Holiness Covenant Practice

Leviticus 21:7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Leviticus 21 in context

Scripture Focus

7They shall not take a wife that is a whore, or profane; neither shall they take a woman put away from her husband: for he is holy unto his God.
Leviticus 21:7

Biblical Context

Leviticus 21:7 establishes a boundary of sacred loyalty, insisting on purity and fidelity to the divine covenant. It uses a marital metaphor to emphasize that the inner life must be holy and undivided.

Neville's Inner Vision

Prayerfully align with the I AM, for the verse speaks not of buildings but of states of consciousness. The wife is the partner of your thoughts, an image you invite into the temple of your awareness. When you accept any profane image or old limitation—the swerving belief that you are defined by lack or fear—you are inviting something unholy to sit beside your awareness. But you are holy unto your God, and your inner king is sworn to constant loyalty to that divine I AM. In Neville's sense, the law becomes a practical discipline: you do not couple with every passing impulse but with that which reflects your divine nature. Cast out inner pictures that reduce you to mere appetite or doubt. Keep the chamber of your consciousness clean, and you will find your life rearranges to match this inner holiness. The moment you assume, I am holy unto God, your surroundings respond as if made of the material of faith—people, circumstances, and opportunities that honor your covenant.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Assume the state I am holy unto God and revise any unholy image. Feel it-real as this inner stance reshapes your outer world.

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