The Door Of Inner Worship

Leviticus 17:9 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Leviticus 17 in context

Scripture Focus

9And bringeth it not unto the door of the tabernacle of the congregation, to offer it unto the LORD; even that man shall be cut off from among his people.
Leviticus 17:9

Biblical Context

Leviticus 17:9 commands bringing an offering to the door of the tabernacle to offer to the LORD; not doing so cuts one off from the community. It frames true worship as obedience to a prescribed place and act.

Neville's Inner Vision

In Neville's lens, the tabernacle is your inner temple and the door a threshold of awareness. The offering represents your creative state—thoughts, feelings, and beliefs you consciously present to the Lord within. If you fail to bring your offering to the door, you sever the flow of life from your I AM, isolating your inner self from the unity of your own consciousness. This is not a punitive rule but a reflection of the law of consciousness: your life follows your inner alignment. When you neglect this act of inner assent, discord, lack, and separation appear because the inner energy isn’t anchored in the I AM. The practice is disciplined imagination: choose a desired state, invest it with conviction, and hold the assumption until it feels real. The command to offer becomes a guide to inner obedience, ensuring your thoughts align with your divine nature. The verse invites you to inspect the passageway of your desires—the door through which they pass into expression—and to guard it with faith, clarity, and love so you remain one with your essential self.

Practice This Now

Assume you stand before the door of your inner tabernacle; present a specific desire to the LORD within, and feel it already real as you dwell in that elevated state.

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