Inner Wave of Consecration
Exodus 29:22-25 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Exodus 29 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Exodus 29:22–25 describes offerings where portions of a ram and unleavened bread are placed in the hands of Aaron and his sons, waved as an offering before the LORD, and then burned as a pleasing aroma to God, symbolizing consecration and devotion.
Neville's Inner Vision
In Neville's psychology, the rite is a blueprint for inner transformation. The ram’s fat and the parts named signify the energy and attention you hold in your 스life, taken into the hands of the inner priest—the I AM within you. When you place these offerings in the hands of Aaron and his sons, you are acknowledging your faculties—thought, emotion, action—as belonging to a higher order of consciousness. The wave offering is not a ritual gesture but the deliberate, conscious movement of energy before awareness, a declaration that your entire being is consecrated to divine use. The bread and wafers symbolize the essentials you relinquish to present-day awareness—the unadorned now, free of ego’s leaven. Burning the offerings represents the transformation of self into a fragrant, devotional state that rises to God as your continuous, obedient life. In this inner temple, the presence of God is your I AM—the steady, nonjudgmental awareness that accepts, refines, and delights in your faithful alignment with divine order.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume you are the I AM. Mentally place your inner ram and loaf in your hands, wave them before God, and feel your small self being transfigured into devotion.
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