Dwelling Within the Inner Temple

Ezekiel 43:9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Ezekiel 43 in context

Scripture Focus

9Now let them put away their whoredom, and the carcases of their kings, far from me, and I will dwell in the midst of them for ever.
Ezekiel 43:9

Biblical Context

Ezekiel 43:9 invites us to cast out idolatry and the remnants of former rulers so that God may dwell among us forever.

Neville's Inner Vision

To Neville, the abominations are not external sins but unrenewed states of consciousness. The I AM—the inner God presence—dwells wherever the temple is clear of idols. Whoredom points to the habit of seeking life in images—approval, wealth, status—rather than in the unchanging self. The carcases of kings symbolize stale mental rulers—egoic beliefs about who you are. Ezekiel’s call is an invitation to liberate your inner sanctuary by letting go of these idols. When you cease identifying with external powers, your inner temple becomes the throne room of the I AM and God remains there forever. Your task is a revision of your state of consciousness: replace the idol of power, status, or lineage with the lived reality that you are the dwelling place of God. This is not effortful morality but a shift in perception that makes your life reflect that inner order. As you revise, you align with the presence that has always inhabited you, and your world rearranges to match that truth.

Practice This Now

In the next few minutes, close your eyes and declare, in present-tense faith: I am the dwelling place of God; I let go of all idols and the old kings of my mind. Visualize removing a symbolic 'carcass' from your inner temple and feel the space made for the I AM.

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