Inner Tabernacle Feast
Leviticus 8:31-32 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 8 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Moses instructs Aaron and his sons to boil the flesh at the door of the tabernacle and eat it with the bread of consecrations; what remains must be burned with fire.
Neville's Inner Vision
Leviticus 8:31-32 becomes a map of consciousness. The door of the tabernacle is the threshold of awareness, where the self may be sanctified. The instruction to boil the flesh symbolizes dissolving egoic appetites; eating the bread of consecration is the act of inwardly nourishing the state you claim to be: holiness here and now. This is not a ritual to satisfy an external law, but a discipline of imagination that makes a state tangible. When you chew the imagined bread and feel the I AM nourished, you are declaring that wholeness is your present function. The command to burn what remains is the decisive release of every pattern that contradicts that sacred state. In practice, this is the inner rearrangement by which perception lines up with the divine pattern you affirm. As you persist, your world bends to your awakened consciousness, and you live from the consecrated self as your natural occupancy.
Practice This Now
Close your eyes and stand at the door of your inner tabernacle; assume the holy state now: I am consecrated. Eat the bread of consecration in imagination and feel it nourishes you, then burn away the remaining ego with the fire of your awareness.
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