Inner Devotion to Awareness
Leviticus 27:28-29 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 27 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Leviticus 27:28-29 speaks of devoting all one possesses to the LORD, marking such things as holy; some may be sold or redeemed, while others devoted by a person cannot be redeemed and are to be set aside or died.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the Neville lens, Leviticus speaks not of external law but of states of consciousness. When you devote all that you have to the LORD—the I AM, your awareness—you are not surrendering property to a sky-god, you are recognizing that every belief, memory, and habit belongs to the One who watches. The phrase 'notwithstanding no devoted thing' signals that you may designate a part of your interior world as sacred, and that such a 'devoted thing' is truly holy because it is claimed by your consciousness. You may 'sell or redeem' aspects of yourself in the ordinary sense, yet the essence remains holy—identified with the I AM. The clause that 'none devoted by men shall be redeemed' points to the end of false identifications rather than punishment: you let the old you die so the true I AM can rise. The 'field of his possession' becomes a sacred inner landscape; thoughts and traits are treated as holy, not for grabbing or bargaining, but for the transformation of the self. When you understand that holiness is an interior alignment, your life becomes the natural outgrowth of a consciousness that has freely chosen the divine I AM as its center.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Pick one limiting belief and imagine you are devoting it to the I AM, then revise it by feeling it real as if already true. Close your eyes, declare, I AM the LORD of my consciousness, and let the old self die to reveal the new.
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