Inner Confession for Atonement

Leviticus 5:5 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Leviticus 5 in context

Scripture Focus

5And it shall be, when he shall be guilty in one of these things, that he shall confess that he hath sinned in that thing:
Leviticus 5:5

Biblical Context

The verse states that guilt in any matter requires an admission of sin in that matter.

Neville's Inner Vision

Leviticus offers an outward ritual, yet the inner meaning is a shift of consciousness. Guilt is an infection of the self, an imagined separation from the I AM. When you declare I have sinned in that thing, you are not pointing to a deed as much as admitting you believed in a thought that diminishes your divine nature. In Neville's school confession is the precise lever by which a man returns to his original state. The moment the self voices the admission, the mind stops feeding the old image and the light of your awareness reclaims the scene. You are not condemned by a law outside you, but healed by the change in the identification you hold about yourself. The act of confessing is thus not a plea to heaven, but a turning of imagination back to its sovereign ruler the I AM. Then the desire for atonement dissolves and reconciliation with every facet of life becomes possible, because the inner climate has shifted from guilt to grace.

Practice This Now

In the next moment, close your eyes and say I confess that I have believed in lack in that matter; I forgive myself and release it to the light of the I AM. Feel the sense of release as the old image fades and grace returns to the inner atmosphere.

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