Inner Judgment and the I AM Presence

Ezekiel 6:12 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Ezekiel 6 in context

Scripture Focus

12He that is far off shall die of the pestilence; and he that is near shall fall by the sword; and he that remaineth and is besieged shall die by the famine: thus will I accomplish my fury upon them.
Ezekiel 6:12

Biblical Context

Plainly, the verse speaks of a divinely appointed order where distant, near, and besieged people meet different fates, signaling collective judgment. It also invites you to read these conditions as inner states that your consciousness fashions.

Neville's Inner Vision

To Ezekiel's words is whispered the simple fact: every scene is a state of consciousness. The 'far off' and the 'near' are not places but attitudes; pestilence is the storm of fear that eats away at confidence; the sword is your inner struggle with limitation; famine is the void that follows when attention starves the soul of nourishment. The fury spoken of is not punishment raining from without, but the closing of an old pattern by your own inner decision. When you dwell as the I AM, you witness these movements as mere weather within the mind, and you hold to the certainty that you are the witness, not the storm. Ezekiel shows that what transpires in the inner weather is what expresses into life; the outward signs are the tailors cutting the coat of your inner state. The invitation is to assume a different outcome by the power of assumption and revision: if you imagine yourself steadfast in the I AM, the pestilence, sword, and famine recede as you claim the presence that never leaves you.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: In any fear or sense of distance, pause, breathe, and declare, 'I AM that I AM here; I revise this scene into life, abundance, and harmony.' Then feel the truth in your chest until it is real.

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