Inner Cutoff Reimagined

Leviticus 18:29 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Leviticus 18 in context

Scripture Focus

29For whosoever shall commit any of these abominations, even the souls that commit them shall be cut off from among their people.
Leviticus 18:29

Biblical Context

Leviticus 18:29 warns that those who commit certain abominations will be cut off from their people, signaling a separation from the community. In the Neville lens, the so-called punishment reflects inner state and choice.

Neville's Inner Vision

This verse speaks not of a distant judgment, but of the inner state you cast upon yourself. The 'abominations' are patterns of thought and feeling you treat as real, the inner acts that separate your life from the Source. 'The souls that commit them' is your self-identity when you believe you are apart from the I AM. When that identity leans into guilt or fear, you experience being 'cut off from among their people' as a real sense of isolation, a contraction of life. Yet there is no outer exile; there is a turning inward. The law of imagination tells you that you may revise from within by assuming a state of holiness and unity with life. If you dwell in that state, you discover you are always present in the one I AM, and the past error loses its power to define you. As you keep your attention on the living I AM, the imagined barrier dissolves and your community becomes the expression of your inward life, not a distant penalty. The text becomes instruction in self-purification: choose a state, hold to it, and let the inner cut-off melt into oneness.

Practice This Now

Assume the feeling that you are already one with the I AM; feel it real that no division can truly separate you from life. Then, for a few minutes, rest in that state and let the old pattern dissolve.

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