Think Upon Me, Bring Me Out
Genesis 40:14-15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Genesis 40 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Joseph asks the cupbearer to remember him and tell Pharaoh about him, hoping to be released from prison, insisting he did nothing wrong. The passage points to suffering and the longing for deliverance through remembrance.
Neville's Inner Vision
Genesis 40:14–15 becomes not a historical plea, but a map of inner psychology. Joseph speaks from a state of innocence, a consciousness that has been displaced but has not lost its true I AM. The dungeon is the old habit of limitation; being stolen from the land of the Hebrews symbolizes the condition in which you forget who you are. The request to think on me when it is well with thee is a directive to your own awareness: when your inner atmosphere is favorable, recall this forgotten state and let it be remembered by the inner authorities—the inner Pharaohs—that you are no longer bound by the old sentence. The act of being remembered is not about external words, but about a revision in consciousness: you switch from lack to sufficiency, from separation to unity. Your liberation follows from the imagination that asserts the end from the beginning: you are already free in the I AM, and the outer scene will align to this inner truth as you hold that memory and feel it real.
Practice This Now
Practice: in the next few minutes, close your eyes and assume the state of release as if it is already real. Tell your inner Pharaoh, 'Remember me; bring me out,' and feel the word settling into your bones.
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