Inner Exodus: Dying Old Self
Exodus 1:6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Exodus 1 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Joseph died, and with him the generation, marking the end of an era in the outer narrative. The verse invites us to see this as a movement of inner consciousness, not merely a history.
Neville's Inner Vision
From Neville's perspective, the verse reveals that every fall of a generation is the disappearance of a state of being. Joseph, the favored son who carried the promise into a family and a nation, dies, and so do the ties of that era—the unity of brothers, the memory of covenant carried by a single lineage. In the psychology of Neville Goddard, places are inner dispositions and events are inner movements. The death of that generation is the quiet death of a previously held assumption about circumstances—family, loyalty, survival, and divine favor slipping into memory. But God is not a person outside; God is the I AM that holds all being. Therefore the true exodus is within: you must let the old self die to reveal a new self who experiences unity and steadfast covenant not as external proof but as inner certainty. The new inner Israel arises by the choice to revise the story with the felt reality that you are the one who persists, the 'I AM' who witnesses the fade and remains present to creation. Revise the past by assuming the next state already here: a community unified by covenant loyalty, alive in your consciousness.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: In a moment of quiet, assume the old generation has died inside your consciousness and that a new covenant state is present. Feel the unity of a community formed by loyalty to the I AM and let that truth sink in for a minute.
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