Inner Exodus: Letting Go to Serve
Exodus 8:1 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Exodus 8 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
God commands Moses to tell Pharaoh to let Israel go, so they may serve the LORD. The verse frames liberation as a required step toward covenant faithfulness and service.
Neville's Inner Vision
Exodus 8:1 speaks not to a distant king alone but to your own mind. The phrase 'Let my people go' is the call to release those inner states of consciousness that you have allowed to rule you—fear, lack, doubt, fatigue—so that they may serve the higher purpose within you. The 'Pharaoh' stands for attachment to old stories; the 'Israelites' are your pulses of life kept in bondage by imagination that has forgotten its king. When you hear 'Thus saith the LORD,' hear the I AM speaking through your awareness, commanding a shift from struggle to serving the divine within. Deliverance, then, is not external conquest but reverent obedience: you choose to identify with your true self rather than with the problem. As you revise your scene in imagination and feel it real, your outer world follows the inner direction. The inner exodus is complete when you can say, in effect, 'I am free to serve the God I am,' and your life rearranges to reflect that sovereignty.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Assume you are already free and serving the I AM. In a moment of quiet, revise a current limitation by declaring 'Let my people go,' and feel the relief of the divine within as if it is done.
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