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PACHRIEL-Another name for the high angel
Baraq'el, who is one of the seven reigning princes in charge of
the seven heavens. Pachriel has authority over the second heaven
and is attended by "496,000 myriads of ministering angels," as
noted in the Third Book of Enoch.
PAHADRON-An
angelic being appearing in Jewish legend as a feared angel of
terror, as noted in the popular work Jewish Magic and Superstition
by Joshua Trachten berg (1939).
PALATINATES-An alternative name given to the
angelic choir of powers or perhaps some other order. According to
the renowned grimoire (or book of magic) called the Greater Key of
Solomon, the angels belonging to the palatinates can be summoned
by a trained sorcerer using spells and invocations conveniently
provided in that work. Once summoned, the palatinates are said to
be able to bestow invisibility upon the sorcerer.
PARADISE-See Eden, Garden of.
PARASIM-A
group of angels, perhaps to be considered a complete order or
choir, that has the singular task of singing the praises of God.
They are said to be under the authority of the high angelic prince
Tagas (Radueriel is also ranked as a possible chief).
PASCHAR-An
angel who is listed among the so-called seven throne angels. They
perform any possible mission at the command of God or his powerful
servants. Paschar is also considered a guard or watcher of the
curtain or gate surrounding the seventh heaven, the veil that in
some Jewish traditions surrounds the very throne of God. (See also
Mekabah Angels.)
PATRON
ANGELS-Those special angels who have a particular devotion to or authority over certain people, places, or professions are called patron angels:
Abortion-(Kasdaye) Adversity-(Mastema) Agriculture-(Risnuch) Air-(Chasan) Alchemy-(Och) Anger-(Af) Annihilation-(Harbonah) Apocalypse-(Orifiel) Birds-(Arael) Chance-(Barakiel) Chaos
(Michael or
Satan) Comets-(Ziqiel) Compassion-(Raphael) Conception-(Lailah) Dawn-(Lucifer) Day-(Shamshiel) Destiny-(Oriel) Dreams-(Duma) Dust-(Suphlatus) Earthquakes-(Rashiel) Embryo-(Sandalphon) Fear-(Yroul) Fertility-(Samandiriel) Fire-(Nathaniel
or Gabriel) Forests-(Zuphlas) Free
Will-(Tabris) Friendship-(Mihr) Glory-(Sandalphon) Grace-(Ananchel) Hail-(Bardiel) Healing-(Raphael) Health-(Mumiel) Hope-(Phanuel) Hurricanes-(Zaapiel) Insomnia-(Michael) Justice-(Tzadkiel) Knowledge-(Raphael) Light-(Issac,
Gabriel, and
Satan) Lightning-(Baraqiel) Love-(Raphael,
Theliel) Memory-(Zadkiel) Mountains-(Rampel) Music-(Israfel
or
Uriel) Night-(Leliel) Obedience-(Sraosha) Oblivion-(Purah) Order-(Sadriel) Patience-(Achaiah) Penance-(Phanuel) Poetry-(Uriel
or
Israfel) Pride-(Rahab) Progress-(Raphael) Prostitution-(Eisheth
Zenumin) Purity-(Tahariel) Rain-(Matariel) Repentance-(Michael,
Uriel, or
Raphael) Revelation-(Gabriel) Righteousness-(Michael) Sea-(Rahab) Silence-(Shateiel
or Duma) Snow-(Salgiel or
Michael) Stars-(Kokabiel) Strength-(Zeruel) Tears-(Sandalphon
or Israfel) Thunder-(Uriel or
Ra'amiel) Treasures-(Parasiel) Truth-(Amitiel,
Michael, or
Gabriel) Twilight-(Aftiel) War-(Michael
or
Gabriel) Weakness-(Amitiel) Whirlwind-(Zaamiel) Wind-(Ruhiel) Womb-(Armisael).
PEACE, ANGEL
OF-An angel who was supposedly devoted utterly to the
cause of peace and serenity, so much so that his passion
ultimately led to his destruction. There is also a long-standing
custop that the angel of peace is actually a member of a group
probably numbering seven, one of the holy numbers. That there is
more than one angel of peace is attested perhaps by the passage in
the Old Testament Book of Isaiah (33:7). They weep because of the
lack of peace in the world. In support of the tradition that there
is only one angel of peace (or at least that there is one angel of
several with the title) is the interesting passage in the First
Book of Enoch (40), in which that great patriarch writes of his
visit to heaven and the tour given of the first heaven conducted
by the angel of peace.
