DWQA Questions › Tag: lightworkersFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesWas my client’s grandmother in need of a Spirit Rescue following her recent passing, and is she now in the light following our Spirit Rescue work? We were told the family knew she was involved with dark energies all her life.ClosedNicola asked 2 weeks ago • Human Lost Soul Spirits121 views0 answers0 votesWill a family group healing help resolve the karmic entanglements, especially dark cordings from the departed grandmother to my client?ClosedNicola asked 2 weeks ago • Human Lost Soul Spirits31 views0 answers0 votesA viewer writes: “Brian has mentioned on the air that the Rosary Prayer has very limited power based on the wording not having specific requests, but there are those in the Catholic community (for example, Gabi after hours, “A Rosary Revolution” https://youtu.be/FE2vEodC1aU?si=HtYkSeL_7ZOkz6If ) who find that it is extremely powerful over obsessions and spiritual struggles such as pornography.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 2 weeks ago • Prayer126 views0 answers0 votesHe writes: “Here’s a video [about the Rosary] that states there’s a hidden code based on primary numbers that can be observed somehow within it that I think you might benefit by looking at: The Rosary’s Impossible Prime Number Proof (Mathematical Apologetics).” What is Creator’s perspective and most important for us to know?ClosedNicola asked 2 weeks ago • Prayer110 views0 answers0 votesA viewer asks: “Can humans reincarnate as other animals, reptiles, or other creatures? If not, when people remember these experiences is it because their souls ride along or because the nonlocal mind can retrieve this information? What can Creator tell us about the origin of this belief in transmigration?”ClosedNicola asked 2 weeks ago • Reincarnation115 views0 answers0 votesWill a request to one’s higher self or spirit guide be shielded from outside observation and interference, just as when one prays to God?ClosedNicola asked 2 weeks ago • Prayer94 views0 answers0 votesA practitioner asks: “Sometimes I don’t want to further include my father’s physical maladies in my LHP-DSMR work, because he is a very difficult and problematic individual, he has said and done something deeply wrong and hurtful to other family members. I know this thought doesn’t sound in divine alignment, but I really resent him at this moment. What kind of karmic liabilities will I incur if I go down this path?” What can we tell her?ClosedNicola asked 3 weeks ago • Karma160 views0 answers0 votesA practitioner asks: “Can the interlopers read our intent like they can study and read our beliefs? Is there a level of intent that is hidden from them?” What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 3 weeks ago • Lightworker Healing Protocol171 views0 answers0 votesA practitioner writes: “Our intent to heal the interlopers must be clear to them.” What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 3 weeks ago • Lightworker Healing Protocol170 views0 answers0 votesDr. Elaine Pagels, a Professor of Religion at Princeton University, wrote a book called The Origins of Satan. She wrote: “In the Hebrew Bible, as in mainstream Judaism to this day, Satan never appears as Western Christendom has come to know him, as the leader of an ‘evil empire,’ an army of hostile spirits who make war on God and humankind alike.” She further writes, “In biblical sources, the Hebrew term the satan describes an adversarial role. Although Hebrew storytellers as early as the sixth century B.C.E. occasionally introduced a supernatural character whom they called the satan, what they meant was any one of the angels sent by God for the specific purpose of blocking or obstructing human activity.” We know Creator has said that a literal “Satan” does not exist, but is rather more of a literary composite figure. We know the fallen Archangel Lucifer is often thought of as “Satan,” but if indeed they are synonymous, why wouldn’t Creator just say that Satan was simply another name for Lucifer? How much of the crucifixion narrative can be directly attributed to Lucifer himself? Or is he given too much credit and we need to look beyond Lucifer for the leaders of the ‘evil empire’ as Professor Pagels characterized the real adversary in the crucifixion narrative? What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 3 weeks ago • Divinely Inspired Messengers160 views0 answers0 votesDr. Elaine Pagels wrote: “All of the New Testament gospels, with considerable variation, depict Jesus’ execution as the culmination of the struggle between good and evil – between God and Satan – that began at his baptism.” Some material has suggested that the baptism was not merely symbolic, but that a profound spiritual transformation took place during the baptism; that the old soul “Jesus of Nazareth” was replaced by the “Christ spirit,” and that after the baptism Jesus was essentially a “walk-in.” Other than his birth and temple visit as a twelve-year-old, there is virtually nothing in the Bible that tells us what he did between the ages of 12 and 30 when he essentially began his ministry following his baptism. What can Creator tell us about the significance of his baptism by John the Baptist, and is there anything important to know about his years spent prior to that? Some sources suggest he was in India for much of that time