Passover Mindscape of Plot

Luke 22:1-2 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Luke 22 in context

Scripture Focus

1Now the feast of unleavened bread drew nigh, which is called the Passover.
2And the chief priests and scribes sought how they might kill him; for they feared the people.
Luke 22:1-2

Biblical Context

The Passover season approaches, while religious leaders plot to kill Jesus, fearing the crowd.

Neville's Inner Vision

Your Luke 22:1-2 reading is not about a political plot but about consciousness. The Passover drawing near is the moment when old conditions—your habitual thoughts, fears, and judgments—are exposed to the light of awareness. The chief priests and scribes are the inner voices that plot to kill what you most desire because they fear the crowd of opinion. In Neville’s terms, they are manifestations of a state of consciousness that believes in lack, danger, and exclusion. The verse invites you to see that the only threat to your true intentions comes from within and that imagination is the instrument by which you entertain or revise this threat. When you assume a new state of consciousness—call it the Covenant of the I AM—your inner crowd loses its power, and the planned harm dissolves. The Passover becomes a symbol of liberation from fear, and you begin to act from coherence with your highest self, rather than from fear of others.

Practice This Now

Close your eyes and assume a new inner state: 'The Passover within me now clears away fear and old judgments.' Revise the scene by affirming, 'I AM the I AM; the crowd's fear dissolves,' and feel the peace as the inner plot loses power.

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