Peter's Resolve, Jesus' Prediction

Luke 22:33-34 - A Neville Goddard interpretation

Read Luke 22 in context

Scripture Focus

33And he said unto him, Lord, I am ready to go with thee, both into prison, and to death.
34And he said, I tell thee, Peter, the cock shall not crow this day, before that thou shalt thrice deny that thou knowest me.
Luke 22:33-34

Biblical Context

Peter declares unwavering loyalty, but Jesus predicts a testing that will reveal where his heart truly rests. The passage shows the clash between surface resolve and inner conditioning.

Neville's Inner Vision

Within the Luke 22 scene, Peter's outward vow to follow into prison or death is not a prophecy but a state of mind he inhabits in the moment. The inner seesaw is your own consciousness swinging between a bold self-image and the hidden belief in separation when pressure arrives. Jesus, the inner I AM, speaks not to condemn but to reveal the test of consciousness: the cock will crow when the old self, the habit of fear, insists. What you call readiness is a clear identity present in the moment of decision. Neville teaches that you are not your outward pledge but the consciousness that makes it possible. So the so-called denial is simply a subconscious counter-claim to wholeness coming to light. Instead of resisting, revise from within: I am the I AM, I stand in God as truth, and nothing can diminish this unity. When fear rises, dwell in that state until the impulse to quit dissolves. By holding to the inner fact, you convert trial into demonstration, and the apparent contradiction becomes harmonious expression of your divine nature.

Practice This Now

Practice: close your eyes and assume the feeling of unwavering I AM now; revise any sense of separation by affirming I am the I AM, united with God in this moment, then feel that unity as your natural state.

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