divine = define ? Heavenletter #4988 22.7.2014
Dear Gloria,
is it possible that the word divine has to be define (in the second sentence)?
Would you please look in to it?
Thanks a lot,
Anneke
written February 3, 2014 Ultimately
God said: #4988 – 22.7.2014
God said, God said, God said, every Heavenletter begins with My saying that I am an ultimate Authority. I will not deny it, yet the word authority falls short, for you are also an authority. Close your eyes and let go of the static your surround yourself with, for a minute and divine Me within you. In any case, you are your own authority. This is obvious. Correct or not, you are your own authority, yet correctness, whatever that means, is not the whole story. You are writing your own story. You don’t have your story all figured out yet. You can go left. You can go right. From one perspective or another, both left and right may work. Rather than right or wrong, We can say you jogged this way or you jogged that. Left could be more direct than right, yet how can you know until you follow the path you choose even when you choose blindly?
Dearest Anneke, I do believe
Dearest Anneke, I do believe that God means divine. He is using it as a verb. God wants us to Divine Him within us. What I will do is capitalize Divine which may make the usage seem more deliberate.
Anneke, through your posting, I spotted another typo!
Close your eyes and let go of the static your surround yourself with, for a minute and Divine Me within you.
I will fix these on the actual Heavenletter.
Once again, thank you a whole bunch!
Gloria, that was a good fix.
Gloria, that was a good fix. At first I thought, oh no, that takes away the subtlety, but it actually adds to it. And I didn't catch the typo on first reading that you did.
The comma in that sentence seems misplaced to me, since "for a minute" goes with the first part of the sentence. Instead of following "surround yourself with" might it not make more sense after "for a minute"?
I think you're right, dear
I think you're right, dear Charles. I am even wondering if we need the comma. I'll go to the Heavenletter and see what feels right at the moment! Thanks a bunch!
Yes, without any comma at
Yes, without any comma at all works just fine.
Divine = divine
dear Gloria,
now I'm a little puzzled: first divine, than Divine and now divine again, as I read in the comments on this heavenletter, and the comma was an issue too....
Well, I translated it conform you wrote it here on the forum.
from heart to heart, namasté, Anneke
Beloved Anneke, Here's I
Beloved Anneke,
Here's I found in Merriam Webster Dictionary: Does this help, dear one?
3divine
verb
: to discover or understand (something) without having direct evidence
di·vineddi·vin·ing
Full Definition of DIVINE
transitive verb
1
: to discover by intuition or insight : infer
2
: to discover or locate (as water or minerals underground) usually by means of a divining rod
intransitive verb
1
: to practice divination : prophesy
2
: to perceive intuitively
See divine defined for English-language learners »
Examples of DIVINE
divine the answer to a question
Origin of DIVINE
Middle English, from Anglo-French & Latin; Anglo-French deviner, from Latin divinare, from divinus, noun
First Known Use: 14th century
Related to DIVINE
Synonyms
anticipate, foresee, forefeel, foreknow, prevision
Related Words
augur, forecast, foretell, predict, presage, prognosticate, prophesy; envisage, envision, foreshadow, prefigure, visualize; alert, caution, foretoken, forewarn; preview; descry, discern, perceive; apprehend, dread, fear
more
See Synonym Discussion at foresee