Inner Cleansing: Leviticus 15:27

Leviticus 15:27 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Leviticus 15 in context

Scripture Focus

27And whosoever toucheth those things shall be unclean, and shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the even.
Leviticus 15:27

Biblical Context

The verse says touching certain impurity makes a person ceremonially unclean. One must wash clothes, bathe, and remain unclean until evening.

Neville's Inner Vision

Leviticus 15:27 speaks in the currency of the senses, but its true meaning is a state of consciousness. When you say you have touched 'those things'—the quick judgments, fear, or lack that seem to cling to you—you feel marked, unclean, separated from the perfect presence of I AM. The rite of washing clothes and bathing in water is not about dirt on skin; it is a discipline of mind: you revise the story you tell about yourself, you reorganize the inner wardrobe so that nothing you touch can diminish your sense of divine self. In Neville’s terms, you turn from the belief that your world defines you toward the awareness that your I AM defines your world. The 'evening' denotes finishing the day with a restored alignment; until then, you simply return to the assumption that you are already clean, breathing the assurance I AM. Touch becomes a signal to return to the inner conviction, not a verdict on your being. Therefore, the law teaches a practical psychology: purity is a state you can maintain by steady inner attention and deliberate revision, not by external rules alone.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes, invoke I AM, and revise the touching into a renewed sense of wholeness. Imagine washing your inner clothes with living water until you feel clean and connected to you.

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