Inner Acceptance in Leviticus 10:19
Leviticus 10:19 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 10 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Aaron notes that the people offered sin and burnt offerings before the LORD, and he wonders if, by eating the sin offering himself today, it would be accepted. The moment hints at the weight of ritual for acceptance.
Neville's Inner Vision
Aaron's fear reveals a belief that acceptance rests on outward rite rather than inner state. His question, whether eating the sin offering today would be accepted, shows a mind conditioned by ritual as the measure of worth. In Neville's light, the offerings symbolize inner movements—guilt, separation, and longing for approval—yet they are but signs reminding you that you are already known and beloved by the I AM within. The true altar is consciousness itself, and God is the constant awareness that you are, and always have been, accepted. The remedy is not more rites but a revision of state: assume you are already accepted, feel it as real, and let the sense of sin dissolve in the fire of awareness. As you maintain this feeling, the sense of separation dissolves and you enter true worship—an inner recognition that nothing external can add to or take away from your divine standing.
Practice This Now
Imaginative_act: In a quiet moment, close your eyes and repeat, 'I am accepted now,' while imagining consuming the symbolic sin offering and feeling the acceptance filling you until guilt dissolves.
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