Inner Judgment Awakening

Luke 13:2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Luke 13 in context

Scripture Focus

2And Jesus answering said unto them, Suppose ye that these Galilaeans were sinners above all the Galilaeans, because they suffered such things?
Luke 13:2

Biblical Context

Jesus questions the idea that those Galileans were sinners because they suffered. He redirects attention from external calamities to inner states and personal accountability.

Neville's Inner Vision

Notice how the crowd reads the calamity as evidence of another's guilt, an outer moral ledger. Jesus refuses that projection and invites you to look within: the Galileans' fate is not a verdict on their sin but a mirror for your own mind. If you believe suffering belongs to someone else’s story, you are treating events as reality separate from your inner I AM. The 'sinners' are your own habit of judging, your urge to classify, your fear of chaos, and your need to feel righteous by condemning others. The kingdom Jesus brings is not a place but an alignment of consciousness with the I AM that creates. When you stop blaming victims and begin to inquire within, you realize you have been co-creating the very scenes you call 'misfortune' by your beliefs. The fire of awareness reveals that your interpretation is the power that shapes experience. Thus, repent not for guilt, but for awakening: revise your inner narrative until suffering serves as a signal to re-sentiment your world into harmony.

Practice This Now

Act: Assume the space as your own inner state and revise it: say 'I am the I AM, choosing to awaken from judgment.' Then close your eyes, imagine the scene transformed into serenity, and let that feeling saturate your awareness.

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