Inner Timing of Peace Offerings
Leviticus 7:15-17 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 7 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Leviticus 7:15-17 says the flesh of peace-offerings for thanksgiving must be eaten the same day it's offered; if it's a vow or voluntary offering, it may be eaten the same day and the next day, but on the third day leftovers are burned.
Neville's Inner Vision
All of Leviticus 7:15-17 speaks to the inner rhythm of worship. The flesh of the peace offering stands for the living presence of gratitude in your own awareness; to eat it the same day you offer it is to dwell in the state you desire as if it already exists. If the offering is a vow or voluntary, you may consume it the same day and in the morrow too - this mirrors your willingness to sustain the feeling of thanksgiving until it has fully integrated. The third day’s burning becomes symbolic of releasing any stale or leftover doubt that lingers in the mind. In Neville's terms, the outer ritual is a mirror of the inner act: you must align your imagination with the I AM and refuse to postpone your inner feast. By assuming you already inhabit peace and abundance, you transform the image until it dissolves the old self and makes room for the new state.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: Assume the state of thanksgiving now; see yourself consuming the peace-offering in imagination on the same day you offer it, feeling gratitude as a present reality. Then permit any lingering old thought to be burned away on the third day, releasing you from past limitations.
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