Luke 21:19

Authorized King James Version

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In your patience possess ye your souls.

Original Language Analysis

ἐν In G1722
ἐν In
Strong's: G1722
Word #: 1 of 8
"in," at, (up-)on, by, etc
τῇ G3588
τῇ
Strong's: G3588
Word #: 2 of 8
the (sometimes to be supplied, at others omitted, in english idiom)
ὑπομονῇ patience G5281
ὑπομονῇ patience
Strong's: G5281
Word #: 3 of 8
cheerful (or hopeful) endurance, constancy
ὑμῶν your G5216
ὑμῶν your
Strong's: G5216
Word #: 4 of 8
of (from or concerning) you
κτήσασθε possess ye G2932
κτήσασθε possess ye
Strong's: G2932
Word #: 5 of 8
to get, i.e., acquire (by any means; own)
τὰς G3588
τὰς
Strong's: G3588
Word #: 6 of 8
the (sometimes to be supplied, at others omitted, in english idiom)
ψυχὰς souls G5590
ψυχὰς souls
Strong's: G5590
Word #: 7 of 8
breath, i.e., (by implication) spirit, abstractly or concretely (the animal sentient principle only; thus distinguished on the one hand from g4151, wh
ὑμῶν your G5216
ὑμῶν your
Strong's: G5216
Word #: 8 of 8
of (from or concerning) you

Analysis & Commentary

Jesus promises: 'In your patience possess ye your souls.' The Greek 'hypomonē' (ὑπομονή, patience/endurance) means steadfast endurance under pressure. 'Possess ye your souls' (Greek 'ktēsasthe tas psychas hymōn,' κτήσασθε τὰς ψυχὰς ὑμῶν) means gain/preserve your lives. The promise is counterintuitive—you preserve life through enduring, not escaping. This follows Jesus' warnings about persecution (vv. 12-18). Enduring faithfully through suffering preserves spiritual life even if physical life is lost. Impatient apostasy to avoid suffering loses the soul; patient endurance saves it. Perseverance proves genuine faith and secures eternal life.

Historical Context

This teaching came during Jesus' Olivet Discourse about Jerusalem's destruction and end times (vv. 5-36). Disciples would face persecution—betrayal, imprisonment, martyrdom (vv. 12, 16). Natural response is panic or apostasy, but Jesus commands patience—steadfast endurance trusting God. The phrase 'possess your souls' echoes Jesus' earlier teaching about losing life to save it (Luke 9:24). Early Christians faced exactly this—Nero's persecution, AD 70 Jerusalem destruction, ongoing martyrdom. Those enduring faithfully secured eternal life; those recanting to preserve physical life lost their souls. Church history demonstrates that perseverance under persecution distinguishes genuine faith from false profession.

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