The Inner Meat Offering Practice
Leviticus 10:12-13 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 10 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Moses instructs Aaron and his sons to eat the remaining meat offering beside the altar, in the holy place, for it is most holy and due to them.
Neville's Inner Vision
Within the Levitical instruction, the meat offering is not a meal but a symbol of the nourishment your soul requires when fed by obedience to the inner law. The altar becomes the stage of your awareness, and the ‘most holy’ designation marks the quality of your attention when you choose to keep your mind free of leaven—free of ego, fear, and doubt. The commanded eating implies a conscious intake: you ingest a thought, a feeling, or story that aligns with your true I AM, and you digest it in the holy place of your own heart. When you claim it as thy due, you acknowledge your divine right to this sacred state, not by external ritual but by inner conviction. This is why the movement of faith and obedience matters: your inner appetite shapes your experience, and holiness is a state you enter, not a place you visit. So the inner meal is a practice in self-authority, a revision of your self-image until your life conforms to that I AM presence.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Sit in stillness, revise your self-concept to 'I AM holy,' and feel it real by tasting the bread of consciousness in the holy place inside; repeat 'I AM' until you know it as fact.
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