Between Walls and the Maker

Isaiah 22:11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Isaiah 22 in context

Scripture Focus

11Ye made also a ditch between the two walls for the water of the old pool: but ye have not looked unto the maker thereof, neither had respect unto him that fashioned it long ago.
Isaiah 22:11

Biblical Context

Isaiah 22:11 speaks of digging a ditch between two walls to carry water from an old pool. Yet the people did not look to the maker who fashioned it long ago.

Neville's Inner Vision

In the inner theatre of consciousness, the ditch is not a literal trench but a habitual separation you keep between appearances and the I AM. The two walls are the external forms you lean on—rituals, opinions, and what you call reality. The water of the old pool represents vitality drawn from stale beliefs, kept stagnant where you refuse to look to the maker within. Because you have not looked unto the maker, you deny the source of life and order in your life. The maker is the I AM, the timeless designer who fashioned you long ago; to trust him is to acknowledge that imagination is the source of form. When you turn your attention from the ditch and its water back to the maker, you unlock the power to alter your world. Revision is not a correction of facts but a re-architecting of consciousness. The moment you assume the I AM as present and active, the mental ditch begins to fill with living water—your inner reality rewrites what you call external. Let every thought be summoned by the maker, not by memory, need, or fear.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and revise the scene: the ditch is removed and the water flows from your inner maker. Silently affirm, I AM the maker of all I perceive; feel it now.

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