Inner Offerings and Pure Consciousness
Leviticus 22:23-24 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 22 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Leviticus 22:23–24 distinguishes offerings by intent: a freewill offering may be made with a defect, while a vow must be free of blemish; no bruised or broken animal may be offered anywhere.
Neville's Inner Vision
In the eye of spirit, the law points to your inner state, not to distant ritual. A freewill offering, with its allowance for something "superfluous or lacking," mirrors how you may present a provisional, evolving self to God — your imagination offered as it is, with room to refine. Yet a vow demands a flawless commitment; it is your fixed sense of I AM, the unblemished you that does not accept any murk of limitation. When you think thoughts bruised, crushed, or broken, you are offering a consciousness that has not yet matured into wholeness; such an offering would be rejected because it does not reflect pure awareness. The land you stand on is your life; you do not plant wounded thoughts there. The spiritual law is clear: holiness is a state of integrity; your worship is true only when your inner state matches your declared intention. So, if you are in practice, revise your self-condition until you feel the state as real, and let your freewill offering be the shimmer of an unblemished I AM, regardless of outward appearances.
Practice This Now
Assume the state of unblemished consciousness now and feel it as real. Revise any sense of deficiency by affirming I AM Whole, and observe your inner offerings align with that truth.
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