Temple Wall Of Inner Grace
Ezekiel 41:20 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 41 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Cherubim and palm trees are described as carved decorations along the temple wall from the ground up to above the door.
Neville's Inner Vision
In this Ezekiel scene, the wall is not a mere external boundary but a map of your inner states. The cherubim and palm trees are not distant sculptures; they are the living images you permit in awareness—guardians of perception and tokens of true worship. From the ground to above the door signifies that every level of your consciousness—from habitual thought up to higher insight—belongs to the sacred. The temple is your own mind; the presence of God is the I AM that fills it. True worship is not outward ritual but the steady impression that this inner temple is inhabited by divine qualities—protection, abundance, reverence, fruitfulness. As you hold this vision, you align your thoughts with that reality, and the wall’s ornamentation becomes a certainty you carry, not a dream you forget. By imagining the door thus guarded, you re-tune your life to the truth that you are God-conscious here and now. The walls declare holiness by your continual yes: I am the temple; the divine presence dwells here, and all that follows is the outward fruit of that inward awareness.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and imagine the doorway of your mind framed with cherubim and palm motifs, extending from floor to ceiling. Then hold the felt sense that the divine presence fills the space, and repeat quietly, 'I am the temple; the I AM dwells here' until it feels real.
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