I think the plan will prove to have been simply a prophecy. The Q posts guaranteed the outcomes it spoke of simply by speaking them when and where and how it spoke them. That Quantum computer knew how to make it happen.
I understand your point. I don’t pretend to know everything about faith and how it operates in this world but I know that it does. Christ continually reminded people that THEY, not just HE were children of God (“Is it not written in your law ‘I have said, ye are Gods, children of the most high?’”). And that when they were healed, it wasn’t Him doing it, but their faith. “Go to. Thy faith hath made thee whole.” He said it many times. When Peter walked on water, then started to sink, Christ didn’t tell him it was because Christ unilaterally decided to stop letting Peter perform that miracle, but rather, placed the blame on Peter’s altered state of mind, wherein he allowed doubt to overtake him at the sight of approaching waves.
I think the Q posts serve many functions. Not only do they reveal what is to come, but they encourage others to believe in it, which makes it self-fulfilling. I think that growing collective faith (the Great Awakening) plays huge role in this “plan.”
Personally, I think what the Quauntum computer that likely wrote those posts did, is it responded to the question: “How can we save the world from the dominion and bondage of this Satanic cabal.” The Q computer then ran perhaps trillions of simulations instantly (project Looking Glass) and figured out which dominoes it needed to tip over in order to ensure that outcome. I think those dominoes were the Q posts themselves. We’re watching it play out as we speak. What was posted, when, where, how they were phrased, etc. were at least some of those dominoes, if not all.
I think the easiest way to illustrate this concept is found in “Avengers: Infinity Wars.” Dr. Strange pops a squat in the middle of a huge battle with Thanos and starts looking at millions of possible future timelines and finds the one future in which Thanos is defeated with the least number of possible casualties. Tony asks him if this is that timeline. Strange responds that if he tells him, it won’t happen. At first they appear to lose. Thanos wins, and retires to some distant planet to drink in his victory (“It had to be this way” -Q). But we know that’s not how the story ends though. I’ve felt for a while now this was a white hat message telling us in both a literal and a symbolic way how this was all going to go down. We will clutch victory from the hands of cataclysmic defeat, and it will blow our minds.
“Look at the nations and watch—and be utterly amazed. For I am going to do something in your days that you would not believe, even if you were told.” -Habakkuk Chapter 1
I think the plan will prove to have been simply a prophecy. The Q posts guaranteed the outcomes it spoke of simply by speaking them when and where and how it spoke them. That Quantum computer knew how to make it happen.
Hmmm....
So if I speak out loud that I'll get to meet Iron Maiden next week, I can will it to happen? Or that I can hit lotto for $100 million?
I understand your point. I don’t pretend to know everything about faith and how it operates in this world but I know that it does. Christ continually reminded people that THEY, not just HE were children of God (“Is it not written in your law ‘I have said, ye are Gods, children of the most high?’”). And that when they were healed, it wasn’t Him doing it, but their faith. “Go to. Thy faith hath made thee whole.” He said it many times. When Peter walked on water, then started to sink, Christ didn’t tell him it was because Christ unilaterally decided to stop letting Peter perform that miracle, but rather, placed the blame on Peter’s altered state of mind, wherein he allowed doubt to overtake him at the sight of approaching waves.
I think the Q posts serve many functions. Not only do they reveal what is to come, but they encourage others to believe in it, which makes it self-fulfilling. I think that growing collective faith (the Great Awakening) plays huge role in this “plan.”
Personally, I think what the Quauntum computer that likely wrote those posts did, is it responded to the question: “How can we save the world from the dominion and bondage of this Satanic cabal.” The Q computer then ran perhaps trillions of simulations instantly (project Looking Glass) and figured out which dominoes it needed to tip over in order to ensure that outcome. I think those dominoes were the Q posts themselves. We’re watching it play out as we speak. What was posted, when, where, how they were phrased, etc. were at least some of those dominoes, if not all.
I think the easiest way to illustrate this concept is found in “Avengers: Infinity Wars.” Dr. Strange pops a squat in the middle of a huge battle with Thanos and starts looking at millions of possible future timelines and finds the one future in which Thanos is defeated with the least number of possible casualties. Tony asks him if this is that timeline. Strange responds that if he tells him, it won’t happen. At first they appear to lose. Thanos wins, and retires to some distant planet to drink in his victory (“It had to be this way” -Q). But we know that’s not how the story ends though. I’ve felt for a while now this was a white hat message telling us in both a literal and a symbolic way how this was all going to go down. We will clutch victory from the hands of cataclysmic defeat, and it will blow our minds.
“Look at the nations and watch—and be utterly amazed. For I am going to do something in your days that you would not believe, even if you were told.” -Habakkuk Chapter 1
“Expand your thinking.” -Q