The Inner Burden Revisited
Numbers 11:13-15 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Numbers 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Moses voices a crushing overwhelm as he bears the people's demands, even asking for relief or death. The passage reads as a mirror of inner belief rather than a mere external trial.
Neville's Inner Vision
To Moses, the cry 'Whence should I have flesh to give unto all this people?' is not about meat but about the belief that the supply comes from without. The crowd's tearful demand mirrors a mind convinced that nourishment must be earned from outside source. In Neville's practice, this is a state of consciousness—a false assumption you must revise. The real you, the I AM, already possesses the faculty to feed the scenario; the weight Moses bears is the weight of a worn identity clinging to scarcity. When you notice this weight, you do not plead with the outer world to change others; you reidentify yourself as the authority of your own dream. Accept the new assumption: you are the source, the capacity, and the perceiver of every scene. Begin to imagine yourself as that substantive presence, feeding not a hungry multitude but your own life with plentiful form. The moment the old wretched self collapses under revision, the present-tense experience of supply becomes yours.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes. In the present moment, declare to yourself: I am the supply now; I have the capacity to feed this moment. Feel the feeling of sufficiency as if it is real, and let that sense linger for a minute or two.
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