Inner Passover Covenant

Exodus 12:43-45 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Exodus 12 in context

Scripture Focus

43And the LORD said unto Moses and Aaron, This is the ordinance of the passover: There shall no stranger eat thereof:
44But every man's servant that is bought for money, when thou hast circumcised him, then shall he eat thereof.
45A foreigner and an hired servant shall not eat thereof.
Exodus 12:43-45

Biblical Context

Exodus 12:43-45 declares a Passover feast limited to those inwardly prepared; outsiders are not admitted. It marks a sacred boundary reflecting inner commitment and covenant loyalty.

Neville's Inner Vision

In the Neville manner, the Lord is your I AM, the sovereign Presence that awakens as you. Moses and Aaron become the two powers of attention within, issuing a single ordinance of awareness: only the circumcised self may eat the Passover. The 'stranger' and the 'foreigner' are not outsiders of place but symbols of unintegrated states of consciousness—ideas and memories that have not been 'cut away' from your sense of identity. The command that no stranger eat thereof points to a daily choice: to align with the covenant of life by cutting off the imagined separation between self and Source. Circumcision then is not a ritual file but a mental act of separation from fear, limitation, and external definitions. When you dwell in the awareness of I AM, you belong to the inner feast; you feed on the divine life that is your true nourishment. The law becomes a living practice of loyalty to the inner covenant, and every experience of hunger or limitation is answered by the realization that you have already partaken in fullness.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and assume the inner covenant; imagine you are already partaking at the divine feast, feeling the life within nourish every part of you.

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