Inner Covenant Vision
Leviticus 26:29 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 26 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Leviticus 26:29 states that breaking the covenant brings extreme famine and a horror so severe that people would eat flesh. It reads as a stark warning about accountability under the law.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within the psyche, Leviticus 26:29 announces not a mere external doom but the inner hunger that arises when you forget your covenant with the I AM. The flesh imagery points to the vitality you drain from yourself when you dwell in separation—your own imagination becomes the source of nourishment or famine. When you identify with lack, fear, and separation, you consume your interior energy, and the world mirrors that depletion as events shape your experience. The law and commandments, in Neville's sense, are not punitive rules but mental disciplines: who you assume yourself to be becomes your reality. To reinterpret is to restore loyalty to the I AM, to imagine that you are sustained by the living unity that permeates all. The fix is simple yet profound: assume the feeling of fullness, revise your sense of deprivation, and dwell in the awareness that you are fully nourished by your own consciousness. In that inner covenant kept, the outer scenes of suffering soften as you align with life.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Assume you are already nourished by the I AM within; feel the fullness until it seems real. Then revise any sense of lack by affirming I am one with God and my life is sustained by divine consciousness.
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