DWQA Questions › Tag: divineFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesThere is the karma of the individual, and then there is group karma. Noxious species are clearly designed to be a response to group karma involving innumerable individuals and even countless generations. As such, it becomes a kind of permanent feature of the environment and landscape. And then there is the problem of a solution designed for one group, being weaponized and used to ravage other groups and planets that don’t deserve such exposure and infestation. While true, that it’s the actions of the extraterrestrials spreading such species that are the cause, what about the involvement of the Creator or creators of the species itself? Does Creator and/or the creative team, share any karmic responsibility? If so, how is that handled?ClosedNicola asked 10 months ago • Karma65 views0 answers0 votesCreator is concerned with the spiritual growth of the individual (and even species) but karma looks geared to not be at all concerned with that agenda. Rather, it simply responds to energy perturbations in a literal tit-for-tat fashion. Karma is not concerned either, about a mission life underway; and if there is an opportunity to introduce a karmic response, it will simply do so in a kind of mechanical, automatic way. Does any cancellation or attenuation necessitate a divine intervention? What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 10 months ago • Karma82 views0 answers0 votesThere is the karmic problem of returning a response to a perpetrator with a dramatically different makeup from the initial victim triggering the karmic debt. For instance, the same shove delivered to one individual is an annoyance but breaks the bones of someone frail. How would this debt be handled? Does karma wait for the perpetrator to be born frail? But even if frail, a psychopathic personality might absorb such a shove very differently than the initial victim, even if the broken bones are the same or similar. Then there is the dilemma of the first victim having a karmic recurrence of the shove themselves. So do we have both the perpetrator and victim getting the SAME karmic response? OR does the perpetrator simply return as another perpetrator and the victim as well, to again be a victim? What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 10 months ago • Karma75 views0 answers0 votesRegardless of the workings of karma itself, we have learned that divine intervention is the means to heal, avoid, and/or reduce and attenuate karmic debts and dilemmas. Can Creator share with us how Empowered Prayer, the Lightworker Healing Protocol, Deep Subconscious Memory Reset, and Divine Life Support bring about the desired divine intervention to heal karmic difficulties?ClosedNicola asked 10 months ago • Karma81 views0 answers0 votesA viewer asks: “I wonder if we have fully addressed the concept of God’s grace. The term was used often in my Catholic youth but I’m not sure if I know what it is, or if such an independent energy exists. Is God’s grace another term for love and light? Is it something that flows automatically when healing occurs? Is it a human contrived concept to explain why others have comforts that you do not, to keep you striving? Is it a by-product of healing or a bonus? Is it the secret ingredient, or rocket fuel that hasn’t occurred to us to request by name? If it is something that can be requested, maybe now’s the time. What is Creator’s perspective on this?”ClosedNicola asked 11 months ago • Creator178 views0 answers0 votesA viewer asks: “How does the soul of a human and an extraterrestrial returning to the light differ?” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 1 year ago • Transition (Crossing Over)276 views0 answers0 votesOne of the biggest obstacles to belief in the Divine is the so-called problem of evil: How could an all-powerful loving God allow evil acts to prevail?ClosedNicola asked 6 years ago • Creator1130 views0 answers0 votesA practitioner asks: “I hear people calling for divine justice, and this is contradictory to saving interlopers. I don’t know how to think about it—pray for divine justice or that everyone is forgiven?” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Prayer216 views0 answers0 votesA practitioner asks: “When using a code word, can one choose a word like ‘the’ that one might say countless times per day to launch sessions, without expressly thinking about launching a DSMR session, or, does one need to have the same focus and intention when saying the code word for a DSMR session (or Mega Prayer that has a code word) to launch?”ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Prayer222 views0 answers0 votesPeople are often reluctant to be too demanding. Can a code word for launching a DSMR session be linked to one’s eye blinking, or one’s heartbeat, so that even an involuntary function such as that will enlist divine help?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Prayer207 views0 answers0 votesA practitioner asks: “The question that arose in me is whether one of the things we are creating—a complex healing prayer, with leveraging, done in a group—can be coded. Is Creator saying that leveraging itself, being so vast a request, requires personal conscious intention each time and cannot be coded for that reason?” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Prayer180 views0 answers0 votesWhat are the concerns, if any, in using a code word for a lengthy prayer, like a Mega Prayer, or even a group of prayers? Will that be just as effective?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Prayer180 views0 answers1 votesA practitioner asks: “How often is it advised to “refresh” a code-worded prayer?”ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Prayer204 views0 answers0 votesA viewer writes, “I thought you would find this writing interesting by Tom Montalk: ‘Interesting thing to ponder: what’s stronger, military might or divine power? The obvious answer is divine power. But then you look at history: 1) 10-20 million Christians killed by the Soviets; 2) 1000s of Christians killed by ISIS in the Middle East this past decade alone; 3) 100s of thousands of Christian children during the Crusades headed to Jerusalem only to be killed or sold into slavery on their way; 4) Always that good Christian family in the news who lost everything in a storm or earthquake or flood. You would think, based on this, that God clearly favors communists and Muslims and natural disasters. Besides, why should divinity favor Christians? What about all the other religions? But millions of communists, Muslims, and Jews have died as well over the centuries. Is there any class of people that’s consistently protected by the divine against military might? You could go back to the Old Testament and the Israelites and what was done for them, which if true, brings up the question of why back then and not since? Yet there’s no doubt that tyrannies and armies have risen and fallen and, in the end, spirituality and religion has endured. So spirit has the last laugh, but was it a Pyrrhic victory considering the millions lost? Or do we place too much value on life and comfort, and death, torture, and slavery isn’t that big of a deal in the eyes of eternity? There are also countless anecdotes of individuals and small groups of people being saved by supernatural intervention. Mysterious strangers helping them only to disappear without a trace, or voices telling them where to seek shelter, or the very laws of physics being bent to keep them from dying. And we have key people being guided by supernatural influences to exert their position/authority to help many other people. So certain individuals matter at certain times enough to get major intervention. But what’s missing is collective, massive, open divine intervention against military physical force, especially in the last 1000 years, let alone modern times. That hasn’t happened to my knowledge, unless it’s been covered up. And because of that, the USSR could kill up to 20 million Christians because it had the military might to do so, and because, for whatever reason, divine power doesn’t prevent collective events.'” His first question is: “Is divinity unable to [prevent collective events]? Then it’s not omnipotent.” What is Creator’s Perspective?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Creator285 views0 answers0 votesThe author says this about the divine choosing to not intervene on behalf of groups: “Then it condoned genocide in the 20th century and favored the Nazis and Communists over Christians and Jews. If it’s willing to sacrifice them, what does that say about our safety during the coming times?” What is Creator’s Perspective?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Creator291 views0 answers0 votes