Inner Redemption of Space: Leviticus 25:29-30
Leviticus 25:29-30 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 25 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage grants a one-year window to redeem a dwelling in a walled city; if not redeemed, the buyer keeps it forever. It shows that inner possession remains provisional until consciously claimed.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within this law, the city’s dwelling is your state of awareness, and the year is a rhythm of inner renewal. The sold house waits for you to reassert ownership by the power of your I AM; redemption comes not from external history but from an inner assumption that you are now the owner, already redeemed and in possession. If you do not persist in that assumption, the mind’s course hardens, and the buyer's choice becomes a fixed pattern within your generations of awareness, a belief you have accepted as real. Time, in Neville’s tongue, is a door you may open or close by feeling: imagine the moment of winning, feel the door swing open, and dwell there until the feeling is vivid and stable. The law’s window is not a trap but a reminder that your future is built in the present state you maintain. So when you seek to own a space, treat it as a present reality within your I AM, and keep the feeling alive until it becomes woven into your outer life.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: In a quiet moment, assume you already own the space you seek to reclaim; feel its weight and walk through it as the rightful owner, declaring, 'I AM the owner of this space, redeemed now by my I AM.' Do this for several minutes until the feeling is real.
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