Weeping for Inner Peace

Luke 19:41-42 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Luke 19 in context

Scripture Focus

41And when he was come near, he beheld the city, and wept over it,
42Saying, If thou hadst known, even thou, at least in this thy day, the things which belong unto thy peace! but now they are hid from thine eyes.
Luke 19:41-42

Biblical Context

Jesus nears Jerusalem and weeps, sensing that the people do not know the things that belong to their peace. The text invites you to see peace as an inner state you can awaken, not a thing to be won from the world.

Neville's Inner Vision

Luke places Jesus near the city, weeping over its failure to know the things that belong to its peace. In Neville’s language, the city is your outer life; Jesus’s tears reveal a truth the wise man has learned: peace is not something to seek in the world, but something you awaken within awareness. If you would know the things that belong to thy peace, you must assume the state in which they already exist. The day Jesus speaks of is the present moment of consciousness you refuse to leave; when you persist in imagining the end you desire, the world aligns to that inner assumption. The things hid from your eyes are not hidden by God but by your habit of identifying with lack. When you hold the inner posture of peace—feeling it as real, as now—your city, your circumstances, your mercy, and your salvation unfold from within. The lament becomes a luminous invitation: turn inward, inhabit the I AM, and the outer city will reflect that peace you have already imagined.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and affirm 'I am at peace now,' feeling it as real in your chest. Then revise a current challenge by whispering inwardly, 'This is already resolved in my peace,' and observe your world begin to align.

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