Inner Temple of Ezekiel 42
Ezekiel 42:1-20 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 42 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Ezekiel 42:1-20 outlines the inner chambers and holy place in the temple, reserved for priests and holy offerings, with strict boundaries separating sanctuary from the profane. The measurements symbolize orderly access to God’s Presence.
Neville's Inner Vision
Imagine Ezekiel’s measure as the rhythm of your inner life. The utter court, the north and south holy chambers, and the outer wall are not bricks but states of consciousness. The priests are your present I AM, entering with clean garments, laying aside the old garments of doubt, and approaching what is sacred for the people. The separation wall marks the boundary between the sacred Presence and the profane noise of habit. The three stories of galleries show that your imagination may rise in levels—thoughts, beliefs, and visions—yet all are within the same sanctuary. When you set your mind to feed the most holy things—the meat offering of gratitude, the sin offering of release, the trespass offering of forgiveness—you enact holiness. Measure round about your inner sanctuary, and you will discover that the Presence is not somewhere out there but the awareness you are. You do not go out from the holy place into the utter court; you revise your state and return, wearing new garments of assurance.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes, assume you are the temple itself, and feel the Presence now. Revise one stubborn thought by imagining it replaced with a holy offering placed on the altar.
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