Inner Offerings of the Self
Exodus 29:40-41 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Exodus 29 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Exodus 29:40-41 describes two lambs with a measured offering of flour, oil, and wine, offered morning and evening to create a pleasing aroma to God. Taken spiritually, it hints at the daily rhythm of devoted inner worship.
Neville's Inner Vision
Exodus 29:40-41 reveals an outward rite, but the real meaning is inward. The two lambs, together with flour, oil, and wine, stand for the movements of your consciousness offered back to the I AM. The lamb is your true identity, the unconditioned self that already stands in the presence of God. Flour represents the steady nourishment of disciplined thought; oil is the unction of Spirit poured into your imagination; wine is joy and gratitude poured through your feelings. The morning and the evening offerings symbolize the two great cycles of awareness: waking and dreaming, action and reflection, each becoming a sweet savour when you maintain a state of faithful expectancy. As you adopt the posture of “I am offering this to the LORD,” you cease resisting and permit your inner faculties to align. The law operates from within: your assumed state becomes your experienced reality, so the ritual’s form becomes a symbol of inner certainty. The outward ceremony invites you to dwell in the awareness that you are already the sacrifice of light, and the world will unfold accordingly.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Morning and evening, picture your inner altar and the lamb as your true self being offered with flour, oil, and wine. Feel the I AM accepting it, and dwell in the sweet savour of perfect alignment.
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