Inner Covenant Awakening
Exodus 2:23-24 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Exodus 2 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Over time the people suffer bondage. They cry out, and God hears and remembers the covenant.
Neville's Inner Vision
Exodus 2:23-24 speaks not of distant histories but of a state of consciousness that binds the soul. The king of Egypt is the dominant belief in limitation, and when it dies, the old outer narrative collapses. The sighing and the crying are inner emotions that arise when a dream calls you to awaken. Your cry rises as a vibration in awareness, and when it reaches the I AM, it is heard—not as a distant event, but as the sound of your becoming. God hearing their groaning means your awareness attends to the image you hold; remembering the covenant is your inner assurance that the true bond of your life remains intact. The covenant of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob represents an unbreakable agreement between your higher self and its promise of liberty. Deliverance, then, is not a future escape but a turn of state: you return to the truth you are, to the covenant already in place, and allow the outer world to reflect that inner liberty. Your exodus is a rearrangement of consciousness, through which freedom becomes your present experience.
Practice This Now
Assume the state 'I am delivered now.' Then revise any sense of bondage by feeling the covenant-like presence within and imagining stepping through the door of liberty.
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