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Modlitwa Inna Niż Wszystkie

 Economic crisis – intentions for prayer

Compiled by Małgorzata Krata

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

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

Example:
— being poor, sick → it is good to also say its opposite:
— being poor, sick, — not being poor, sick

This allows the pattern to be addressed as broadly as possible in different aspects, including its opposite. It is also worth noting that Souls often think or claim that they do not have such opposite 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 help her understand the state she is in.

Being a bad mother, — not being a bad mother —

“But of course not, never in my life! These are not my patterns. What I do is my private matter.”
[— This is very often said or thought by the Soul.]

Intentions related to economic crisis

  1. Our own and others’ experiencing, creating, supporting, generating, combating, healing, and eliminating all types, scales, and meanings of financial crises—defined as situations involving sudden changes in financial markets, often related to insufficient liquidity, insolvency of individuals, banks, financial institutions, and other entities, leading to decreased production or deepening decline—and all effects thereof, both experienced and not experienced.
  2. Our own and others’ experiencing, creating, supporting, generating, combating, healing, and eliminating currency crises—defined as sudden and strong depreciation of a country’s currency due to loss of trust, resulting in devaluation and depreciation caused by mass selling—and all related effects.
  3. Our and others’ understanding and experiencing that symptoms of currency crises include falling exchange rates, rising short-term interest rates, capital outflows, central bank interventions, and declining reserves—and all resulting effects.
  4. Our and others’ understanding that the most dangerous economic disruptions include economic shocks, excessive inflation, and prolonged deflation, and that eliminating these enables stable long-term decision-making—and all effects thereof.
  5. Our and others’ understanding that economic crises have varied causes, but share the common feature of reducing quality of life—and all related effects.
  6. Our and others’ understanding that high interest rates can reduce investment capital and contribute to crises—and all effects thereof.
  7. Our and others’ understanding that crises may result from loss of investor confidence, stock market crashes, and bursting speculative bubbles—and all effects thereof.
  8. Our and others’ understanding that crises may arise from falling housing prices, reduced liquidity, mortgage burdens, and bank losses—and all effects thereof.
  9. Our and others’ understanding that lack of government oversight over financial institutions can lead to fraud, asset bubbles, and market instability—and all effects thereof.
  10. Our and others’ understanding that post-war economic conditions can trigger crises due to reduced military spending and workforce shifts—and all effects thereof.
  11. Our and others’ understanding that prolonged deflation discourages consumption and contributes to crises—and all effects thereof.
  12. Our and others’ understanding that excessive money supply can inflate asset prices and contribute to instability—and all effects thereof.
  13. Our and others’ understanding that economic crises disrupt economies and require government intervention to mitigate their impact—and all effects thereof.
  14. Our and others’ understanding that economic imbalance can arise from changes in demand, investment, and net exports—and all effects thereof.
  15. Our and others’ understanding that changes in productive capacity, technological progress, and overinvestment can disrupt equilibrium—and all effects thereof.
  16. Our and others’ understanding that sudden increases in costs (e.g., energy, wages, raw materials) can lead to inflationary shocks and crises—and all effects thereof.
  17. Our and others’ involvement in creating, supporting, building, or eliminating financial and economic crises on all scales—global, national, local, household, or even “cosmic”—and all resulting effects.
  18. Our and others’ experiencing (or not) of suffering caused by crises, including job loss, loss of income, and decline in quality of life—and all related effects.
  19. Our and others’ being (or not being) protected by God from financial and economic crises and their consequences on all levels—family, local, national, global, or beyond—and all effects thereof.


Opublikowano: 22/03/2026
Autor: Sławomir Majda
Kateogrie: Money and freedom from poverty


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