Some Questions about Workshops for FAQ?
What does it mean Godwriting? What does it imply?
Godwriting™ is the process of writing down what we “hear” God say. Heavenetters are Godwritten, and, once written, then I call the existing Godwriting Heavenletters. Instead of coining the term Godwriting, I could have used the term Heavenletterwriting instead!
Do we really hear God?
We don’t really hear a voice. At least I don’t. It is like a subtle sense of hearing. It is almost hearing. It's like hearing inside. More a sense of hearing and having more trust that it is God we hear whispering to us ever so silently.
How do I get everything clear in my mind before engaging into Godwriting. This is something I’m not sure I am ready for.
As we Godwrite, we have to put thinking aside. Godwriting is not a thinking process. It is more a feeling process. It is letting go of thinking and boldly trusting. It takes guts to Godwrite! We have to be more trusting of ourselves. In a way, it is like jumping off a cliff – we don’t know where we’re going to land.
We don’t have to be clear in our minds! In fact, to Godwrite, we can't be clear in our minds! Every time we Godwrite, it is like for the first time. We are innocent. We have to be innocent.
As for being ready, Godwriting, to my mind, isn't something we are ever ready for! The process of Godwriting is letting go of our usual thinking and the standards we impose on ourselves. Every time we Godwrite, it is like for the first time.
God in Heavenletters™ says we don't have to do anything to get ready for Him! There is no real preparation for Godwriting. If we prepare, you and I, then perhaps we are deciding what our Godwriting has to be and what it has to look like. It doesn't have to be anything at all but what it is. There is no certain way Godwriting has to be.
While we're actually Godwriting, we don't always know how powerful our Godwriting is. We have to let go of the idea that every word has to be something special.
What if I can't keep up the pace. It is a responsibility, after all, and a really special one that we cannot abandon once we start. What happens in that case?
There is no pace we have to keep. God does not make us make a commitment. It's great to Godwrite every day, but God doesn't say we must. We aren’t abandoning anything if we don’t keep on with it. God is always here for us. He’s ready whenever we are. Nothing happens if we stop. We can only be ahead.
Are translators of Heavenletters also Godwriting?
Certainly, translators put their whole hearts and souls into translating. Translating Heavenletters has to be more than translating cut and dried materials. Translating Heavenletter requires a love for Heavenletters and a sense of how to cast the meaning into a different language. Sometimes an almost Godwriting, yet translating Heavenletters is not Godwriting.
Later I will add other questions labout Godwriting workshops, like Do we need to take a workshop?

