Inner Cleansing of Leviticus 14:2-3
Leviticus 14:2-3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 14 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage frames cleansing as a ritual: the leper comes to the priest, who observes and declares healing. Symbolically, this speaks to an inner process where consciousness recognizes wholeness.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within the inner narrative, the 'leper' is a worn belief in lack, the 'day of cleansing' a dawning moment when awareness flips from fear to truth. The priest, not an external priest, but the I AM within you, goes forth from the caravan of ego to examine the condition with a quiet, decisive gaze. When it looks and says the 'plague' is healed, it means your state has shifted from response to absence of resistance to the present healing. The camp represents the crowd of old identifications; the act of going forth out of the camp signifies stepping out of those identities long enough to witness the truth anew. The diagnosis is not a future event but an inner verdict: healing is completed in the consciousness that knows itself as one with the I AM. The law described is the law of your inner holiness, defined by your unwavering assumption. By withholding belief in separation and choosing the felt reality of wholeness, you fulfill the condition of cleansing in this moment.
Practice This Now
Assume the inner priest now; declare healing and let it feel real by imagining a warm light washing over you from head to toe. Stay with the sensation until it becomes your normal state.
The Bible Through Neville










Neville Bible Sparks









