Deciphering God. A Prayer
I once heard a priest say these words: “This is a great mystery.”
Do we really need mysteries about God? Must someone always stand between me and God, explaining what He is and how He works, while at the same time proclaiming that God is a mystery?
In books about family constellations, there are many suggestions not to touch a mystery—let it remain a mystery.
A friend of mine does not like the term “deciphering” in the context of God. To her, “I have understood God” sounds much better. However, in Polish, the word pojąć can also mean “to take as a husband,” as in taking a “living god” for a husband. It also means “to understand.”
Several years of writing on various “spiritual” websites have given me insight into other people’s views and understanding of God. I have read the opinions of many people claiming that the Semitic El, that JHWH, or Allah have nothing in common with God. I have read that God lives in India and is called Sathya Sai Baba. There is also a large group of people who desire such exaltation that they regard their own personality as God.
I can experience, understand, and decipher God myself without relying on the opinions of others. I can experience, understand, and decipher God myself when He chooses to guide me toward the truth.
After all, together with my Soul, I will be accountable for this… before God. Accountable for my understanding of His laws, for the consequences of surrendering to the Divine Will, or for wandering blindly in the dark.
Therefore, it is better for me when I ask for deciphering, understanding, and insight.
Please, God, open my heart and my soul now.
I have deciphered God, with His approval.
I have deciphered divine mysteries when the Creator Himself allowed me to do so.
I invited God into my home, into my life, into my family, and into my professional work.
I deciphered God when God supported me with all His powers, when He protected and safeguarded me.
Without any effort, I deciphered the astral worlds, solely with God’s permission and with God’s blessing.
I invited God into my life, both while awake and in my dreams. I deciphered God as the One who removes all the ropes, anchors, nets, and forms of enslavement imposed upon us.
I deciphered the Creator for the sake of understanding, reliable knowledge, and safety.
With God’s permission, I deciphered the false and harmful images and myths concerning Him.
With God’s permission, I deciphered His false companions and those eager to act as intermediaries in contact with Him.
I came to know God accurately, reliably, and in the manner that God allowed me to know Him.
I deciphered the manifestations of divine activity in my life and in the lives of other beings.
I deciphered God by becoming once again a creative being of Divine Love and Divine Light.
I deciphered God, leaving to the Creator the gods of energy and earth, the false gods, imagined gods, and self-proclaimed gods.
I deciphered God as He pours down a rain of grace and every kind of abundance upon myself and upon the universe.
Comment
s_majda writes:
02/01/2015 at 15:34 (Edit)
[14:19:21] Dorota:
Can one bless God?
[15:24:10] Sławomir Majda:
God blesses.
In many religions people pray, “God, bless us.” When asking for God’s blessing, it sometimes happens that a pillar of light coming from God is clearly visible.
Theoretically, one may wonder whether such a pillar of Divine Light would appear if a person blesses someone on their own.
However, what purpose would God have in giving His light toward an objective that is not His own?
When things are unclear, it is better not to fall into idolatry.
The word to bless may, for example, mean to heal someone or to bestow favors upon them.
That possibility—whether in the case of cancer, poverty, or any other condition—always belongs to God.
If such ambiguity exists, a situation may arise where one person heals another through their own powers while bypassing God. At their own expense—and thus it would become exactly the situation described above.
The Czech word for LOVE is LÁSKA.
In Polish, łaska means grace, but contextually, the manifestation of God’s grace in someone may also be understood linguistically as the manifestation of God’s Love.
A different dimension and outcome may arise when one wishes something directly to God—for example, joy or ease in carrying out God’s Plan.
An example would be King David the Psalmist, who played for Him on a ten-stringed harp and knew that God was pleased with the music.
I understand it this way: David may have received in return something that also satisfied his own musical tastes.
Opublikowano: 03/06/2026
Autor: Sławomir Majda
Kateogrie: God


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