Matthew 19:26 is studied here as a Biblical passage first: in its immediate King James context, through its recurring metaphysical themes, and through source-grounded readings preserved in Neville Goddard's lectures and books.
But Jesus beheld them, and said unto them, With men this is impossible; but with God all things are possible.
Read the Passage in Context
- Matthew 19:25 When his disciples heard it, they were exceedingly amazed, saying, Who then can be saved?
- Matthew 19:26 But Jesus beheld them, and said unto them, With men this is impossible; but with God all things are possible.
- Matthew 19:27 Then answered Peter and said unto him, Behold, we have forsaken all, and followed thee; what shall we have therefore?
Open Matthew 19:26 in the YHWSA Bible workspace for the complete chapter, word tools, notes, and comparisons.
Key Metaphysical Themes
- God
- Possibility
- All Things Are Possible
- God Within
- I Am
- All Things Possible
- Changing Facts
- Imaginal Acts
- Imagination
- God-In-Man
- Human Imagination
- Belief
Neville’s Reading in Catch The Mood
This verse, when understood in conjunction with "I Am is God," means that all things are possible to the individual who recognizes their own "I Am" as God.
all things are possible to God.
Source: Catch The Mood
Neville’s Reading in Eschatology The Drama Of The End
This verse underpins the teaching that 'all things are possible to God,' which, when combined with the understanding that God's name is 'I AM' (and therefore one's own consciousness), implies that all things are possible to the individual's imaginal acts.
All right, isn’t it a fact that everything is possible to God? And if all things are possible to God and his name is “I am” can a fact not be changed?
Source: Eschatology The Drama Of The End
Neville’s Reading in Gifts Bestowed By God
This statement, often attributed to Jesus, is linked by Neville to the human imagination, implying that all things are possible to the individual's imagination, which is God within.
“all things are possible to Him,”
Source: Gifts Bestowed By God
Neville’s Reading in If Any Two Agree
Neville equates "God" in this verse with the human imagination, meaning that all things are possible to the human imagination.
We are told that, “With God, all things are possible.” Then we are told: “All things are possible to him who believes,” so he equates God with the human imagination: that God is the human imagination, and all things are possible to the human imagination.
Source: If Any Two Agree
Neville’s Reading in If You Can Really Believe
This verse states God's unlimited power, which Neville later equates with man's imagination, implying that if man is God, then all things are possible to man.
We are told in Scripture – this is the 19th chapter, the 26th verse, of Matthew: “With God all things are possible.”
Source: If You Can Really Believe
Neville’s Reading in Imagination
This verse teaches that with God, all things are possible. Neville equates God with man's own wonderful human Imagination, thereby implying that all things are possible to man's Imagination.
Are we not told in Scripture: “With God all things are possible”?
Source: Imagination
Practical Reflection
- Assume that 'all things are possible' to your 'I AM' consciousness. Ignore current facts and assume your desired reality, knowing that your imaginal acts are God's acts.
- Believe that all things are possible through your imagination, as it is the divine creative power within you.
- Recognize that your imagination is God, and therefore, there are no limits to what you can achieve through it.
- To realize that there are no limitations when operating from the perspective of God (one's imagination).
Authoritative Neville Sources
YHWSA provides the Biblical workspace. MyNevilleGoddard.com preserves the complete source works behind the Neville-specific readings.
- Catch The Mood (lecture)
- Eschatology The Drama Of The End (lecture)
- Gifts Bestowed By God (lecture)
- If Any Two Agree (lecture)
- If You Can Really Believe (lecture)
- Imagination (lecture)
Questions about Matthew 19:26
What is the metaphysical meaning of Matthew 19:26?
YHWSA reads Matthew 19:26 in its Biblical context while examining the states of consciousness and spiritual themes expressed by the passage.
Where can I read Matthew 19:26 in context?
Open the linked YHWSA Bible workspace to read the complete chapter and use its language, note, and comparison tools.
Where did Neville Goddard discuss Matthew 19:26?
The source list links to the complete lectures and books on MyNevilleGoddard.com rather than reproducing those works as a competing article.