period. What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 3 weeks ago • Divinely Inspired Messengers144 views0 answers0 votesDr. Pagels wrote, “The stark events of Jesus’ life and death cannot be understood, he (the Gospel of Mark author) suggests, apart from the clash of supernatural forces that Mark sees being played out on earth in Jesus’ lifetime. Mark intends to tell the story of Jesus in terms of its hidden, deeper dynamics – to tell it, so to speak, from God’s point of view. What happened Mark says, is this: ‘Jesus of Nazareth, after his baptism, was coming out of the water of the Jordon River when “he saw the heavens torn apart and the spirit descending like a dove on him” and heard a voice speaking to him from heaven. God’s power anointed Jesus to challenge the forces of evil that now dominate the world, and drove him into direct conflict with those forces.'” Following the baptism, the mysterious narrative describes him immediately being “driven” into the wilderness, and he was in the wilderness forty days being tempted by Satan. Given that Creator has said Satan is a composite figure only, what REALLY took place in the desert during those forty days? How would Creator today characterize the adversary that Jesus struggled with and against, and what was the nature of that struggle? What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 3 weeks ago • Divinely Inspired Messengers58 views0 answers0 votesDr. Pagels wrote, “Mark suggests that Jesus recognizes that the leaders who oppose him are energized by unseen forces.” Given the extraordinary powers Jesus possessed, he would almost certainly know who those unseen forces were. Today we know from Creator’s words that it is Anunnaki psychics interacting with humans directly, Anunnaki psychics directing lost soul Anunnaki spirits to attack humans in hit-and-run style encounters, while also instructing the Anunnaki lost soul spirits to enlist and command the fallen angelic spirit meddlers to attack and attach themselves and even directly possess human beings. Jesus is said to have driven seven demonic spirits out of Mary Magdalene—one for each of her seven major chakras. Was Jesus aware at that time that he was going against a galactic empire of extraterrestrials with mastery of time and space? Creator did say the Bible was primarily a whistleblowing document on the extraterrestrial problem. Jesus clearly knew that back in the light. Was his struggle in the desert a coming to terms with remembrance of what he was really up against, what he needed to do, and how it would likely play out? What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 3 weeks ago • Divinely Inspired Messengers172 views0 answers0 votesThe widespread narrative is, of course, that the Romans crucified an innocent man. But innocent of what? Because, if anything, Jesus was extraordinarily politically incorrect. Dr. Pagels wrote, “The astonished crowds recognize that Jesus possesses a special authority, direct access to God’s power. … the scribes immediately took offense at what they considered his usurpation of divine authority. By pronouncing forgiveness, Jesus claims the right to speak for God – a claim that, Mark says, angers the scribes: ‘Why does this man speak this way? It is blasphemy! Who can forgive sins but God alone? Instead of fasting, like other devout Jews, Jesus ate and drank freely. And instead of scrupulously observing Sabbath laws, Jesus excused his disciples when they broke them. Claiming divine and royal power while simultaneously violating the purity laws, Jesus, at the beginning of his public activity, outrages virtually every party among his contemporaries, from the disciples of John the Baptist to the scribes and Pharisees.'” We are faced with the conundrum of Jesus “speaking truth to power.” The hazards of which are so visibly and starkly apparent from human history, that his eventual crucifixion was not only NOT a surprise but, in fact, an almost near certainty. Anyone wishing to follow his example and engage in speaking “truth to power,” as he did, is not likely to avoid a similar life-threatening fate. What lessons are we to best derive from this? What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 weeks ago • Divinely Inspired Messengers150 views0 answers0 votesWhat was the interloper perspective on Jesus and his ministry prior to his crucifixion? Is it to be assumed, like so much of the workings of the divine, that the actual spiritual, energetic, and miraculous workings performed by Jesus during his ministry were largely shielded from extraterrestrial observation? Is it true that all they saw was the aftermath of the miracles and not their actual mechanics? What did they, in fact, observe, and what were their evaluation and analytic conclusions regarding them? Was he a conundrum to them or, in their arrogance, did they just dismiss him without looking deeper? Was their engineering his path to crucifixion done with more urgency and determination than applied to other human victims throughout history? Or did they consider him utterly unextraordinary and had him crucified simply because they love giving a comeuppance to any human who stands out without their assistance and approval? What can Creator tell us about the interloper perspective on Jesus, both then and now?ClosedNicola asked 3 weeks ago • Divinely Inspired Messengers152 views0 answers0 votes