Inner Feast of Unleavened Bread
Exodus 23:15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Exodus 23 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Exodus 23:15 commands seven days of unleavened bread at the appointed time, recalling deliverance and demanding that no one present themselves before God empty-handed.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the inner sense, the feast is a disciplined state of consciousness, where unleavened bread represents the removal of leaven—the ego, pretenses, and all thoughts that puff up the mind. Observing this feast is not about external rites but about purifying your mental atmosphere so your awareness can speak plainly as I AM. The seven days symbolize a complete cycle of renewal; during this time you eat truth rather than the illusions that keep you separated from your divine nature. To come out of Egypt becomes the memory of stepping from bondage to limitation into the unveiled light of consciousness, where you no longer plead with God but recognize that God is your own awareness. The command that none shall appear before me empty urges you to fill your inner space with the sense of wholeness—seeing yourself as already complete, not wanting. When you dwell in this inner worship, your imagination aligns with the fact that you have escaped the illusion of separation. You live as if you are free now, for you are free in awareness. This is a shift of state, not a ritual apart from you.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: For the next seven days, spend a few minutes each day closing your eyes, stating 'I AM,' and imagine consuming the unleavened bread of truth. Revise any sense of lack, and feel your inner freedom as present reality.
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