Inner Cleanliness and Wholeness
Leviticus 11:4-6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 11 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage names three animals and declares them unclean because they chew the cud yet lack a split hoof; it teaches purity through separation and obedience.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the psychology of your life, Leviticus speaks not of beasts but of states of consciousness. To chew the cud is to loop a thought, repeat a pattern, or dwell in memory, while lacking the split hoof—the visible sign of wholeness in action. When you hear the word unclean, remember it points to a misalignment between belief and behavior, between inner intention and outer deed. The I AM within you, your true awareness, is the sole holiness; it is the boundary by which all things are measured. The outer commandments mirror this inner law: integrity is not handed down from outside but lived from within. When you cultivate the sense that you are ruled by the I AM, the world around you reorganizes to reflect that inner order. The separation described is really an inner separation from incongruent thoughts and feelings, a welcome alignment that births wholeness. Thus the symbolic beasts invite you to dissolve patterns into a single, coherent life—the life of God in you, precisely now.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and affirm I AM as your only reality. Revise any sense of impurity by declaring, I am clean and whole, aligned with my inner state, and act from that awareness.
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