Remnant’s Inner Repentance
Ezekiel 6:9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 6 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
In Ezekiel 6:9, the remnant who escapes will recall the Lord in foreign lands; their broken, idol-worshiping heart leads to self-loathing for their abominations.
Neville's Inner Vision
Your Ezekiel speaks to the inner geography of consciousness. The 'remnant' is a part of awareness that remembers the truth; the 'escape' is the mind turning from outward images. The line 'I am broken with their whorish heart' translates to the inner conviction that belief in separation has shattered fidelity to the I AM. The 'eyes, which go a whoring after their idols' are your attention pulled toward conditioned images and outcomes. When you awaken to the I AM, judgment becomes a healing signal, not punishment: you loathe the old self as the sign of awakening and a return to wholeness. Exile and return are the rhythm of inner life—moments of drifting from alignment followed by the natural restoration of consciousness to its true state. By choosing to identify with the I AM, you reverse the seeing of idols and re-seat your life in timeless awareness, so the outward captivity mirrors your inward release.
Practice This Now
Assume you are the remnant who remembers God now. Feel the old self loosen as you affirm, 'I AM the I AM, I return to my true self.'
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