DWQA QuestionsCategory: KarmaAs a follow-up to the previous question, what would be Creator’s advice to an avid football fan who suddenly learns of the negative divine perspective on football? Should they quit watching? Should they give up loyalty to their favorite team? Should they try and coach their children not to play or participate or even watch? What would be the wisest course to take with friends and family? Should they communicate their new concerns and try to educate others about the divine perspective on football? What is Creator’s advice?
Nicola Staff asked 2 years ago
We have said before there are no "shoulds" because we do not lead, so we will not issue orders and make categorical pronouncements about human choices because it is truly up to them, given our perspectives, to choose who they wish to be and, in this case, how far out of divine alignment they want to go to satisfy an inner bloodlust of a sort, because they have been programmed to seek vicarious dominance of others through a scripted and somewhat controlled series of violent encounters. We are using this description to, again, further emphasize what it is people are drawn to and often becomes a kind of preoccupation, even a mania, during football season where people are glued to their screens, engaging in endless discussions, and are enthralled by the spectacle of this grand enterprise that celebrates athletic ability and cleverness of coaches, and so on, all the while not appreciating the big picture of the origin of this so-called "sport" and that it truly serves the darkness, because it is a reflection of the darkness in how it operates to begin with. So we see the best course of action for all who hear these words but are caught up in many entanglements with others in their life in the various ways you describe, as parents of children who will be exposed to this sport in school, as spectators, fans, and having many friendships centered around the love of sports in their gatherings and conversations, there is thinking to do, again, about who and what they choose to be with their energy in the living of their life. If you are moved by our description of football as serving the darkness and want to break away, you can be an example to others more effectively than as a proselytizer engaged in a campaign of re-education. You will be seen as a pest and, at worst, a threat to their happiness as a naysayer and critic. There are many who stand on principles of all kinds and appear different, and even bizarrely so, to outsiders. This is the case with the Amish, for example, who avoid modern conveniences and have a very strict set of guidelines they follow religiously in their conduct, to the point they seem anachronistic, or even backward, to those in the modern culture of freewheeling pursuit of enjoyment in many ways that are unhealthy, or even dangerous, without giving much thought to this reality. But again, this is a personal decision that must be made. We will not issue a set of commandments to anyone.