Eating the Old Corn: Inner Covenant

Joshua 5:11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Joshua 5 in context

Scripture Focus

11And they did eat of the old corn of the land on the morrow after the passover, unleavened cakes, and parched corn in the selfsame day.
Joshua 5:11

Biblical Context

In Joshua 5:11 the people eat of the land's harvest—the old corn, unleavened cakes, and parched grain—on the day after Passover, symbolizing immediate inward provision.

Neville's Inner Vision

This verse speaks not of a distant historical meal but of your inner harvest now. The old corn of the land represents the abundance already available in your state of consciousness when you enter the promised land of awareness. Passover marks release from old bondage; the morrow signifies the present moment in which you claim the fruit of that release. Unleavened cakes symbolize simplicity and the stripping away of ego-led pretenses, while parched corn denotes quick, nourishing energy drawn from your I AM. When you acknowledge yourself as the wearer of the land’s bounty, you consume it with the mouth of faith rather than labor. The covenant loyalty is the unwavering alignment of your inner assumption with the truth that your state creates your world. Right now, you feed on the realization that you are the land and the harvest together, here and now, through the felt experience of I AM awareness. This is the living demonstration that imagination, rightly held, reforms your outer life to match your inner state.

Practice This Now

Assume you are already feeding from the land of your true self today. Close your eyes, feel the nourishment as present reality, and quietly affirm, 'I AM fed by the land I am.'

The Bible Through Neville

Neville Bible Sparks

Loading...

Loading...
Video thumbnail
Loading video details...
🔗 View on YouTube

© 2025 The Bible Through Neville - A consciousness-based approach to Scripture