Inner Pharaoh, Bowing to I AM
Exodus 11:8 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Exodus 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Exodus 11:8 records the moment Pharaoh's servants bow to Moses, urging him to depart, while Pharaoh himself goes out in a great anger.
Neville's Inner Vision
From the Neville lens, this verse is not about a political exodus but about a state of consciousness. Pharaoh embodies the ego that clings to its old order; the servants are the scattered attitudes and reactions of your mind that still serve that pattern. Moses is the inner voice of the I AM—the steady command you can choose to entertain. When the inner decree says, Get thee out, it is you declaring that the old condition must exit your consciousness. The bowing of the servants signals the moment those identities yield to your new discipline and acknowledge the power you are choosing to live from. Their submission is not to a person but to a higher state you have already imagined. Pharaoh's great anger reveals the last resistance of the old self, powerless against a mind fixed in the I AM. If you dwell there, the outer world will align with your inner assumption—true worship becomes fidelity to that inner reality, not to outward forms.
Practice This Now
Practice: close your eyes and dwell in the I AM; silently declare, I am the ruler here. In imagination, have the servants bow and say, Get thee out, then feel the old order depart and the new state settle into your life.
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