One Measure of Inner Law
Ezekiel 45:11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 45 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Ezekiel 45:11 asserts that the ephah and the bath share one equal measure, a fixed standard of measurement rooted in the homer.
Neville's Inner Vision
In Neville's voice, the verse becomes a meditation on states of consciousness. The ephah and the bath symbolize two outer functions of life—receiving and measuring—that must be harmonized under one inner standard, a single measure issued from the I AM within. The 'tenth part of an homer' points to the idea that any portion of your entire life you weigh or release must come from a fixed, abundant center rather than from fluctuating moods. The line 'the measure thereof shall be after the homer' suggests that your external form follows an inner abundance, not the other way around. When you assume you are that unified measure, you align law (order), righteousness (right use), and truth (faithfulness) as expressions of consciousness. Imagination becomes the 'homer' within which the ephah and bath are defined; your life mirrors the consistency of your inner decree. Reality yields to a stable, felt-reality state where every aspect of experience is measured by the same divine standard, all tracing back to the I AM inside.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and declare: I am the measure; my life is governed by a single, abundant standard. Feel the unity and let the outer world conform to this inner decree.
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