Inner Offerings Reimagined

Malachi 1:7 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Malachi 1 in context

Scripture Focus

7Ye offer polluted bread upon mine altar; and ye say, Wherein have we polluted thee? In that ye say, The table of the LORD is contemptible.
Malachi 1:7

Biblical Context

Malachi condemns polluted offerings and a contemptible table of the LORD. Read through Neville's lens, the issue is not external ritual but the inner state that such acts reveal.

Neville's Inner Vision

Malachi 1:7 shows a people and an altar; in Neville's psychology the altar is the inner temple of consciousness, the bread the thoughts you offer daily, and the table the sense of nourishment you keep toward life. When they say the table of the LORD is contemptible, they project judgment onto sacred forms while ignoring the inner atmosphere that makes form real. The condition is not a distant accusation but a condition of mind. If you accept a belief that your offerings are polluted, you deform your experience; if you insist that the Lord’s table is clean only when forms look right, you are denying your own I AM presence. The cure is the practice of revision: assume you are always offering pure bread, that your inner altar is holy, that the table of the LORD is delightful because it is your consciousness reflecting its divine nature. By feeling the reality of wholeness—now, here—you shift the inner movements, and the outer rituals follow suit. You are not changing God, but waking to the truth you already are: the I AM, here and now, imagining purity into every act.

Practice This Now

Assume the feeling that you are the I AM and this moment is holy. Visualize placing clean bread on the inner altar and tasting its purity, and let that shift your next outward gesture.

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