Inner Judgment and Suffering

Luke 13:4 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Luke 13 in context

Scripture Focus

4Or those eighteen, upon whom the tower in Siloam fell, and slew them, think ye that they were sinners above all men that dwelt in Jerusalem?
Luke 13:4

Biblical Context

Luke 13:4 poses a rhetorical question about whether those killed by the Siloam tower were more sinful than others, highlighting that external calamities do not establish someone’s guilt or worth.

Neville's Inner Vision

To the reader, Luke 13:4 reveals that the fallen tower is not a judgment on others but a mirror of consciousness. The crowd’s debate about guilt is a project of the mind seeking to prove a separateness that never truly exists in the I AM. When you glimpse this scene within, you see you are the observer and the meaning-giver; you are not defined by another’s supposed sin but by the state of your own awareness. If you cling to the belief that some are more guilty, you imprison yourself in a fictive separation. Revise that assumption to 'There is only the I AM' and watch the impulse to condemn dissolve. The event then points you to a turning in consciousness, not a punishment of others. Suffering ceases to be a verdict and becomes an invitation to return to the one timeless reality that you are inherently whole and untouched by the judgments of appearances.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and visualize the Siloam tower as a belief about someone else’s guilt. Let it collapse, and in the same breath revise your stance to 'There is only the I AM.' Feel the shift as you affirm the reality of wholeness.

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