Inner Gate to True Worship
Ezekiel 8:13-15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 8 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Ezekiel is shown deeper abominations at the temple gate, including the ritual weeping for Tammuz, urging a turn inward to witness the growing likeness of worship to external images. It signals a call to holiness and separation.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the inner theatre of your mind, Ezekiel’s tour of the temple becomes a tour of your own states. The 'greater abominations' are increasingly subtle beliefs you have accepted as reality—images, roles, and emotions you worship as if they were God’s power. The gate toward the north is the direction of your attention, the threshold where you choose to identify with the I AM or with transient forms. When you resist the inner shift and cling to outer rituals, you generate consequences that feel like judgment: you see more convincing signs that your consciousness is bound to forms. Yet the invitation is always the same: you may turn again, revise, and awaken to true worship—awareness itself. By consistently claiming the I AM as your real identity, you dissolve the grip of idolatry and invite holiness, separation from lack, and the reality of God’s presence here and now.
Practice This Now
Sit quietly, place attention on the I AM at the center of your chest, observe any inner image you have worshipped, and revise it by affirming, I AM the source and ruler of all I behold, replacing outer idols with the reality of divine consciousness.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









