Inner Famine, Inner Exodus
Genesis 12:10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Genesis 12 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Genesis 12:10 describes a famine that prompts Abram to move. The text uses outward movement to signal an inner absence awaiting renewal.
Neville's Inner Vision
Genesis 12:10 speaks in outward terms of famine and migration, but in the Neville vision it reveals the inner climate of your consciousness. The famine is not a geographical calamity; it is a lack arising in the I AM, a false feeling that supply is elsewhere. Abram leaving Canaan for Egypt mirrors the mind sliding into a different state, believing that nourishment comes from outside the self. Yet Abram's journey is only until the famine passes; the true remedy is not more outward security but a shift of state. When you identify with the I AM as your sole source, you discover that Egypt is merely a temporary focus of attention, not a fixed condition of being. In that light, you can revise the scene by returning to the awareness that you are always where supply resides, within the one life that animates all. The moment you assume a new inner condition - abundant, secure, eternally provided - the external scene reorganizes to reflect that truth.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes and revise the scene now. See Abram stayed in the inner land of plenty, declare 'I am the source of all I need' and feel the security spreading through your body.
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