Inner Atonement in Leviticus
Leviticus 10:17-18 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 10 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Leviticus 10:17-18 questions why the sin offering was not eaten in the holy place, since it is most holy and is to bear the congregation's iniquity to make atonement; the blood was not brought into the holy place, though it should have been eaten there as commanded.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the inner theater of consciousness, the sin offering represents a state of guilt or error within you. The holy place is the sanctum of awareness where you are asked to internalize, rather than guard from, the sensation of wrong-doing. To eat the offering in the holy place is to consent to absorb the burden of iniquity within your own sense of I AM, thereby making atonement in your inner kingdom. The command not to bring the blood into the holy place signifies a misalignment between action and belief; proper living arises when you acknowledge the fault, hold it in your mind, and cast it into the furnace of your awareness until it is balanced by unity with God. The presence of God is the constant backdrop of your experience, and holiness comes through a disciplined interior act: you choose to internalize the offering, not as guilt kept apart, but as the catalyst for right relation with the divine within you. By this interior ritual, the law becomes a living practice of wholeness rather than a distant statute.
Practice This Now
Assume you now eat the sin offering in the holy place within your mind; feel the release as you declare, 'I am at one with God; this burden is dissolved in the light of I AM.'
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