DWQA Questions › Tag: victimFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesOne of the recurring themes in witchcraft lore is the notion of witches “selling their soul to the devil” in exchange for their magical powers. And while Creator has taught that such a thing cannot happen in actuality, the belief in the validity of this pact can turn this fiction into experiential fact, in that the divine is constrained to honor the belief and choices of such practitioners, leaving them unprotected, and open playthings for the interlopers to have their way with. Not to mention the severe karmic ramifications for the harm inflicted on the self and others as a consequence. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • High Level Psychic Attacks, Curses201 views0 answers0 votesKleen noted that religion, although according to history being widely practiced, was actually rarely used to combat fear and victimization by witchcraft. Rather, what was popular was “fighting fire with fire,” in that those fancying themselves and loved ones and neighbors and associates as victims of witchcraft would fight back, essentially, with witchcraft of their own, by hiring or engaging witch doctors or witch masters who would combat the witch for them—for a fee of course. Others fearing being “bewitched” would resort to folk defenses such as shooting silver bullets at effigies of suspected witches. Since such remedies leave out the divine, the likelihood of massive karmic missteps for all involved seems obvious. What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • High Level Psychic Attacks, Curses191 views0 answers0 votesA great deal of witchcraft and belief in witchcraft revolved around agriculture. One particularly interesting belief was the notion that witches could steal a cow’s milk with the use of a towel. The story goes that the witch would hang a towel on a rack, kneed and squeeze a corner of the towel as if it was a teat, and draw milk out of the towel and into a waiting bucket as if it was the cow itself. This was suspected when farmers would suddenly and unexpectedly have “dry cows.” Is there ANY truth to these stories? What is the real backstory?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • High Level Psychic Attacks, Curses215 views0 answers0 votesOne of the more startling Illinois stories surrounding bewitching is that of the Williams sisters. Sixteen and eighteen years old, the two girls were reportedly normal by day, but in the evening would run off into the corn and then “returned to their home, and with almost supernatural ability, climbed to the roof and began dancing near its precarious edge. Their father, James Williams, in front of around fifty spectators, pleaded with his daughters to come down. They replied with animal-like shrieks and groans.” Even the New York Times picked up this 1871 story. The sisters claimed to have been bewitched by an old woman who lived nearby in retribution for refusing to become witches themselves. What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • High Level Psychic Attacks, Curses218 views0 answers0 votes“Milk sickness” is a problem only dairy farmers remain aware of. But in the 1800s it was a huge problem. Abraham Lincoln’s own mother died of it at a young age. Turns out, the problem comes from cows ingesting a particular weed, the “snakeroot plant.” The plant is toxic to humans, but apparently not to numerous herbivore animals. The toxin gets into the milk and can inflict humans with serious illness and even death. Before the cause of this danger was finally discovered, milk sickness was often attributed to witchcraft. Could this plant be from the same beings who introduced witchcraft itself? Is the plant itself an extraterrestrial import? If so, who brought it, and roughly when? Are new problematic species of animals and plants still being imported today, or very recently if not currently? And if they have stopped, why?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • High Level Psychic Attacks, Curses224 views0 answers0 votesWitches are often associated with poisonings. People were implored never to accept gifts from those suspected of being witches. In fact, in German, the word “gift” means poison. Kleen wrote, “Through spreading physical illness through purported acts of generosity, witches upset the balance between neighbors at a time when sharing and exchanging goods was not only common practice, it was a necessary element of community life.” What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • High Level Psychic Attacks, Curses196 views0 answers0 votesKleen wrote, “Winning love, attracting a man or woman and keeping them faithful was (as it always has been) a primary concern, and much of the folk magic recorded was dedicated to those ends.” Most love spells were examples of contagious magic. Contagious magic involved the use of physical ingredients that were once in contact with the targeted person. The physical proximity of material items, such as hair and blood, and the ingestion or binding of these items, was believed to increase the spell’s potency. What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • High Level Psychic Attacks, Curses196 views0 answers0 votesWitchcraft is mysterious partly because its history has been largely lost in just the span of a century. A lot of people would be tempted to think “good riddance,” but the fact a social change of this magnitude can happen and be forgotten so quickly, and in just a few generations, suggests something far more sinister is behind it all. Can Creator share how Empowered Prayer and the Lightworker Healing Protocol can protect us from the hazards of witchcraft, and heal those who introduced its nefarious practice to humanity in the first place?