Calling Your Inner Nurse
Exodus 2:7-9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Exodus 2 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Exodus 2:7-9 shows a sister suggesting a Hebrew nurse be called to care for the child; Pharaoh's daughter allows it, and the child's mother is summoned to nurse him, receiving wages for nursing the child.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within your inner life, the sister represents a decision to call forth help from within. Pharaoh's daughter stands as the outward stage—the world’s authority that permits your inner choice to take form. The nurse is your inner faculty of care, the conscious energy that can nurture a new possibility until it becomes tangible. When the sister asks, Shall I go and call a nurse? you are confirming a willingness to summon inner resources; when the daughter says, Go, and the nurse is summoned, your inner life shifts from intention to nurturing action. The mother nursing the child embodies your deeper I AM—the imagination that tends the newborn idea with tenderness until it grows strong enough to reveal itself. The wages offered signify the reciprocal law: as you invest love, attention, and belief in your desire, the universe returns the value as outer opportunities or results. Providence, in Neville’s reading, is the activity of your own consciousness. The birth of your outcome is the steady, affectionate care of imagination working through you, here and now.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and hear the inner sister ask, Shall I call a nurse? Then invite your inner mother—the deeper I AM—to nurse the newborn idea in you and feel the return of reward as you tend it with unwavering attention.
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