Someone here posted that you can't bless something - they are wrong. You can. You need holy water. You can make holy water by saying a quick player over it, and ... well blessing the water. Believe it or not - when I was a young chap I asked the same thing to a nun - and this is what she told me. I was pressing her to a point about how to baptize someone when they are dying, and you have no holy water around - she told me to even use... saliva.... i don't know if she was just sick of my questions... but yeah. Then you simply say - I bless you, in the name of the Father and the Son and the holy Spirit.
Now how accurate this is... not sure - but its as much as I know and it was a nun that directed me on this.
Anyone, anywhere, anytime and of any religion or lack of it can bless or curse anyone or anything.
Caress me, come bless me.
1. To request someone or something 2. To beg for someone or somthing 3. To bless someone or something
Cleanse it, and ask for the Lord and Lady's blessings upon it.
To bless is to confer upon someone or something divine favor or protection. It is a gesture of goodwill, gratitude, or bestowing positive energy upon someone or something. It is often done by invoking a higher power or offering good intentions.
"Bless" can be used as both a verb and a noun. As a verb, it expresses bestowing or invoking divine favor or protection upon someone or something. As a noun, it refers to a prayer asking for God's favor or protection.
yes.but it must be something a christian wishes something to be blessed. for example, if he wants his rosary to be blessed, then he must let the priest bless it.
I wouldn't call it karma, nor would it bring on something specific. But if you do something bad to someone intentionally, then to the same extent it will come back to you. Same goes for good. Only I wouldn't call it karma. I believe if you bless someone, then God will bless you.
If the family's last name is Smith, you would say "God bless the Smith family."But if you were talking about a boy named Smith and his family, you would say "God bless Smith's family", because the family belongs to Smith.Only use an apostrophe if something belongs to that person! I hope this helps :)
No one really knows..... maybe people are just use to it. It was once believed that sneezing was something to do with being possessed by demons, so 'bless you' i.e.'God bless you', would help save you.
Bless is present tense. The past tense is blessed, and the future tense is will bless.
I asked myself this many times. If you dont have the kinda faith to where you know that god is going to bless as you ask because you are obedient to him and submissive, well then you wont be blessing anything but someone sneezing ;)