From Unclean to Inner Wholeness

Leviticus 13:45-46 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Leviticus 13 in context

Scripture Focus

45And the leper in whom the plague is, his clothes shall be rent, and his head bare, and he shall put a covering upon his upper lip, and shall cry, Unclean, unclean.
46All the days wherein the plague shall be in him he shall be defiled; he is unclean: he shall dwell alone; without the camp shall his habitation be.
Leviticus 13:45-46

Biblical Context

Leviticus 13:45-46 presents a leper declared unclean, banished from the camp, living apart due to a plague. The passage links outward signs of defilement to an inner separation from holiness and community.

Neville's Inner Vision

Notice how the text assigns the burden of uncleanness to the man who bears the plague, yet the true message is a state of consciousness. The leper’s clothes are torn, his head is bare, his lip covered, and his cry Unclean are not about dirt in the flesh but about a belief in separation from the One Life that fills all. The dwelling outside the camp represents a mind withdrawing from its awareness of unity; isolation is the result of fear, not a real condition. In Neville’s sense, you are not defined by the external circumstance, but by the I AM that feels and knows from within. When you accept the truth that you are the expression of God’s presence, the sense of uncleanness dissolves. The plague is a misperception that you are separate from God, others, or your own worth; the cure is to assume the state of wholeness here and now, and to feel the inner sight that knows you are always in the camp of divine life.

Practice This Now

Assume the I AM now; feel your wholeness as if it were your immediate experience. Revise the cry Unclean to I AM clean, and dwell in the inner camp where God’s life abides.

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