Inner Offerings, Inner Feast
Ezekiel 46:11 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Ezekiel 46 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Verse Ezekiel 46:11 presents feasts where the meat offering is measured—an ephah for the bullock, ram, and sheep—with oil, symbolizing orderly worship and covenant loyalty. It shows that worship is not arbitrary but proportioned to the activity and energy of the worshiper.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within the theater of your mind, Ezekiel's feast becomes a map of your inner life. The 'meat offering' is not a ritual to appease a distant God, but a symbolic measure of attention you pour into your day. The bullock stands for steady, disciplined consciousness; the ram, bold and active energy; the lambs represent the receptive, pliant moments you allow for growth; the oil is inspiration—the oil of clarity and faith that quickens every measure. The ephah is your inner container, a precise field of awareness you fill. In feasts and solemnities, you practice loyalty to the covenant with your I AM presence. When you revise your inner state to reflect abundance, you align events in your life with that measure; you awaken to the truth that imagination creates reality, and the ceremonial acts of worship become deliberate acts of self-creation. So the verse invites you to honor your inner feast by proportioning your thoughts and feelings to your highest aims, keeping your pledge to the I AM.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume, right now, the feeling that you give your inner life exactly what it needs. Visualize offering an ephah of consciousness to your steadfast self (bullock), to your energized will (ram), and to your open-hearted lambs, then anoint it with oil of inspired thought.
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