Receiving God’s answers to other people’s personal questions
I don’t know how or when was the first time I dared to receive God’s answers to Heavenreaders’ personal questions. I don’t know how I had the nerve, but I did.
I am amazed at the answers that come. I am amazed every time. As in all Godwriting™, the words simply come.
I find a difference between writing down the day’s Heavenletter™ and writing down a personal answer to someone’s question.
Writing down a Heavenletter is more like being out on a limb. When I sit to write down a Heavenletter, I have no idea of the subject of the Heavenletter beforehand. I still may not know what the Heavenletter is leading up to for a paragraph or two, and, yet, God knows very well. I’m just not in on it yet. God finds a new topic every day, and He ties his themes together magnificently. He sure doesn’t need my knowing what’s going on.
The process of Godwriting is simple and effortless, or it would not be Godwriting, yet receiving answers to others’ heart questions has a focus, and that makes the Godwriting seem easier to me. I feel less vague. Although I feel a strong responsibility to the person who asked the question as well as to God, because of the question, I know where God is leading and I am aware of the subject from the beginning. It’s a boundary that’s comfortable.
At the same time, as with all Godwriting, I don’t know how the answers come. I simply don’t. But they come, and I know the answer isn’t mine.
The other day I received God’s answer to someone’s question that astounded me. The answer was so unusual, how it was phrased, the tone of it, and in one place, even the use of language. It was in English, but it could almost have been in a foreign language. The answer was something of a mystery to me, but clearly understandable to the person God was talking to. I come back again and again to the question: How does Godwriting happen, how is it done, and how do I happen to be doing it and even offering Godwriting workshops?
Godwriting workshops now have the added name: Come Play with Me. Me, of course, refers to God. I wonder if all we need to know is that God wants to play with us, and Godwriting simply comes because God wants us to engage with Him, and so He takes us by the hand.
Godwriting is a blog by Gloria Wendroff and is about Gloria's daily life as the Godwriter of the Heavenletters project that is having a profound effect on the lives of people around the world.

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