Door Within the Wall

Ezekiel 8:7-9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Ezekiel 8 in context

Scripture Focus

7And he brought me to the door of the court; and when I looked, behold a hole in the wall.
8Then said he unto me, Son of man, dig now in the wall: and when I had digged in the wall, behold a door.
9And he said unto me, Go in, and behold the wicked abominations that they do here.
Ezekiel 8:7-9

Biblical Context

The vision shows a hole in a wall, a door revealed after digging, and a command to enter and witness the people's wicked acts. It invites seeing inner patterns rather than external events.

Neville's Inner Vision

Imagine Ezekiel not as an ancient seer but as you, standing in the chamber of your own consciousness. The wall is the boundary you have drawn around your sense of self; the hole is the invitation to inquiry. When you dig, you are not accomplishing a task in time, you are waking to awareness. The door that emerges is your inner doorway, the point where you can enter and stand inside the beliefs you have allowed to govern your world. The wicked abominations you behold are the pictures you have given power to—habits of fear, stories of lack, judgments of others—things you have treated as real because you have fed them with attention. As you step through, the lesson is not to condemn but to claim mastery over your state of consciousness. You can revise by asserting the truth of your unity with the I AM, the living God within. Return your focus to that wholeness, feel it real, and watch the imagined idols dissolve. The door remains open to any moment you choose to enter with awareness, and in that entry you find true worship.

Practice This Now

Assume you are already standing before the door inside your mind; revise a current fear into devotion by silently declaring 'I am the I AM' and feel the realness shift.

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