Inner Threshold of Mourning

Genesis 50:10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Genesis 50 in context

Scripture Focus

10And they came to the threshingfloor of Atad, which is beyond Jordan, and there they mourned with a great and very sore lamentation: and he made a mourning for his father seven days.
Genesis 50:10

Biblical Context

Genesis 50:10 depicts mourners at the threshing floor, a profound moment of lament for Jacob's death.

Neville's Inner Vision

Genesis 50:10 offers the threshing floor as an inner field where the mind separates belief from truth. They cross beyond Jordan—the mind's edge—into a storehouse of feeling that asks to be transmuted. The great lament is not only sorrow for a father, but the soul's old identification with loss. In Neville's sense, the scene is a state of consciousness: the brothers and Joseph symbolize parts of your own I AM reacting to change. The threshing floor is where you thresh your beliefs, separating the grain of reality from the chaff of fear. The seven days of mourning mark a disciplined interval you grant the old story before you plant a new seed. When you view this drama in imagination as the I AM, you are not denying grief; you are affirming a higher fact: the I AM remains untouched by outer events and can turn sorrow into a fresh form of life. If you feel it real that mourning is complete, you align with your inner Kingdom and step into a new chapter of awareness.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes, assume you are the I AM standing on that threshing floor, and feel the mourning as already complete; then imagine stepping into doorway of Kingdom within through imagination and I AM.

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