Inner Unleavened Bread Practice
Leviticus 23:6-8 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 23 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Leviticus 23:6-8 commands seven days of unleavened bread, holy convocations on the first and seventh days, and offerings, signaling holiness, rest from ordinary toil, and dedicated worship.
Neville's Inner Vision
Place your attention on the inner meaning behind the letter: the seven days are the seven facets of your consciousness, and unleavened bread stands for removing the leaven of fear, pride, and habitual thought from awareness. The first day and the seventh day are holy convocation moments where you pause, become still, and remember your true I AM presence. The fire-offerings are the affectionate return of every impulse to the altar of divine intention, a cleansing through desire rather than strain. When scripture tells you not to work, you are invited to cease the useless labor of the old mind and rest in the one perception that you are, right now, the I AM. This observance is a practice that trains your inner sight toward holiness, purity of intention, and surrender to a greater pattern. As you live from that restored consciousness, outward conditions align with your renewed sense of being, and the feast becomes a continual state rather than a yearly event.
Practice This Now
Imaginative_act: For seven days, assume the state of pure awareness—"I am unleavened in mind"—and feel the rest of the mind as holy ground. Each day, imagine offering every impulse to the altar of your I AM and feel the purification as a lived present-tense reality.
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