Hardened Hearts, Quiet Storms
Exodus 9:33-35 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Exodus 9 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Moses prays and the storm ends; outward judgments mirror the inner weather of the mind. Pharaoh’s heart hardens as the inner resistance persists.
Neville's Inner Vision
Exodus 9:33–35 speaks not to geography but to the inner weather of your consciousness. When Moses spreads his hands to the Lord and the storm ceases, understand that the hail and rain are thoughts and conditions you have believed to be real. The stopping of the storm is the moment your I AM declares a new state, a revision of what you accept as possible. Pharaoh’s heart, then, is your stubborn habit—the repeated belief that you must suffer the old result before you are worth freeing yourself. As you fix your attention on the end you desire and dwell in the feeling of its achievement, the old script loses its grip. The moment of surrender comes from within, not from Pharaoh’s field of obedience. The Lord spoken by Moses becomes the inner law of your consciousness: you are free to let go of the old rain by assuming the new weather as already present. The rain’s cessation is the silent testimony of your own inner authority.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and declare: I am the I AM; I now let the inner storm depart and the end I seek is mine now. Hold that feeling, imagine the sun returning, and remain in the revised state until it feels real.
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