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • High Level Psychic Attacks, Curses183 views0 answers0 votesMachu Picchu is an Inca citadel located in the Eastern Cordillera of Southern Peru on an eight-thousand-foot mountain ridge. Hiram Bingham roamed South America in the early 1900s and is credited with rediscovering Machu Picchu in 1911. He relates the following: “The modern Peruvians are very fond of speculating as to the method which the Incas employed to make their stones fit so perfectly. One of the favorite stories is that the Incas knew of a plant whose juices rendered the surface of a block so soft that the marvelous fitting was accomplished by rubbing the stones together for a few moments with this magical plant juice!” Can Creator tell us approximately when it was built (hundreds or thousands of years ago), what was its purpose, and who built and used it? Was it simply a make-work project to create a labor-intensive structure in such an inhospitable place?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Extraterrestrial Interlopers285 views0 answers0 votesElizabeth Clare Prophet took over The Summit Lighthouse when her husband Mark L. Prophet died in 1973. He founded this organization in 1958 to spread a message combining elements of Christianity, Buddhism, Hinduism, and Theosophy. The New York Times had this to say upon her death in 2009: “In 1975, she founded the Church Universal and Triumphant, a formal religion with ceremonies and sacraments, extending the work of the Lighthouse. The religion’s teachings were derived from divine messages believed to be transmitted by the Ascended Masters, a pantheon of mystic saints and sages, among them Jesus and the Theosophist Master El Morya. Its worldwide membership was once estimated at 30,000 to 50,000 people.” What can Creator tell us about Elizabeth Clare Prophet? Did she really receive messages from Ascended Masters?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Channeling Pitfalls320 views0 answers0 votesIn the late 1980s, Mrs. Prophet issued warnings of an impending nuclear strike by the Soviet Union against the United States. More than 2,000 of her followers left their homes and gathered at the church’s compound near Corwin Springs, Montana, near the northern edge of Yellowstone National Park. There they began stockpiling weapons, food, and clothing in underground bomb shelters. Of course, the prophesized nuclear strike never happened, and the Church went into rapid decline after this, and today a much smaller remnant remains. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Channeling Pitfalls263 views0 answers0 votesMrs. Prophet experienced early onset Alzheimer’s disease at age 58 and died twelve years later. She lost her ability to write in just two years, and her ability to speak not long after that. We learned from Creator that Alzheimer’s is actually the workings of the deep subconscious responding to the self’s desire to “escape” overwhelming anxiety stemming from a lifetime of emotional wounding. Did the pressures of leading a large spiritual community, feeling responsible for their welfare, the distress and fallout stemming from the inaccurate prediction of nuclear war, and all that entailed, and perhaps having no one to turn to, no one she could lean on and draw strength from, create the mental conditions leading to her Alzheimer’s and relatively early passing? Were spirit attachments a contributing factor, or was this some other form of victimization? Is she in the light, or does she need a Spirit Rescue?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Channeling Pitfalls257 views0 answers0 votesWas all that doomsday preparation they did a kind of folly? Were her followers sold an interloper “bill of goods” and sent on a wild goose chase that arguably sidelined the movement, and neutered its genuine potential to awaken humanity? If the nuclear war she actually foresaw had come to pass, how would her community likely have fared?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Channeling Pitfalls204 views0 answers0 votesIn addition to being a channeler, Mrs. Prophet was an extremely knowledgeable theologian. She republished the entire Book of Enoch in her book, Fallen Angels and the Origins of Evil. She mentioned a work by Athenagoras, Legatio, written about A.D. 170 that had this line: “The souls of the giants are the demons who wander the world.” Prophet wrote that this teaching was directly from Enoch, the purported grandson of Adam (of Adam and Eve). Creator has shared with Karl the reality of Anunnaki spirits in limbo. Seems this knowledge has been available since almost the beginning of humanity but suppressed. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Channeling Pitfalls272 views0 answers0 votesErin Prophet, daughter of Elizabeth Clare Prophet and Mark L. Prophet, rejected the role of heir apparent of her parent’s religious movement and went on to become a professor of religious studies specializing in cults, or new religious movements, which she prefers to call them. She says the classic definition of the word “cult” is nothing more than a religious movement still within the first generation of its founding. She says one of the biggest hazards of cults is the development of a “fortress mentality.” What is Creator’s perspective on cults?ClosedNicola asked 2 years ago • Channeling Pitfalls257 views0 answers0 votes