Inner Wall Repair
Nehemiah 3:19 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Nehemiah 3 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The verse describes Ezer, son of Jeshua, repairing beside another piece near the armoury at the turning of the wall, signaling collaborative restoration.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the old text you see a scene of labor, but in the mine of Neville's teaching it becomes the act of your own I AM repairing the inner wall. Ezer represents a conscious faculty—the resolve, vision, and authority that rises in you when you decide to rebuild your life. The ruler of Mizpah is the inner sovereignty, the I that governs thoughts and turns them toward security and readiness. The place beside the armoury is the inner armory of ideas, habits, and creative power you carry within—material for turning points. The wall's turning suggests not a mere wall turning in space but a turning of your state of consciousness from lack to fullness, from fear to faith. So the work is not external only; it is a practice in steadfast attention, a steady choice to repair a belief that has frayed. When you stand with Ezer, you are choosing to show up with discipline, aligning your action with your inner vision. Your consciousness redirects energy toward wholeness, and the scene becomes a map for the way imagination re-creates reality through persistent, unified effort.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Assume the role of Ezer beside the turning wall and repair a section in imagination while affirming I am the builder of my inner strength. Feel the activation of the I AM as your belief revives, and dwell there until it feels real.
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