Inner Welcome and Union
Exodus 2:18-21 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Exodus 2 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Moses becomes welcome at Reuel's home after his sisters speak of an Egyptian who helped them; he stays and is given Zipporah.
Neville's Inner Vision
The 'Egyptian' who rescued them is not a man of history but a state of consciousness—an old belief that help comes from the outer world. The shepherds symbolize the pressure of lack in the dream; Reuel’s question, 'where is the man?' is the inner invitation for the living I AM to appear as your guiding state. When Moses is content to dwell with the man, you are choosing a new habitation of consciousness, a sanctuary where the old struggle is fed bread instead of becoming bread of life. To eat bread here is to accept the idea that life sustains itself through communion with a higher self. Zipporah, given to Moses, stands for a harmonious partnership between faculties—love, will, perception—united under the inner ruler. Your inner Father invites you to sit, eat, and recognize you are already one with the I AM. From this dwelling arises unity with people, places, and circumstances, not by force but by alignment; your reality becomes a living expression of the I AM, nourished by deliberate imagination.
Practice This Now
In a quiet moment, imagine the inner father Reuel greeting you, inviting you to eat bread. Then feel Zipporah as inner harmony entering your life, a tangible union you now inhabit.
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