Just Scales of Inner Judgment

Leviticus 19:35-36 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Leviticus 19 in context

Scripture Focus

35Ye shall do no unrighteousness in judgment, in meteyard, in weight, or in measure.
36Just balances, just weights, a just ephah, and a just hin, shall ye have: I am the LORD your God, which brought you out of the land of Egypt.
Leviticus 19:35-36

Biblical Context

The verse commands no unrighteous judgment or unfair measures; it calls for just balances, weights, and measures as a sign of covenant loyalty.

Neville's Inner Vision

Think of the command not as external rule for merchants, but as an inner law of your consciousness. The meteyard and the ephah are your standards—how you weigh a situation, how you measure desire, how you value results. Do not let biased thoughts, fear, or scarcity tilt the scales; let your inner judge be guided by justice—consistent, unbiased, and proportionate. When you judge a scene as true or false, generous or lacking, you are only reading your own state of awareness. The line 'I am the LORD your God' declares that the Self you worship is the perceiving I AM within, the source of all proportion. The Exodus is your movement from the slavery of wrong thinking to the freedom of right thinking; you are led out of limitation by choosing to align your judgments with divine order. Thus, every circumstance becomes an invitation to revise your inner measure until what you see reflects a fair, balanced, and harmonious life.

Practice This Now

Assume the role of the inner judge who uses just weights; in a moment of judgment, revise it by reweighing the scene with I AM awareness until the scales settle.

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