Morning Inner Offering

Ezekiel 46:14 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Ezekiel 46 in context

Scripture Focus

14And thou shalt prepare a meat offering for it every morning, the sixth part of an ephah, and the third part of an hin of oil, to temper with the fine flour; a meat offering continually by a perpetual ordinance unto the LORD.
Ezekiel 46:14

Biblical Context

Ezekiel 46:14 prescribes a morning meat offering, measured with flour and oil, to be offered continually as a perpetual act of worship to the LORD.

Neville's Inner Vision

Ez 46:14 speaks not of bricks and bowls but of you—an inner temple waking to its own I AM. The daily offering is your morning state, a fixed portion of attention and life-energy given to the One within. The six parts of an ephah and the third part of an hin of oil are symbolic measures: a disciplined, precise mind (the flour) tempered by the Spirit’s vitality (the oil). When you temper your thought-form with gratitude, clarity, and fixed expectancy, you are not appeasing an external deity but aligning your inner consciousness to its perpetual law: whatever you believe in your heart you enact in your life. The offering is continuous, a perpetual ordinance in the sanctuary of your mind, which is the LORD inside you. Faithfulness is not a ritual to keep but a posture to maintain—awake, hopeful, and obedient to the I AM’s sovereignty. In this view, true worship is daily, practical and inner; it is the stable, imaginative act by which you reorder your inner meals, so your outer world becomes the fruit of inner order.

Practice This Now

Sit in quiet first thing, declare, I am the I AM, and offer a fixed measure of inner attention tempered by gratitude until it feels real. Visualize oil-like vitality mingling with orderly thoughts, a continuous inward rite setting the day in divine alignment.

The Bible Through Neville

Neville Bible Sparks

Loading...

Loading...
Video thumbnail
Loading video details...
🔗 View on YouTube

© 2025 The Bible Through Neville - A consciousness-based approach to Scripture