Inner Consequences of Thought

Leviticus 26:16 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Leviticus 26 in context

Scripture Focus

16I also will do this unto you; I will even appoint over you terror, consumption, and the burning ague, that shall consume the eyes, and cause sorrow of heart: and ye shall sow your seed in vain, for your enemies shall eat it.
Leviticus 26:16

Biblical Context

Leviticus 26:16 warns that disobedience invites hardship and sorrow, showing up as external trouble when inner life is out of alignment. The consequences reflect inner states rather than only external judgment.

Neville's Inner Vision

From a Neville perspective, Leviticus 26:16 is not a distant legal threat but a map of inner weather. The phrases terror, consumption, and the burning ague symbolize fears, decay of hope, and heart-sorrow you have permitted in imagination. When you sow seed in vain, you are feeding thoughts of scarcity and imagining enemies that consume your projects from within; the apparent external enemy is simply misdirected attention. The remedy is not appeasing punishment but awakening to I AM—the unchanging awareness that watches thoughts and can revise them. In practice, imagine you are already free, that you do not belong to fear or sorrow; feel the presence of I AM governing this scene. Assume that reality, and let fear dissolve as your heartbeat aligns with the truth you entertain. With continued revision, seeds flourish and apparent exile becomes a turning back to your true imagination. Your life reflects this inner shift, not by changing the outer world alone, but by reconstituting the inner state that creates it.

Practice This Now

Practice: Close your eyes and, in imagination, assume I AM is governing your life now; revise the scene by affirming, I am free and whole. Then feel this truth until it becomes your immediate experience.

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