DWQA Questions › Tag: divine inspirationFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesJohn Galsworthy wrote: “It was such a spring day as breathes into a man an ineffable yearning, a painful sweetness, a longing that makes him stand motionless, looking at the leaves or grass, and fling out his arms to embrace he knows not what.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Human Potential170 views0 answers0 votesErik Pevernagie wrote: “If we only see things through the cold-eyed lens of factuality and don’t listen to the yearning and screaming of unexpressed feelings, life may remain bleak in a mire of clinical hollowness, sodden in apathy and indifference.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Human Potential168 views0 answers0 votesLouise Erdrich wrote: “Life will break you. Nobody can protect you from that, and being alone won’t either, for solitude will also break you with its yearning. You have to love. You have to feel. It is the reason you are here on earth. You have to risk your heart. You are here to be swallowed up. And when it happens that you are broken, or betrayed, or left, or hurt, or death brushes too near, let yourself sit by an apple tree and listen to the apples falling all around you in heaps, wasting their sweetness. Tell yourself that you tasted as many as you could.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Human Potential193 views0 answers0 votesUnfulfilled, unrequited, and often ineffable soul yearnings can be immensely painful and even debilitating. Can Creator share how Empowered Prayer and the Lightworker Healing Protocol can be used to clear the obstacles to fulfillment, intimacy, and contentment, by truly equipping the individual with tools they can easily and productively use to remodel and rejuvenate their interior experience?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Human Potential199 views0 answers0 votesDoes prayer intention get used up by the divine, through acting to implement the prayer request fully?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Prayer211 views0 answers0 votesWhen a person says a prayer, where does the prayer intention go, to be stored as energy?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Prayer214 views0 answers0 votesIf prayer intention is on record and can be repurposed, why does that not happen through the divine realm routinely, especially as many prayers are for projects or enterprises of some kind, like recovering from serious illness or keeping a marriage together, which take time? Granted, people know they must pray repeatedly, and often, for large needs, but does the intention of prior prayer requests really remain unused unless there is a specific request to repurpose it again and again?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Prayer188 views0 answers0 votesHow long would it take for one person’s prayer, along with a request to have it acted on over and over as rapidly as feasible, to equal all of humanity launching a single prayer in unison?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Prayer201 views0 answers0 votesWhat enabled Jesus to heal people so quickly, to bring about a clear miracle?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Divinely Inspired Messengers305 views0 answers0 votesThe questions for this show are inspired by the book, Joan of Arc: A History, by Helen Castor. We have learned that nothing happens in terms of divine intervention without a human intention. Castor wrote, “Marie Robine, the peasant woman who had received divinely inspired visions at Avignon in the last years of the fourteenth century, had had many revelations concerning the calamities that would affect the kingdom of France. … She had been terrified by a vision of great quantities of armor, fearing that she would be required to put it on and fight, but she had been told it was not for her. Instead, a maid would come after her, who would bear these arms and deliver France from its enemies.” So the life of Joan of Arc was foreseen before she was even born. We know about retrocausal healing, where the prayers said in the future can heal the past. Are mission lives, such as Joan’s, a “retrocausal” intervention, planned and executed in response to desperate prayers said by those grievously suffering in the future? What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Divinely Inspired Messengers164 views0 answers0 votesCastor wrote describing, “… the plight of the whole kingdom. Across great swathes of France, the oppressive and violent reality of armies moving through the countryside, of battles and sieges, pillage and plunder, had left scorched earth, torched homes, and lives and livelihoods destroyed.” These were clearly the conditions that Joan’s mission life was conceived to resolve. Was it the prayers of the common people of France, a deeply religious and Christian nation, that enabled the divine to intervene in the form of Joan “The Maid?”ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Divinely Inspired Messengers169 views0 answers0 votesJoan’s was not the only “mission life” on display in these times. The king she was commissioned to support and see coronated, clearly had a mission life to bring France’s suffering to an end. Castor wrote, “The dauphin (heir apparent to the throne of France) – whose daily routine included two or sometimes even three masses, so unstinting was his devotion.” How important were the dauphin’s own prayers in bringing about the divine intervention in the form of Joan “The Maid,” that would see his mission of unifying France and ending the Hundred Years War truly fulfilled in his lifetime? What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Divinely Inspired Messengers182 views0 answers0 votesJoan wrote to the English, “You will never hold the kingdom of France from God, the king of heaven, holy Mary’s son; but King Charles will hold it, the true heir, because God, the king of heaven, wishes it.” But is this literally true? Creator has told us time and again that this is humanity’s world, and that no divine intervention can happen without human intention for it to be so. So can Creator explain how and even if Joan’s common notion of “God’s will” can be understood in the context of Creator’s modern teachings that humans really are in charge here?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Divinely Inspired Messengers233 views0 answers0 votesDivine favor was seemingly on display in the battles leading up to the king’s coronation. Castor wrote, “The troops were almost in place when suddenly a stag (male deer) erupted out of the woods and plunged into the English ranks, precipitating a great shout of confusion and fear just at the moment when advance riders from the French forces were approaching within earshot. The animal had given away the English position before (the) archers had finished planting their sharpened stakes in the ground and making ready their bows.” The result was the complete rout of the English forces. Was the appearance of the stag divine intervention, or was it karma, or both?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Divinely Inspired Messengers179 views0 answers0 votesJoan’s fortunes changed after the king’s coronation. Was her mission life essentially fulfilled at that point? During her assault on Paris, she rallied her troops promising them they would be inside the Paris walls that evening. A crossbow bolt ripped through her leg. She did not stop insisting that the city would be won as she was dragged from the ditch and carried to safety. What she didn’t know was the king had made treaties with his enemies to temporarily end hostilities for the winter, taking matters into his own hands and against Joan’s wishes and proclamations. Castor wrote, “The great theologian Gerson had foreseen this very problem. The ‘party having justice on its side,’ he had concluded after the triumph at Orleans, must take care not to render the help of heaven useless through disbelief or ingratitude, ‘for God changes His sentence as a result of a change in merit,’ he wrote, ‘even if he does not change His counsel.'” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Divinely Inspired Messengers180 views0 answers0 votes