Holiness Through Inner Diet

Leviticus 11:3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Leviticus 11 in context

Scripture Focus

3Whatsoever parteth the hoof, and is clovenfooted, and cheweth the cud, among the beasts, that shall ye eat.
Leviticus 11:3

Biblical Context

Leviticus 11:3 states that only animals with a split hoof, cloven-footed and cud-chewing are edible.

Neville's Inner Vision

Think of Leviticus 11:3 as a map of your inner appetite. The parting of the hoof and the cloven foot speaks to a mind with distinct, yet aligned faculties—perception and choice—held together by integrity. The cud-chewing beast digests its meals by returning again to the same truth, until it becomes habit. So your mental diet must be tested: feed only what your higher I AM can discern and repeatedly digest until it settles as certainty. When you imagine yourself as the I AM—watchful, unshaken by fear, whole in intention—the inner kitchen becomes clean. Anything that does not survive the twofold test—clear discernment and repeated digestion—is not food for your life. This inner law is not punitive; it is the alignment of consciousness with wholeness. Your visible life will reflect the order you nourish inwardly, and your imagination acts as the cook and the kitchen, turning thought into form.

Practice This Now

Practice: Sit quietly and declare, I am the I AM; I only feed my mind with thoughts that pass the test of discernment and digestion. Picture a gate at the mind's door and let through only ideas you can thoroughly digest, then feel the truth as real.

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