Inner Offerings for Purity
Leviticus 9:3 - A Neville Goddard interpretation
Read Leviticus 9 in context
Scripture Focus
Biblical Context
Leviticus 9:3 directs Israel to bring a goat for sin and a calf and a calf and a lamb for burnt offerings, symbolizing purification and dedicated worship.
Neville's Inner Vision
Viewed through Neville Goddard's lens, Leviticus 9:3 reveals inner movements rather than distant rites. The 'kid of the goats' set aside for a sin offering represents a release of a wrong belief or impulsive appetite—the animal self acknowledged and prepared for transformation. The 'calf and a lamb, both of the first year, without blemish' symbolize fresh, untainted states of consciousness you offer to the I AM, the awareness you identify with. 'For a burnt offering' means you surrender your whole attention to a single truth, allowing the divine presence to consume what is not pure until the self stands as pure consciousness. The phrase spoken to the children of Israel becomes a reminder that your inner world is the altar where every thought and feeling is examined and rearranged. In this view, God is not an external agency but the I AM within you; the offering is your mental economy aligned with that light. By treating offerings as transformations of consciousness—release, then consecration—you awaken the timeless fact that your life itself is the expression of pure awareness.
Practice This Now
Imaginative Act: In a moment of stillness, identify one limiting thought. Assume the I AM is present as your core; revise the thought to 'I release this belief and am now pure awareness.' Feel-it-real as if the entire life is being offered to that consciousness.
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