becomes the I AM within, not a distant deity but the very act of awareness looking through the windows of your thoughts. To honor these inner symmetries is to invite worship - true worship - by aligning belief with feeling and by allowing purity and integrity to define your state. The separate place at the western end marks a boundary between ordinary thought and higher revelation; treat it as a discipline of attention rather than a wall to fear. As you dwell in this image, you awaken to a sanctuary that exists wherever you turn your awareness. The doors facing inward become doors of possibility, and the whole structure testifies that your consciousness is the temple in which Presence lives.
Practice This Now
Sit quietly and envision the inner temple within your mind. Assume you already inhabit its Presence, feel the I AM filling every chamber, and revise any sense of lack by affirming the sanctuary is complete.
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