Meditation (on the way that God is #inside Your @GoVictoryTV Soul) reveals (AGAIN) that 'Prayer' is actually #SettingTheThermostat (like @CharlesCapps1's #CallThingsThatAreNot-Advice)

Reading VTV's parent-organization's magazine (a parent-organization their Twitter-page doesn't even mention, BTW), I discuss a 'new thinking' they're suggesting in the prosperous forum that's linked through 'that word' below; but first I want to understand that word better. And I find you understand words better if you look at 'the words at their base' (then going on to look at the words at those words' bases, then the words at those words' bases, etc.-etc. ad infinitum)

The word “Inside” is built of the words In & Side (reminds me of DOCTOR WHO's "ingenious" identification of the seventh 'side' of the alien cube). #InsideOut #Insides #Insider #InsideMan #InsideTrack (|Advantage - taken from the Racing-Track, where the inner track is a shorter distance than the outer tracks of the oval) #InsideOf- (taking less time than-)

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The 'meditation on prayer' actually came up when I was searching for a picture to post on that forum ... I was led to Daily Effective Prayer's "Prayer to be God-Inside Minded":

I expect I'll be agreeing-in-prayer with a lot of D.E.P.'s 'invocations,' but that word (where I could've used 'prayer-requests' or 'supplications' or 'desperate pleas' ... Christians aren't sticklers about definitions when you're talking about 'supernatural communications' 🤩)

It reminds me of Capps Ministries' frequent affirmation that Christians "call 'things that are not' as though they were"---something that Charles Capps would compare to 'setting the thermostat' ("you don't tell the thermostat 'how cold you are'; you tell it 'how warm you would like to be,' and the thermostat's machinery moves to make it so).

Of course, it's not limited to Christians ... No matter what you believe; you call for your dog, "Here! Fido," no matter where Fido actually is at the time; or you call the name of an associate who you know is there and -will come help you, and they'll move to help you even if they could choose not-to.

When you 'invoke'-a new temperature or -a dog's closeness or -an associate's help, you aren't so-much "asking for their kind cooperation" as you are "reminding them what they started to do" ... they're not so-much 'favoring- or blessing-you' as they are 'finishing what they began.'

The 'invocation' in a prayer is usually an 'invitation to return.' Which is why a lot of people think their prayers are unanswered (especially when the prayers are mostly 'telling the thermostat what the temperature already is').

It's like when Lord Jesus prayed to St. Peter to step off the boat and walk on the water: for the first few steps, St. Peter was standing on Jesus's invitation to cross the water.

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