Exodus 5:13-14 Inner Deliverance
Exodus 5:13-14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Exodus 5 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Pharaoh's taskmasters urge the Israelites to fulfill daily brick tasks and beat those who fail to meet the quotas, illustrating external pressure and suffering in the tale.
Neville's Inner Vision
Exodus 5:13-14 speaks through the outer voice of taskmasters and quotas, yet in the Neville Goddard frame it reveals a state of consciousness. The 'Egypt' and the beating are not somewhere outside you; they are the old habit of fear pressing on your awareness, the belief that you are defined by your labor and lack. Your deliverance arrives not by changing Pharaoh's orders but by turning inward—recognizing that the I AM within you is the source of supply, order, and completion. When you imagine yourself already free and fulfilled, the relentless demand to hurry loses its grip, because you no longer identify with the need to prove yourself. Stand in the assumption that your daily tasks are already done by the power you acknowledge as you. As you persist in that inner assurance, the outer appearance begins to adapt to that inner reality, until the sense of oppression dissolves into liberating calm. The deliverance is thus a shift of the mind—an inner conquest that makes your experience reflect the truth: you are God in the form of a person, and your task is to feel it real.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes, assume the state of the I AM, and revise the report: 'I have fulfilled all my daily tasks.' Feel the relief as if completed now, for 60 seconds.
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