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A Prayer Different From All Others

The Struggle Between Good and Evil – Intentions for Reflection

Author: Małgorzata Krata

Technical aspects of the concept and sentence construction in working with intentions

Article: “800 intentions for cleansing” – Link
“Building extensive intentions and prayers. A Skype conversation about the technique” – Link
“One-sentence structure for intentions” – Link

The word “(–not)” added when working with intentions to a given word means that it is worth expressing it together with its opposite, or even spontaneously finding and speaking any synonyms that come to mind along with their opposites.

For example:
—being poor, sick → it is also good to say it together with its opposite:
—being poor, sick, —not being poor, sick

This allows you to address a given pattern as broadly as possible, including its opposite aspects.

It is also worth noting that souls often think or claim that they do not have such opposing patterns—for example, that they are not idolaters in a given case.

Another example:
A woman’s soul denies ever having been a bad mother. Therefore, adding the negation—“not being a bad mother”—may allow her to understand her actual state.

Being a bad mother — not being a bad mother —

“Oh no, never in my life! These are not my patterns. What I do is my private matter.”
—This is what the soul often says or thinks about itself.


Intentions

Our belief—and through our actions, others’ belief—that good and evil, being two fundamental opposites that exclude each other, both cannot and at the same time can exist independently, and yet complement each other, where one emphasizes the other and forms the basis of harmony in the world, and of our and others’ experiencing all the consequences of this.

Our belief and promotion of the idea that good and evil must exist simultaneously, that their coexistence has lasted since the beginning of time and will last forever—even after our and others’ enlightenment—because this is a typical, fundamental example of dualism: the clash of two opposing forces that are inseparably intertwined, and of our and others’ experiencing all the consequences of this.

Our belief and promotion of the idea that the struggle between good and evil is omnipresent—including among people, souls, and beings—and even that God, as well as deities and divine forces, fight against forces of evil, defeating or losing to them, and of our and others’ experiencing all the consequences of this.

Our and others’ engaging in fighting and waging war against good and/or evil, taking sides in conflict, believing that the side we stand on is the only correct one, and that we must combat the representatives of evil/good on the opposing side, and of our and others’ experiencing all the consequences of this.

Our defining and following various definitions and criteria of good and evil—whether aligned with divine categories or shaped by our own and others’ beliefs, intentions, patterns, conditioning, unconscious states, trances, illusions, and rules—and of our and others’ experiencing all the consequences of this.

Our belief and promotion of the idea that evil was created by God or by Satan or dark forces, in order to constantly test us through trials, temptations, and inner struggles with our weaknesses, so that we may become stronger and more resilient, and of our and others’ experiencing all the consequences of this.

Our belief that in the struggle between good and evil, ultimately either good or evil wins, and that their existence requires constant conflict, battles, wars, forceful solutions, elimination, and even killing of opponents, and of our and others’ experiencing all the consequences of this.

Our participation in this struggle as active participants—heroes, warriors, soldiers, leaders—forming armies, forces, and groups, and of our and others’ experiencing all the consequences of this.

Our preparation in various ways to fight and strike decisive blows against forces of evil and/or good, involving other people, souls, beings, entities, animals, or even extraterrestrial civilizations, and of our and others’ experiencing all the consequences of this.

Our belief in being chosen or sent—as emissaries or selected individuals—by God or other divine beings to carry out missions aimed at defeating good or evil through force, struggle, competition, or power, and of our and others’ experiencing all the consequences of this.

Our belief that there is a constant hidden battle between forces of good and evil over our souls and the souls of others, and of our and others’ experiencing all the consequences of this.

Our striving to gain influence or control over other souls, acting on behalf of or aligned with forces of good or evil, and experiencing victory or defeat, and all resulting consequences.

Our and others’ preparation of catastrophes, apocalypses, and destruction meant to bring victory or defeat of good over evil or evil over good, and of our and others’ experiencing all the consequences of this.


Opublikowano: 02/05/2026
Autor: Sławomir Majda
Kateogrie: Suffering of Body and Soul - Transfigurers of Suffering. Liberating Prayers.


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