Inner Exodus: Repentance and Relief
Exodus 10:16-19 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Exodus 10 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Pharaoh admits sin and pleads for relief; Moses intercedes, and God drives away the locusts with a mighty wind.
Neville's Inner Vision
Pharaoh's confession is more than a historical moment; it is a vivid image of a mind ready to return to its true state. The 'sin' he speaks of is the belief that a fallen self can stand apart from the I AM, a misalignment that makes pain seem real. When he asks 'forgive this sin only this once,' he is revealing the inner habit of keeping a layer of old consciousness in charge. Moses' intercession is not a petition to a distant judge but the inner act of turning attention toward the one reality within: I AM awareness. The Lord responding with a west wind that blows away the locusts is the symbol of a new mental atmosphere sweeping through the land of perception, dissolving the stale states that plagued him. In Neville's terms, the plague clears when you revise your story about yourself, forgive the past, and feel the truth that you are already union with God. The wind is your inner shift - the result of choosing a different state, and relief follows as naturally as night yields to day.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit quietly and assume the state 'I am forgiven and one with God.' Feel the relief as you revise the story of your circumstance and imagine the wind carrying away the problem.
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