DWQA QuestionsCategory: Divine RealmTo what extent do the negative beliefs of family and friends, and often the patient as well, about reversal of a client’s medical condition limit the ability of the divine realm to bring about a miracle?
Nicola Staff asked 6 years ago
This is an astute question because it indeed is a factor and sometimes a decisive factor in limiting the possibility of a divine intervention to reverse the seeming inevitable. There are many instances when people are told they will die when the divine realm cannot prevent it. Even though we have the power, we cannot go against the choices of human to perish if they believe this is their destiny and their fate. This is why having belief in the Divine is so much better than a secular view because when there is no possibility of divine assistance, you are left solely with what today’s experts say with their limited understanding and perspective, and ineffective tools for the most part, to truly assist most problems. If their pronouncements are believed and embraced, particularly by the subconscious, to create new beliefs about their doom, this can cut off the lifeline to the Divine simply because humans hold the power at all times to say no to God and that must be allowed. In effect, they doom themselves when they listen to the voices of doom from the experts. This is a tragedy that does not have to happen. If there were simple acceptance that people need emotional support and need to have hope remain alive within them, if only for their emotional benefit and peace of mind as best one can under difficult circumstances of declining health, to simply not make pronouncements of impending death and that this is irreversible, that nothing can be done. If that were simply avoided, this would keep the door open to divine rescue much more effectively. In this way, doctors are, in effect, killing many patients through their negativity causing the door to be closed, and that will have severe karmic consequences for them in addition to the immediate practical loss for the patients themselves and their loved ones. There needs to be mutual respect, acceptance, and understanding of the possibility of divine help, and whether this is fully believed in and embraced or not, the idea of encouraging more positivity in patients is readily defended by abundant data showing it has value. There only needs to be some restraint on the part of doctors to soften their words and not be so categorical in their predictions.