PELIEL-An
angel found in Jewish lore who is acknowledged as one of the
chiefs or ruling princes of the angelic order or choir of the
virtues. He is also counted among the ten holy sefiroth and is the
so-called angelic guide or patron of the Old Testament figure
Jacob, the Patriarch who wrestled with the dark angel.
PENANCE, ANGEL
OF-The title given to the angel Phanuel.
PENEMU-Also
Pinem'e, a onetime holy angel who fell from grace. He is
especially vilified in the literature of Enoch, specifically the
First Book of Enoch (69), because he taught humanity many terrible
things, such as the secrets of wisdom and, worst of all, the use
of ink and paper in writing. As a result of this ability, many
humans "have erred from eternity to eternity, until this very day.
For indeed human beings are not created for such purposes to take
up their beliefs with pen and ink"; this may be rather stern
denunciation of writing and the field of journalism.
Interestingly, Penemu is also credited with the ability to cure
stupidity.
PENIEL-The
name, meaning "face of God," that was used by the Old Testament
figure Jacob for the place he visited across the ford of Jabok,
where he spent an entire night wrestling the being called in lore
the dark angel. Another tradition found in many occult writings
considers Peniel to be an actual angel, the very dark angel who
was the wrestling companion of Jacob (although this title is also
given, with perhaps more authority, to such angels as Michael,
Uriel, and even Metatron).
PERI-A type
of fallen angel or celestial spirit mentioned in the lore of Islam
and Persia. According to Persian custop, they were exceedingly
attractive, but this only masked their evil nature, being fallen
spirits. There is a custop that the peri were the children of the
evil angels, a tradition that would make them the equivalent of
the nephilim. Unlike those beings of angelic origin, however, the
peri were said to be eligible for redemption from their
unfortunate progeny and their wicked tendencies. This is because
the phophet Muhammad turned his attentions to them and labored to
convert them from their sinful lives. In some legends they will
remain unable to enter paradise until the sins of their parents,
the fallen angels, are finally forgiven by a suitable penance.
PERSIA, ANGEL
OF-A title given to the angel Dubbiel as the special
patron or protector of Persia. He is said to have managed to
overthrow the archangel Gabriel as the high potentate of the Lord
in the celestial hierarchy, thereby permitting Dubbiel to promote
the greatness of Persia at the expense of Israel. Such a favored
status, however, did not long endure, for Gabriel was restored to
prominence and ended the suffering of the Chosen people. As the
patron of Persia, Dubbiel was apparently unable to prevent the
eventual conquest of the Persian empire under Alexander the Great
in 331 B. C. It is possible that there is an additional reference
to the angel of Persia in the Old Testament Book of Daniel
(10:13), where mention is made of Michael, the archangel and "one
of the chief princes," entering into a struggle with the "prince
of the kingdom of Persia," perhaps to be identified with the angel
of Persia. (See also Dubbiel.)
PESTILENCE, ANGEL
OF-Also the angel of plague, a certain highly feared and
destructive angelic servant sent by God to bring wholesale death
and ruin through the spreading of a kind of plague or disease as
punishment for some great sin or as a symbol of divine wrath. The
angels of pestilence were perhaps responsible for bringing some of
the woes inflicted upon Egypt recorded in the Book of Exodus, and
also in the First Book of Chronicles.
PHALEC-A
prominent angel in the occult who is chief or ruling prince of the
angelic order or choir of angels. He is also said to have a
special area of authority over the planet Mars, a guardianship
that explains the rather bellicose nature he is said to possess.
PHANUEL-One
of the four so-called Angels of the Presence (or the face), angels
who have the cherished position of actually beholding the very
face of God or spending time in his direct presence. Phanuel is
often listed among the four chief angels of the Presence as a
substitute to the great archangel Uriel, standing with his
fellows, Michael, Raphael, and Gabriel. Phanuel appears in the
first Book of Enoch (40) with the other three major angels of the
Presence and is described in a role quite similar to the one
normally held by Uriel. If, as is often stated by scholars,
Phanuel may be declared synonymous with Uriel, then that mighty
angel's attributes, achievements, and legends may be said to be
Phanuel's as well. (See Uriel for other details.)
