Freedom Feast in the Desert
Exodus 5:1-11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Exodus 5 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Moses and Aaron approach Pharaoh to let Israel depart for worship in the wilderness; Pharaoh refuses and imposes heavier burdens, insisting the people remain at their labor.
Neville's Inner Vision
Pharaoh in this reading is your stubborn ego, resisting the interior release that is already yours. The cry Let my people go is the I AM calling a portion of consciousness to awaken into freedom, to hold a feast unto the LORD in the wilderness of your awareness. The question Who is the LORD? reveals the old belief system that still commands your day; the reply of Moses and Aaron names the God within—the Hebrews’ God who meets you in consciousness. The three days' journey becomes a practical inner revision: you choose to move your attention from bondage into worship, even if appearances insist on labor. The decree to increase workload and diminish straw is the mental image of constraint you’re asked to rewrite. When you stand in this inner vision, you are told not to regard vain words, but to feel the truth of your freedom now. The deliverance is not distant; it is the awakening of your awareness toward the feast that already awaits you.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, assume you are already free, and feel the inner feast as if you are dining with your own God within. Silently affirm, I AM free, and envision Pharaoh releasing the people, inside your own consciousness.
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