Inner Famine, Inner Food
Genesis 43:1-2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Genesis 43 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Famine grips the land; after they eat the corn they brought, their father commands them to go back and buy more food.
Neville's Inner Vision
Genesis 43:1-2 speaks of famine pressing a family and the hunger that follows even after the little they had is consumed. Yet this is not merely external lack; it is the inner state that asks to be perceived differently. In Neville style, the land is your consciousness, the famine is a belief in limitation, and the eating of the corn is using the current supply of thought. The call Go again, buy us a little food is the inner imperative to revise your state, to move inside and claim a new supply from the I AM, the enduring I within you. When you feel the ache of lack, you do not argue with it; you acknowledge it, then turn your attention to a higher set of assumptions. The father speaking is your inner authority, your I AM, commanding you to consent to a more abundant image and to act from that image as if it were already real. The process is simple: refuse to interpret the famine as final, and permit a fresh supply to emerge through renewed imagination. The next purchase is the feeling of fullness right now, the assurance that you are sustained by a living present abundance.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and declare that you are the abundance you seek, and in your imagination see yourself receiving fresh nourishment from an inner storehouse, letting the feeling of fullness rise as real.
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