Blood, Dust, Inner Discipline

Leviticus 17:13 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Leviticus 17 in context

Scripture Focus

13And whatsoever man there be of the children of Israel, or of the strangers that sojourn among you, which hunteth and catcheth any beast or fowl that may be eaten; he shall even pour out the blood thereof, and cover it with dust.
Leviticus 17:13

Biblical Context

The verse commands the disposal of blood from hunted meat and to cover it with dust. It signals an inner discipline—keeping purity and separation by right handling of appetite.

Neville's Inner Vision

Within the I AM that you are, every craving to chase an external result becomes a small hunt. Leviticus speaks by symbol of blood and dust: blood is the life poured into pursuit; to pour it out is to refuse to energize the hunt, to withdraw the vitality from the impulse. Dust is the earth encompassing the trace of that movement; when you dust over, you end the story of that chase in your inner theatre. Thus the law invites you to maintain holiness and separation by choosing where life is invested. If you feel pulled toward a desire, see the impulse as a hunted beast and say to yourself: I pour out its blood and cover it with dust. Then return to the still, quiet I AM, where awareness shines unspent and the imagination can re-create your world from that grounded, purified state. This is not denial but realignment: your inner boundary creates outer order because consciousness is creative.

Practice This Now

Practice: in a moment of craving, imagine pouring out its blood and dusting it with silence; affirm 'I AM that I AM' and let your awareness return to a pure center.

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