Inner Sanctity of Leviticus

Leviticus 22:2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Leviticus 22 in context

Scripture Focus

2Speak unto Aaron and to his sons, that they separate themselves from the holy things of the children of Israel, and that they profane not my holy name in those things which they hallow unto me: I am the LORD.
Leviticus 22:2

Biblical Context

Leviticus 22:2 instructs Aaron and his sons to keep the holy things separate and not to profane God's holy name by their treatment of what is hallowed. It presents holiness as a discipline of sacred handling and integrity.

Neville's Inner Vision

Think of the verse as a mirror for your own inner life. The holy things are not jars and garments alone; they are your inner meanings, your desires and duties that you have 'hallowed' in consciousness. The command to separate yourself from them becomes a command to separate your sense of self from unworthy mixing—stories and motives that would profane the royal name you carry within. In Neville’s terms, God is not a distant judge but the I AM, the awareness that you are. To keep the holy things unsullied is to protect the clarity of awareness, to prevent your sacred investments from becoming mere performances. When you imagine yourself as the high priest of your own temple, you practice the art of keeping your sacred assignments—work, love, truth—from being profaned by fear, vanity, or doubt. Your worship is true when your inner state remains intact while your outer duties are performed as a reverent act. The moment you revise your thoughts to align with the sacred, you are sanctified in consciousness.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Close your eyes, breathe into the I AM within, and declare, 'Only the holy enters my temple.' If a thought about self becomes profane, revise it instantly to align with the sacred I AM.

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