Moses' Inner Mercy Intercession
Exodus 32:30-32 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Exodus 32 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Moses declares their sin, goes up to the LORD to seek atonement, and pleads for forgiveness, even offering to be blotted from God's book.
Neville's Inner Vision
From the Neville point-of-view, the scene is not about historical fact but about the states of consciousness you inhabit. Moses represents the elevated I AM that thinks of itself as the perceiver of every thought and memory. The people’s gold images symbolize attachment to forms and names—identifications that obscure your unity with the divine. Moses’ ascent to the LORD is the inner decision to elevate your awareness above the mistaken self-image; to 'go up' is to turn attention back to the source of all life within. When he asks forgiveness for the sins and offers to be blotted from the book, he embodies the readiness to erase a remembered failure from the inner self-concept. The 'book' is the inner register where you store your self-identifications; to blot it is to revise your identity until it aligns with the truth of your oneness with God. Forgiveness comes not by blame but by a deliberate revision of consciousness—an inner act that reunites you with love. The outcome is an inner restoration: not a change of external circumstances, but a lightened sense of self that no longer lives in separation from divine life.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Sit in stillness and assume the state of forgiveness. Silently declare, 'I am the forgiveness that rewrites my inner record.' Visualize the old 'book' being erased and a fresh page inscribed with unity with God.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









