Inner Trumpets of Worship

Numbers 10:10 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Numbers 10 in context

Scripture Focus

10Also in the day of your gladness, and in your solemn days, and in the beginnings of your months, ye shall blow with the trumpets over your burnt offerings, and over the sacrifices of your peace offerings; that they may be to you for a memorial before your God: I am the LORD your God.
Numbers 10:10

Biblical Context

On glad and solemn days, trumpets are blown over offerings to make them a memorial before God; the passage ends with the declaration, I am the LORD your God.

Neville's Inner Vision

Take Numbers 10:10 as a map for the inner life: your gladness and your solemn moments become occasions to sound a trumpet within, declaring a state of awareness rather than performing a ritual. In Neville’s language, the outer rite is only the symbol of an inner act of awakening—the decision in imagination that you are not moved by circumstance but by the I AM you are. When you blow the inner trumpet over your offerings, you are not bribing God, you are aligning your consciousness so that the acts you perform reflect your true state. The memorial is a memory you cultivate of God as your own awareness, not a distant judge but the very beingness that makes experience possible. By repeating these inner moves with feeling, you affirm that you are the LORD your God—the I AM behind every perception. The day, the month, the offerings are all occasions to revise your inner world: lift your mood, claim your identity, and watch the outer scene echo your inner decree.

Practice This Now

Today, assume the glad and solemn state you wish to inhabit; imagine blowing a trumpet within and declare the I AM presence over your goal, feeling it real. Then revise any lack by affirming, I am the LORD your God as your present identity.

The Bible Through Neville

Neville Bible Sparks

Loading...

Loading...
Video thumbnail
Loading video details...
🔗 View on YouTube

© 2025 The Bible Through Neville - A consciousness-based approach to Scripture