Tithe of the I Am: Unchanging Devotion

Leviticus 27:33 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Leviticus 27 in context

Scripture Focus

33He shall not search whether it be good or bad, neither shall he change it: and if he change it at all, then both it and the change thereof shall be holy; it shall not be redeemed.
Leviticus 27:33

Biblical Context

Leviticus 27:33 commands a fixed commitment: do not search the tithe as good or bad, and do not change it; if you change it, both the change and the original are holy and cannot be redeemed.

Neville's Inner Vision

Your inner life is the arena where the tithe is offered to the I AM. The verse asks you to treat a chosen state of consciousness as unalterable, not to ask whether it feels good or bad, not to revise it lightly. When you search or adjust, you fragment your certainty and grant sanctity to the act of changing; the old and the new each sit in holiness, and neither is redeemable from its own claim. In Neville’s psychology, such a fixed assumption becomes the ground of creation: you cannot escape it by clinging to doubt, you must rather insist that the I AM has already decreed the state and you are simply living from that decree. The energy of your imagination must be anchored in a single, unyielding purpose, so that the sense of 'I AM' animates the state you hold. By honoring the unrevised tithe, you align with holiness and faithfulness, and your reality grows from that unwavering seed.

Practice This Now

Choose a single inner state to vow as your tithe and hold it unaltered for 24 hours, imagining it is already true. When doubts arise, neither protest nor revise—double down by feeling the I AM confirming the state.

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