Inner Exodus: Moses' Final Gaze

Exodus 10:29 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Exodus 10 in context

Scripture Focus

29And Moses said, Thou hast spoken well, I will see thy face again no more.
Exodus 10:29

Biblical Context

Moses tells Pharaoh he will not see his face again, signaling a turning inward. He commits to the Presence of God rather than the external world.

Neville's Inner Vision

Exodus 10:29 records Moses declaring to Pharaoh, I will see your face no more. In Neville's terms, this is a defining state of consciousness rather than a physical farewell. Pharaoh represents the external authority and the urge to measure reality by what is seen, heard, or controlled. Moses' statement is not a negation of responsibility but a surrender into the Presence—the I AM within. He chooses covenant loyalty: to remain faithful to the inner law that God is and that his life is sustained by the consciousness of Being, not by palace audiences or signs from without. When you reinterpret the line as a psychological truth, you see that seeing the face is equivalent to seeking validation from an outer power. The moment of revision is the inner agreement: I am the I AM; I have nothing to fear from change, for all change is the movement of consciousness within God. From now on, the face you expect to see is the face of God in you, the unchanging reality that makes Pharaoh fade into the background.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Sit quietly, breathe, and revise the scene in your mind by declaring I will see the external face no more; rest in the awareness that I AM is the only reality. Then feel the inner Presence grounding your life.

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