Threshold Of Inner Glory

Ezekiel 9:3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Ezekiel 9 in context

Scripture Focus

3And the glory of the God of Israel was gone up from the cherub, whereupon he was, to the threshold of the house. And he called to the man clothed with linen, which had the writer's inkhorn by his side;
Ezekiel 9:3

Biblical Context

Ezekiel 9:3 describes the glory of the God of Israel moving from the cherub to the threshold of the house, and a linen-clad man with an ink-horn is summoned.

Neville's Inner Vision

Take this scene as a map of your interior life. The glory of the God of Israel is your I AM—your awareness—rising and then stepping to the threshold of the house, the boundary where inner and outer life meet. The cherub stands for a high image of consciousness, a radiant center you have held within. When the glory moves to the threshold, it is not leaving you but inviting you to discriminate, to notice what you permit into your mind. The man clothed with linen and the writer's inkhorn is the inner function that records belief; he is the disciplined voice that marks thoughts for entry or denial. In Neville language, judgment becomes a revision of belief, not a threat: you declare, with the I AM, what thoughts are true and what are not. The move from presence to threshold asks you to keep your sanctuary clear, so your life may express the order of the awakened state.

Practice This Now

Assume the I AM stands at the inner doorway; feel the glory come to the threshold. Instruct the linen-clad scribe to write and seal your thoughts in alignment with that awakened state.

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