PHOENIX
(1)-Also Phenex, an angel who is fallen but who, according
to the occult work The Lemegeton by Arthur Edward Waite, has high
hopes of returning after 1,200 years to the light of goodness.
According to one source, The Encyclopedia of Occultism by Lewis
Spence, Phoenix was formerly a member of the angelic order or
choir of thrones. In the meantime he is said to be a respected
poet in the nefarious regions, with authority over many legions of
presumably damned spirits.
PHOENIX-(2)-A type of bird found in Greek
mythology that was said to inhabit the Arabian or Egyptian desert,
living to the age of six hundred years. At the end of that time it
settled into a nest made of spices, sang a hauntingly beautiful
song, and, flapping its wings, managed to set itself on fire and
reduce itself to ashes; soon after, it literally rose out of the
ashes and began a new cycle of life. The phoenix has become one of
the most common symbols for resurrection and eternal
life.
PISTIS
SOPHIA-One of the aeons, the superior angelic beings of
the lore of the Gnostics, a heretical sect of Christianity. Also
called simply Sophia (meaning "wisdom"), she supposedly helped
bring into being the material world, ironically by her fall from
heaven. She pondered certain questions that the aeons were
forbidden from considering and so was ejected from her state of
grace. Plummeting into the darkness, she collapsed into despair;
but, remembering the light of heaven, she emanated and brought
forth the being who came, in Gnostic thinking, to be Jesus. He
then appealed to the other aeons to come to the aid of Pistis
Sophia. They helped rid her of the negative, imperfect thoughts
that had plagued her. Unfortunately the negative energy was later
put to use to create the imperfect and flawed material world in
which are trapped untold millions of souls who struggle
fruitlessly to achieve salvation, an unobtainable goal because
they are not chosen and made members of the elect (saved) souls.
In the rather peculiar thinking of the Gnostics, Pistis Sophia
encouraged the redemption of humanity by sending the serpent into
the Garden of Eden to tempt Adam and Eve, thereby setting in
motion the events that led to the defeat of Demiurge, the cruel
lesser god who controls the world and prevents the ascension of
the souls to the Supreme God, who is perfection. (See also Aeons.)
PLAGUE, ANGEL OF
THE-Another name for the so-called Angel of Pestilence.
PLANETS, ANGELS OF
THE-A group of angels who possess certain powers over the
planets they administer as a kind of govenor or ruling prince. By
custop the angelic rulers of the planets are headed collectively
by the angel Rahatiel. The list of the planets was
connected intimately with astrology and was formulated based upon
the concept of the seven planets. The Magus (1801) by Francis
Barrett lists the ruling angels as
follows: Mercury(Michael or
Raphael); Venus (Haniel or
Anael); Mars (Camael); Saturn
(Orifiel or Zaphiel); Jupiter (Zadkiel or
Zachariel); the Sun (Michael or
Raphael); the Moon(Gabriel).
POWERS-(Choir)-One of the nine accepted
choirs of angels according to the celestial organization developed
by the sixth century theologian Dionysius the Areopagite; also
called potentates, authorities, dynamis, and forces, the powers
are placed in the second triad of the nine choirs and are numbered
sixth overall. The powers were supposedly the very first of the
angels created by God, although this disagrees with the teaching
that all angels came into existence at the same moment. They are
described as having the task of defeating the efforts of the
demons in overthrowing the world and are declared the awesome
defenders of the cosmos against all evil and the maintaners of all
cosmic order and equilibrium. They are guardians of the heavenly
paths, policing the routes to and from heaven to the earth, which
means that they concern themselves as well with humanity.
POWERS, ANGEL OF
THE-The name given to certain angels belonging to the
angelic choir or orders of powers. The chief angels of this order
are listed as Gabriel, Camael, and even Satan (before his Fall).
Other angels receiving this title have been Verchiel, Samael, and
especially Zacharel, who is also the governing angel of the planet
Jupiter. Yet another angel mentioned under this title was the
famed archangel Michael, as noted in the apocryphal work the
Testament of Abraham.
