Doorway To Inner Priesthood
Exodus 29:32-33 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Exodus 29 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Aaron and his sons eat the offerings to consecrate and sanctify them. The text marks holiness as a boundary that excludes the outsider.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within your mind’s sanctuary, the ram and bread become symbols you live by. The flesh of the ram is the vitality of disciplined action — your thoughts, feelings, and words that serve a sacred purpose. The bread in the basket represents daily nourishment that supports consecration: repeated acts of right worship, not casual ritual, but a continuous maintenance of inner holiness. The door of the tabernacle is the threshold of awareness; standing there, you choose which impressions may enter your system. When it says they shall eat those things wherewith the atonement was made, it invites you to feed on the results of your own atonement — the forgiveness you extend to yourself through revision, and the energy you invest in becoming what you intend. The prohibition on strangers eating says holiness is a personal, intimate alignment with your I AM — your true self, not borrowed by others. Practice shows that you are already the sanctified state you pretend to serve; you simply awaken to it by assumption and feeling-it-real.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Stand at the threshold of your inner tabernacle and, in vivid imagination, eat the symbolic offerings as if you are already holy; revise any limitation and feel the I AM reigning now.
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