Leaving Egypt: Abram's Inner Ascension

Genesis 13:1 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Genesis 13 in context

Scripture Focus

1And Abram went up out of Egypt, he, and his wife, and all that he had, and Lot with him, into the south.
Genesis 13:1

Biblical Context

Abram leaves Egypt with his wife, Lot, and all that he had, moving south.

Neville's Inner Vision

Think of this scene as a movement within your own consciousness. Egypt is not a place you escape from, but a state of awareness you have begun to outgrow. When Abram goes up out of Egypt with Sarai, Lot, and all that he possesses, he is not fleeing a city; he is revising a belief in separation and scarcity. The southward journey signals a shift toward a higher covenant—the I AM that knows itself as the one and only power. The “Lot” at his side represents attachments in the old state. Leaving them behind or carrying them forward is a decision of inner prioritization, guided by faith in the unseen promise. Notice that the command to rise comes from within: the inner conviction that the future is not determined by famine or geography but by the living awareness that you are already in the presence of the promise. In Neville language, Abram awakens to the truth that his supply, his wife, his fortunes, and his destiny are states of consciousness, not externalities. Your task is to dwell in the feeling of that promise until it is your realized experience.

Practice This Now

Imaginative Act: Sit in stillness and revise your present state as Abram leaving Egypt. Assume the feeling of ascent into the promised land of awareness and feel it real by affirming, 'I am that I AM.'

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