Inner Offering Practice

Numbers 28:5-6 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Numbers 28 in context

Scripture Focus

5And a tenth part of an ephah of flour for a meat offering, mingled with the fourth part of an hin of beaten oil.
6It is a continual burnt offering, which was ordained in mount Sinai for a sweet savour, a sacrifice made by fire unto the LORD.
Numbers 28:5-6

Biblical Context

The passage describes a perpetual offering—flour mingled with oil—as a continual sacrifice unto the LORD. Neville would translate this as an invitation to continually offer your inner state of consciousness and devotion as worship.

Neville's Inner Vision

In the scriptural table of Sinai, the flour and oil are not merely substances; they are the mental ingredients you mix to create a life that pleases God—the I AM you are. The tenth part of an ephah and the fourth part of an hin symbolize a precise, habitual proportion you bring to your inner altar. When you accept that the continual burnt offering is ordained for a sweet savour, you are being asked to dwell in a state of imagination where your very awareness is sacrificed to the good you seek. In Neville's teaching, the world is the dream of the I AM; the offering is the act of holding a conviction until it becomes your felt reality. So, see yourself not as performing rituals, but as embodying a state—as if you already are the living sacrifice of peace, abundance, and loyalty to the divine within. Each moment is the fire tending, each thought a fragment of oil poured into your consciousness, uniting with form until your life itself becomes the fragrance that God savours.

Practice This Now

Imaginative act: Assume you are already in the continual offering, sensing your I AM presence as the fragrance. When a disharmony arises, revise it in imagination as a sweet sacrifice and feel it dissolve into the LORD.

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