Blood Upon the Horns
Leviticus 4:7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 4 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Leviticus 4:7 describes the priest applying blood to the horns of the altar and pouring the rest at the base, symbolizing purification and atonement through ritual acts.
Neville's Inner Vision
Viewed through the I AM, the rite becomes a map of inner conversion. The horns of the altar are not metal and spice; they symbolize the focal points of your attention where you incline your affirmed desire. When you imagine placing blood on those horns, you are saying to your subconscious, This is the state I choose to inhabit now. The bullock’s blood poured at the base signifies a complete release into your conscious practice—the old self is washed away wherever you once believed limitation held sway, and the entire flow seals the new vision into the nervous system. In Neville’s psychology, sacrifice is not punishment but the voluntary shifting of belief. The tabernacle in the congregation stands for your present awareness, the audience of your inner drama, where I AM meets the world. The act of anointing the horns before the LORD becomes a disciplined revision: you refuse to remain identified with lack or fear and declare, I am the Ruler here. Your inner heaven aligns with your outward experience as you persist in this shift.
Practice This Now
Imaginative act: Close your eyes, declare I AM, touch the horns with imagined blood, and let the flow pour to the base to seal the new state. Repeat until it feels real.
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