Inner Cleansing of Leviticus 13:3
Leviticus 13:3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 13 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Leviticus 13:3 describes a priest inspecting a skin plague and declaring the person unclean when the hair turns white and the lesion seems deeper than the flesh. The act links outward appearance to ritual uncleanliness.
Neville's Inner Vision
To Neville, this text is not about a disease but a scene on the stage of consciousness. The priest is the inner observer, the I AM looking at a thought that claims you are contaminated. The plague is a belief that appears in awareness; the whitening hair and the depth of the lesion are not facts about the body but signals of a separated state your mind has accepted. When the priest proclaims 'unclean,' the inner you agrees with lack and perpetuates the condition by attention. Yet you can reverse the drama by a simple act of assumption: assume the state of wholeness, now. dwell in the feeling that you are the I AM, perfectly clean, and that the so-called plague dissolves in the light of consciousness. As you persist in that revised state, the illusion of separation fades and the external body follows the new inner truth. This is the method: awareness, then feeling, then reality, not the other way around.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and declare I AM whole right now; feel that truth as real. Visualize the priest examining your skin and, seeing no plague, pronouncing you clean.
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