Ezekiel’s Inner Judgment
Ezekiel 7:24-27 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 7 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage predicts external upheaval and the defilement of sacred things, followed by a disruption of peace and guidance; ultimately, it points to accountability and the awakening of awareness.
Neville's Inner Vision
To Neville’s ear, Ezekiel 7:24-27 is not a distant political scene but an inner allegory. The 'worst of the heathen' represents the disowned fears and habits occupying the rooms of your mind, seizing your inner houses. The pomp of the strong and the defiled sanctuaries signify the self-worship and rigid rituals you cling to, mistaking form for life. When destruction comes and peace vanishes, you are being summoned to awaken, not surrender to despair. The line 'the law shall perish from the priest, and counsel from the ancients' signals that old external authorities and inherited practices cannot govern your reality any longer; you must rely on the I AM, the immediate awareness within. The king mourns and the prince is desolated as the old self collapses under the light of conscious attention. And the claim 'I will do unto them after their way' becomes a personal invitation: you reap what you have imagined and believed. Ultimately, they will know that the LORD is the inner consciousness you awaken through realized I AM.
Practice This Now
Assume the feeling of inner sovereignty now: imagine your inner house secure, the old disturbances expelled, and the I AM reigning as governor. Then acknowledge, with full feeling, that this is your true state.
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