Double Wash of Inner Purity
Leviticus 13:58 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 13 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Plain paraphrase: If the plague has departed from the garment, you wash it a second time and it becomes clean. The act of washing twice signals a confirmed state of cleanliness.
Neville's Inner Vision
Consider the garment as your formed sense of self and the plague as a belief that you are stained or unworthy. The rule to wash twice is not about linen but about consciousness: once the old condition is seen as departed, you repeat the cleansing until your inner state is certain. In Neville's psychology, the I AM is the water that makes dry things alive and the imagination is the instrument by which you alter appearance. When the sense of limitation lifts, you do not merely notice—it is your turn to revise and feel it real. The first washing is your decision to forgo identification with the old story; the second washing is the sealing act, the moment you declare, with feeling, that you are now clean. The law’s outward ritual becomes an inward practice, a demonstration that holiness is a present condition attained by steady, compassionate self-talk and vivid, unwavering assumption. Your inner world is not bound to outward signs; it is the state you inhabit here and now, which then manifests as a clean and integrated life.
Practice This Now
Imaginative_act: Sit quietly and assume the feeling of the wish fulfilled. Picture the garment being washed a second time and feel the certainty that the plague has departed, affirming I AM clean.
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