Gilgal Passover Inner Covenant

Joshua 5:10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Joshua 5 in context

Scripture Focus

10And the children of Israel encamped in Gilgal, and kept the passover on the fourteenth day of the month at even in the plains of Jericho.
Joshua 5:10

Biblical Context

Israel encamped at Gilgal and observed the Passover on the fourteenth day at evening in the plains of Jericho. This marks faithful obedience and covenant loyalty as they begin life in the Promised Land.

Neville's Inner Vision

Joshua 5:10 invites us to read the act as a turning inside your own consciousness. Gilgal is the psyche’s still point, where you detach from past identities and settle into the I AM. The Passover is not a ritual merely celebrated; it is an inner Passover: you slay the old sense of limitation, you pass over the Jordan of fear, and you enter a land governed by law—your inward alignment with divine order. The timing—on the fourteenth, at evening—speaks of a precise shift of awareness when the inner light settles and nothing can move you from your new stance. The plains of Jericho symbolize the world of appearances, the fortress of circumstance, but the people encamped there with the Passover to show that outer events bow to inner obedience. Obedience and faithfulness, in this light, are not outward acts but the steady state of assumption—knowing that the I AM is present here and now, and that the outer landscape must reflect that truth. When you persist in that assumption, Jericho’s walls yield to your inner covenant.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Assume you already reside in Gilgal, keeping Passover in your mind. Feel the I AM as present and revise any lack into fullness.

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