Vessels of Inner Holiness
Leviticus 6:28-30 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 6 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage describes how the sin-offering is to be handled: an earthen vessel sodden with the sacrifice must be broken, brass pots must be cleaned, the priests may eat the most holy portion, and any blood offering is burned rather than eaten.
Neville's Inner Vision
Leviticus invites you into the temple of your own mind. The vessels are states of consciousness: the earthen vessel represents a fragile frame that has absorbed heat and drama, and thus must be broken to reveal the truth beneath. A brass pot stands for a hardened habit; its cleansing with water symbolizes the renewal of attention and the washing of old patterns. The instruction that the priests may eat the most holy portion points to the higher faculties—awareness, discernment, and love—nourishing themselves on the fruits of clear knowing. The prohibition on eating the blood, and its burning in the fire, signals release: the emotional charges—guilt, fear, or separation—must be burned away rather than consumed as nourishment. Read thus, holiness is not a distant ritual but the state your awareness assumes. When you treat your inner movements as sacred, you align with the I AM and allow the holy to become your ongoing reality, here and now.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: In stillness, picture the earthen vessel of a belief breaking apart and dissolving, then see it rinsed clean with a fresh impression of I AM presence. Silently affirm, 'I am holy now; I eat only the truth of my I AM,' letting the feeling root in your awareness.
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