Inner Sacrifice and Worship
1 Chronicles 29:21 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read 1 Chronicles 29 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
The passage reports the people offering abundant sacrifices and burnt offerings to the LORD for all Israel, expressing communal devotion and covenant loyalty.
Neville's Inner Vision
See in this chronicle how the crowd’s offerings are not merely animals on an altar but images of the mind’s array of states turning toward the divine I AM. God, as Neville teaches, is awareness, not a distant deity: the people’s collective sacrifice mirrors the ascent of consciousness toward abundance and covenant loyalty. When you read that a thousand bullocks and a thousand rams were presented, hear the inner equivalents—thousands of hopeful possibilities imagined and kindly felt into awareness. The drink offerings signify refined feeling poured into your scene, and the abundant sacrifices signal the readiness of the mind to give itself to what it already accepts as real. The phrase 'on the morrow after that day' marks a fresh dawn in your interior life—a decision to live from the assumption that the altar of your being is already supplied. True worship, in Neville’s sense, is not ritual alone but the disciplined practice of imagining and feeling from the state you seek. By this inner act, you harmonize with the I AM and invite the corresponding reality into your life.
Practice This Now
Practice: Sit quietly, close your eyes, and mentally assume you already possess abundance. Imagine offering your inner wealth to the I AM and feel the gratitude; repeat for 5 minutes daily.
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