Adimu as Sacred Offering
Adimu is a meaningful offering presented with care, intention, and respect. In this lesson, the Iyawo prepares an offering for their own Ori and consciously consumes it within a defined ritual frame.
This lesson calls the Iyawo to prepare and consume an Adimu for their own Ori. The assignment is not casual. It is a practice in awareness, purification, right timing, proper setting, documentation, and timely completion.
The offering is not only about what is placed before Ori. It is also about what is revealed within the self: discipline, order, sincerity, alignment, and readiness.
Know Thyself • Cleanse and Purify • Living in Alignment With Absolute Truth
We Seek No Followers • Many Paths, 1 Truth
Select the foods, set the day and time, establish the ritual setting, document the process, and complete it in a timely manner.
Adimu is a meaningful offering presented with care, intention, and respect. In this lesson, the Iyawo prepares an offering for their own Ori and consciously consumes it within a defined ritual frame.
The process reveals the Iyawo’s condition. The food chosen, the quality of preparation, the order of the setting, the timing, and the documentation all show the degree of discipline and alignment.
The Iyawo must choose the foods with intention. This requires self-awareness. Why these foods? What do they represent? What condition are you bringing to the offering?
The setting, the body, the hands, the utensils, and the arrangement should reflect respect. Purification is not only physical. It also includes speech, attitude, and the removal of chaos.
Truth is shown in follow-through. Set the day and time. Keep the commitment. Complete the work properly. Document it honestly. Let the act and the record agree with one another.
The Iyawo is required to prepare, present, and consume an Adimu for their own Ori. This assignment is an act of alignment, discipline, and self-engagement. It must be carried out thoughtfully, documented appropriately, and completed in a timely manner.
This assignment is not merely about food. It is about how the Iyawo thinks, prepares, orders, follows through, and reflects in sacred relationship with Ori.