Inner Cleansing Accord: Leviticus 15:20-22
Leviticus 15:20-22 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 15 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Leviticus 15:20-22 describes ritual cleanliness: anything the menstruating person lies on or sits on becomes unclean, and anyone who touches those things must wash and bathe until evening.
Neville's Inner Vision
The verses speak not of moral failing but of states of consciousness. The bed and objects symbolize inner resting places where attention lingers; the 'uncleanness' is a temporary psychic disposition, a moment when consciousness forgets its unity. In Neville’s language, purity is not earned by ritual but entered by awareness. Treat the I AM—the sacred, unchanging awareness within you—as the cleansing principle. When you assume the feeling of being wholly awake and untouchable by transient states, you rewrite the impression left on your inner environment. The 'evening' signifies the return to wholeness after a lapse; remind yourself that all things you touch are made anew by your persistent assumption. By dwelling in the consciousness that is always pure, you commission your surroundings to reflect that inner reality. The law in Leviticus thus becomes a map of inner boundaries: separation is not distance from God but a disciplined attention to what you allow to inhabit your mind. Your life is the atmosphere you imagine it to be.
Practice This Now
Before bed, sit quietly and declare: I am the I AM, pure awareness; nothing touches my being that I do not instantly cleanse by this awareness. Picture a stream of light washing over every object you touch in daily life, and feel them becoming clean as you sink into the evening of your true self.
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