I Have no idea but Im gonna try and answer this. There seems to be a beauty in creation that and meaning to this journey we are on. This is supported in the Holy Bible with God saying that it was good. So if man was created by God then it seems that he has a plan for our lives if we are in tune with it. Its like an invitiation to his word through The Bible and a modern day GPS if you care to follow it. The prophecies appear to have come to pass in The Bible so it would seem there is a divine destiny. Follow his word and let this be the roadmap for your life or your GPS.
rhythm divine
In legal terms, providence refers to the foreseeing care and guidance of natural or divine power. It can also refer to the idea of fate or destiny influencing events.
Destiny is Schicksal in German.
Gamyam is the right word for destiny.
Divine/pride
Haughty Divine
The English adjective "divine" corresponds to two Latin adjectives: (1) "divus, -a, -um," meaning "deified, divine," "of or belonging to a deity," "godlike," and (2) "divinus, -a, -um," meaning "belonging to the gods," "divine," or "superhuman, supernatural." Our English verb "divine" comes from the Latin verb "divinare," which has essentially the same meaning.
Divine one
Divine, Celestial
Manifest Destiny was a belief in the 1830s and 1840s that the "divine right" of the US was to expand westward toward the Pacific Ocean and conquer the entire continent (unoccupied except by the native tribes). This, of course, actually occurred, at least partly as a result of political pressure to follow this assumption.It was used by people who claimed it was "God's will" for the U.S to expand all the way to the Pacific Ocean. (Manifest destiny meaning obvious fate.)
It's French and it means 'divine'.
Manifest Destiny and divine right share the idea of a perceived entitlement to power and territory, often justified through a belief in a higher purpose. Manifest Destiny was the 19th-century doctrine that Americans were destined to expand across the continent, while divine right was the belief that monarchs were granted the right to rule by God. Both concepts have been used to legitimize actions and policies, often leading to the expansion of authority and territory at the expense of others. Ultimately, they reflect a worldview that justifies dominance based on a perceived moral or divine sanction.