Clean Vessels, Clear Consciousness
Leviticus 11:32-33 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The text says that if any dead carcass touches a vessel, whether wooden, cloth, skin, or earthenware, that vessel becomes unclean until evening and must be cleansed; earthen vessels must be broken when contaminated.
Neville's Inner Vision
Here the word 'unclean' is pointing to a state of consciousness, not a punishment. When a dead thing—a belief, fear, memory, old habit—touches the form of your consciousness, your mental vessel becomes unclean, until the awareness of the moment washes it clean at evening. Your vessels—wood, cloth, skin, or clay—are the forms through which you think and act. If a clay vessel can’t be cleansed by water, you break it and give birth to a new vessel. This law reveals a sacred inner practice: impurity signals identification with a worn form, not the essence of you. You are I AM, and the moment you recognize that the living presence is always here, you rinse the vessel with the water of attention, you revise the story, and you feel it real that you stand in pure consciousness. In other words, switch your state: let the old form dissolve and declare, internally, I AM clean, I AM free, and watch the form rearrange itself to reflect that truth.
Practice This Now
Imaginative_act: Assume the I AM as your constant, washing every formed thought. When you sense contamination, revise aloud: 'I am pure consciousness now,' and feel the image of a clean vessel refashioned in light.
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