PRAISE, ANGELS
OF-A group or even order or choir of angels that, as the
name might suggest, has the perpetual duty of singing the divine
praises of the Lord. According to the famed work The Legends of
the Jews by Louis Ginzberg, the angels of praise were supposedly
created by God on the second day of Creation, along with the angel
hosts and the ministering angels. It is generally accepted that
the angels of praise can be considered synonymous with the angelic
choir of thrones.
PRAVAIL-See
Vrevoil.
PRAYER, ANGEL
OF-An angel appearing in various traditions with special
authority over prayer, such as the privilege of bringing before
the throne of God the prayers of certain exceedingly worthy
mortals, in particular the saints and holy men and women. The
exact number of the angels of prayer is somewhat unclear, being at
five, six, or seven.
PRESENCE, ANGELS OF
THE-A special kind of angel, also called the angels of the
face, who receives the incomparable honor of standing in the
presence of or before the very face of the Lord. Often nameless,
the angels of the presence are regularly grouped in accounts with
such other angelic bodies as the angels of sanctification, angels
of glory, angels of the spirit of fire, and the angels of the
spirits of the winds.
PRIDE, ANGEL
OF-A name frequently given to Satan (or Lucifer). It is
derived from his hubris, his pride, which caused, according to
Christian teaching, his Fall from the light and his expulsion from
heaven.
PRINCES,
ANGELIC-The name given to certain powerful and highly
placed angels who are honored with the title of prince or ruling
princes of heaven. The angelic princes are found especially in
Jewish lore, with princes governing not only the seven heavens,
but the angelic orders or choirs. Following are some of the
princes of the individual choirs: SERAPHIM:
Michael, Metatron, Uriel, Seraphiel, and Satan (before his
Fall) CHERUBIM: Gabriel, Raphael, Uriel, Zophiel,
and Satan (before his fall) THRONES: Zaphkiel,
Raziel, Orifiel, and Jophiel DOMINATIONS:
Zadkiel, Zacharel, and Muriel VIRTUES: Gabriel,
Michael, Uzziel, Tarshish, Sabriel, and
Peliel POWERS: Camael, Gabriel, Verchiel, and
Satan (before his Fall) PRINCIPALITIES: Amael,
Nisroch, and Haniel ARCHANGELS: Metatron,
Raphael, Michael, Gabriel, Barachiel, Jehudiel, and Satan (before
his Fall) ANGELS: Gabriel, Chayyliel, Phaleg, and
Adnachiel.
PRINCIPALITIES-(Choir)-One of the nine
accepted choirs of angels as organized by the sixth-century
theologian Dionysius and adopted largely by the Christian church.
The principalities are placed first in the third triad of angels
(with the archangels and angels) and are ranked seventh overall.
Also called princedoms and princes, these angels are the first of
the choirs most concerned with the earth and are traditionally
declared to have the roles of caretakers over every nation,
province, county, district, city, town, village, and house,
working with the guardian angels, who are assigned to every spot
and person; while this seems to be bureaucratic doubling of
angelic activity, it can be argued that guardian angels function
as the personal angelic protectors, while the principalities are
the administrative or technical writers.
PSEUDEPIGRAPHA-The name given to those works
that are considered noncanonical (meaning that they are not
accepted as sacred literature and included in the books of the
Bible), were deliberately written in a style that emulated actual
biblical literature, and were named after or attributed to some
great personage in order to establish for them some kind of
heightened authority or credibility. There is a large body of
these Pseudepigraphical writings, with details about angels
included in many of them. Among the most notable angel sources are
the Books of Enoch, the Books of Baruch, and the Gospel of St.
Bartholomew.
PUNISHNENT, ANGEL
OF-The title borne by several different angels denoting
their special powers and authority in handing out the divine
punishment of God. Among the possible members of this
association-although there is no indication that such angels
should be thought of as forming their own choir order-are Amaliel,
Ariel, Kushiel, Puriel, Makatiel, Hemah, Mashit, Af, Kezef, and
Hasmed. Like the angels of destruction, angels of vengence, and
angels of wrath, these angelic beings are not to be taken lightly
and are truly feared.
PURIEL-Also
Puruel and Pusiel, an angel who appears in the apocryphal work of
the Testament of Abraham, the secondcentury A.D. apocalyptic tale
of Abraham's journey to heaven. Puriel is described as utterly
pitiless, with the task of examining the soul of each person
brought to heaven for examination after death.
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