Thursday, September 17, 2020

If you develop your "Seeing the Future" abilities:

Once again, the problem is NOT that you can see what is going to happen!

No. 

The problem is what you do with this information.

Any time anyone sees exactly what is coming it means they could also change the future of many people's lives.

So, if they are not very skilled they could cause catastrophes from their ignorance of how to deal with this information.

It takes years of figuring out wise and mature ways to deal with things like this.

I speak from experience of having been this way my whole life.

My wife often talks about "Not becoming a Cassandra in Greek mythology who told people what the future was and they got angry with her about it.

So, her curse put on her by Apollo was to make her prophecies unbelievable to people so they wouldn't heed her words.

I often see the future too but very few people believe me when I tell them the truth. So, some survive and some don't because of this when all or most could have survived if they listened to me.

Luckily, most prophesies are about injuries and not deaths so people usually survive even if they don't stop what is coming. 

And I also see this gift is a "Gift From God" and so it is important to honor gifts from God and not to get "Silly" about all this or one tends to lose one's gifts. God gives us these gifts for a reason so learning to honor God in the use of these gifts is paramount.

By God's Grace



Cassandra, in Greek mythology, the daughter of Priam, the last king of Troy, and his wife Hecuba. In Homer's Iliad, she is the most beautiful of Priam's daughters but not a prophetess.
Parents: Priam
Siblings: Helenus
Appears in book: Homer's Iliad
Partner: Agamemnon

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Cassandra or Kassandra (Ancient Greek: Κασσάνδρα, pronounced [kassándra], also Κασάνδρα), (sometimes referred to as Alexandra), was a priestess of Apollo in Greek mythology cursed to utter true prophecies, ...

Cassandra was the daughter of King Priam and Queen Hecuba, lords of Troy, in Greek mythology. She was also known as Alexandra. According to one myth,...

 

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