Inner Exodus: Letting Go Now

Exodus 10:4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Exodus 10 in context

Scripture Focus

4Else, if thou refuse to let my people go, behold, to morrow will I bring the locusts into thy coast:
Exodus 10:4

Biblical Context

The verse frames liberation as conditional on releasing the people. If refused, impending disaster follows.

Neville's Inner Vision

In Neville’s mind, Pharaoh stands as the stubborn self - an unyielding habit of consciousness that refuses to relinquish a story of lack. The threat of locusts is not a future plague arriving from outside but the visible consequence of a mind clinging to limitation. When you hear let my people go, hear it as a command to release a part of your own identifications—the enslaved you, the belief that you are defined by bondage. To refuse is to harden an inner posture; to yield is to open the inner coast to new abundance. The locusts, then, are the thoughts that swarm when you keep your focus on oppression instead of on the I AM that you are. But the moment you revise, you announce to your inner state that freedom is already present, and the scene shifts from threat to procession of light. The law of consciousness makes space for a new order: you do not wait for deliverance; you assume the completed act of liberation in your present feeling and perception.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes, breathe, and silently say I AM free now, feeling the release as your present reality. Then revise the old sense of lack by imagining the enslaved self stepping aside to reveal your true, unbound nature.

The Bible Through Neville

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