Inside the Sacred Sanctuary
Ezekiel 44:7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 44 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Ezekiel 44:7 warns that bringing in strangers into the sanctuary, who are uncircumcised in heart, pollutes the temple and breaks the covenant. It exposes how inner loyalties and unholy offerings contaminate sacred space.
Neville's Inner Vision
Verse speaks of strangers in heart and flesh entering the sanctuary, eating the bread, and thus breaking the covenant because of abominations. In Neville's psychology, the sanctuary is your inner state of consciousness, and the strangers are habitual thoughts and identifications you tolerate that are not aligned with your I AM. When you yield to these unclean patterns, you pollute the sacred space; the bread, the fat, and the blood symbolize the persistent foods of belief you feed the sense of separation. The violation is inner, not external: it marks a shift of attention from wholeness to division, from unity to self-importance. God is not a distant temple; God is the I AM within, the consciousness that remembers itself as one. To restore covenant, revise your inner declarations: affirm that you are the keeper of your temple, that you stand as the realized I AM, and that all offerings arise from a purified heart. The moment you assume this reality and feel it as real, the 'strangers' lose their power and the sanctuary clears of pollution, renewing the covenant in your present awareness.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close eyes, assume you are already the I AM, and revise any belief that pollutes your temple. Feel it real now as you offer purified bread to your inner sanctuary.
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