Inner Sacrifices, Eternal Acceptance
Leviticus 10:19-20 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 10 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Aaron notes the offerings before the LORD and asks if eating the sin offering today would be accepted; Moses hears and is content.
Neville's Inner Vision
Consider the scene through the eyes of the I AM. Aaron’s remark about the sin and burnt offerings is not a question about God’s appetite for ritual, but a symbol of your inner stance toward fault. The phrase 'if I had eaten the sin offering today' points to dwelling in guilt as a habit of mind. To the state of consciousness that Neville teaches, the sacrifice is never a thing you perform, but a shift you assume. When Moses heard and was content, it signals a release into a higher alignment: the outer ritual is not coercing the inner; the inner is already aligned with the divine Presence. The Presence of God is your awareness here and now. Holiness is not separation but the quiet recognition that you are the I AM witnessing every thought, emotion, and act. Thus, the question becomes: what state are you occupying? If you assume you have already satisfied the inner law, the acceptable sacrifice becomes your lived experience, transforming ritual into radiance.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and assume you are already the I AM, wholly accepted; feel guilt dissolve as you declare, 'I am already reconciled with my life today.'
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