Thursday, November 23, 2006

Queen Of The Angels

Queen Of The Angels
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There are many legends about the Queen Of The Angels. In Catholicism, the Queen of Angels, "regina angelium", is the Virgin Mary. In the Cabala, it is the Shekinah; in Gnosticism, it is Pistis Sophia.

In Jewish occult lore, female angels are rare. In Gnostic lore there is Pistis Sophia, "faith, knowledge", a great female aeon or archon, or angel. In Arabic legend, female angels are not uncommon and were often objects of worship or veration; they were called "benad hasche", Daughters of God.

Many of the traditions are listed here.

Female Angels

Acamoth One of the aeons, and a daughter of Pistis Sophia. In Ophitic Gnosticism, Achamoth is the mother of the evil god Ildabaoth.

Agrat bat Mahlat An angel of prostitution, one of the 4 mates of Sammael or Samael (Satanil, Samil, Satan, Seir, Salmael, etc.) - a combination of "sam" meaning poison and "el" meaning angel. The other 3 mates are Lilith and Naamah, and Eisheth Zenunim.

Al Ussa In Pagan Arab mythology, a female angel. Her idol was destroyed on orders of Hohammed

Apsu In Babylonian mythology, Apsu is a female (?) angel of the abyss; "father" of the Babylonian gods as well as "wife" of Tamat. Apsu is finally slain by his (her) son Ea.

Ardousisur (Arduisher) In Zoroastrianism, Ardouisur is a female-ized (i.e., Cherub). Among the attributes of this Cherub is making females prolific and giving them easy childbirth, and even supplying them with breast milk. Her title is "giver of living water, " says King in "The Gnostics and Their Remains", p. 106.

Armaita (Aramaiti, Armaiti) In Persian mythology, one of the 6 or 7 Amesha Spentas or Archangels. She is the spirit of truth, wisdom, and goodness who became incarnate and visited the earth "to help the good."

Aruru In Sumerian mythology, a female messenger of the gods who created man from clay. She was the mother of the hero Gilgamesh.

Astarte (Ashteroth, Ashtoreth, Ishtar-Venus, etc.) Chief female diety of the ancient Phoenicians, Syrians, Carthaginians. Astarte was a Syrian moon goddess of fertility. As Ashteroth she was worshipped by the Jews in times when idolatry was prevalent in Palestine: "Ashotoreth, the abomination of the Zidonians" (II Kings, 23:13), the Zidonians being the Phoenicians. Jeremiah called Ashtoreth the "queen of heaven." The Greeks borrowed their Aphrodite from Astarte. Finally, Astarte shows up, in occult lore, as the demon for the month of April. In "Paradise Lost" (I, 438), Astarte is a fallen angel, equated with Astoreth.

Barbelo A great archon (female) "perfect in glory and next in rank to the Father-of-All. " She is the consort of Cosmocrator. In the "Texts of the Saviour", Barbelo is the daughter of Pistis Sophia, procreator of the superior angels. (Cosmocrator: in Valentian gnosticism, Cosmocrator is ruler of the material cosmos in the guise of Diabolos (the devil). His consort is Barbelo and together "they sing praise to the Powers of the Light," which would indicate that Cosmocrator is not wholly evil. [Rf. "Pistis Sophia"])

Benad Hasche ("Daughters of God") Female angels worshipped by Arabs.

Derdekea A heavenly female power who descends to earth for the salvation of man. In the gnostic "Paraphrase of Shem", Derdekea is referred to as the Supreme Mother.

Eisheth Zenunim (Isheth Zenunim) In Zoharistic Cabala, an angel of whoredom or prostitution, one of the 4 mates of the evil Sammael.

Ephinoia In Valentianian gnosticism, the 1st female manifestation of God. Cf. the Shekinah, also Holy Ghost (the latter being regarded in some sources as the mother of the living, Zoe, hence female).

Epititiokh A virgin aeon, mentioned in gnostic lore.

Holy Ghost (Holy Spirit) Another name for the Comforter, the 3rd person in the Trinity, sometimes regarded as female. The apocryphal "The Gospel According to the Hebrews" makes the Lord speak of "my mother the Holy Ghost" who "took me by one of my hairs and carried me to the great mountain Tabor", traditionally the mountain of the Transfiguration.
The "mother" reference here is explained by the fact that in Aramaic, which Jesus spoke, as also in Hebrew, the word "spirit" or "ghost" is of feminine gender. Origin "On John II, 12", quotes the cited passages from "The Gospel According to the Hebrews." The "Commentary on Apocalypse of the Blessed John" suggests that "by the angel flying through the midst of Heaven is signified the Holy Spirit."

Hurmiz One of the daughters of Lilith. Hurmiz is mentioned in Talmud "Sabbath" 151b.

John the Baptist The "forerunner angel" as in Exodus 23:20,; Malachi 3;1, Matthew 11:10. "Behold, I send an angel before thee, to keep thee in the way to bring thee into the place I have prepared." In "The Zohar" (Vayehi, 232a), Rabbi Judah delcared: "This angel, this deliverer of the world, is sometimes male, sometimes female. When he procures blessings for the world, he is male, resembling the male who prides blessings for the females. But when he comes to bring chastisement on the world, he is female, being, as it were, pregnant with the judgment." In the Coptic "book of John the Evangelist", Jesus speaks of "Helias the prophet" (meaning John the Baptist) and refers to the latter as an angel sent by Satan to baptize the water. "In the incons of the Eastern Church he (John the Baptist) is always depicted with wings, to indicate his office as messenger angel sent before the face of Christ" from Gales, "The Christian Lore of Angels."

Lilith In Jewish tradition, where she originated, Lilith is a female demon, enemy of the infants, bride of the evil angel Sammael (Satan). She predated Eve, had marital relations with Adam, and must thus be regarded as our first parent's 1st wife.
According to Rabbi Eliezer("The Book of Adam and Eve"), Lilith bore Adam every day 100 children. "The Zohar (Leviticus 19a) describes Lilith as "a hot fiery female who at first cohabited with man", but when Eve was created, "flew to the cities of the sea coast, " where she is "still trying to ensnare mankind." She has been identified, incorrectly, with the screech owl in Isaiah 34:14.
In the Cabala she is the demon of Friday and is represented as a naked woman whose body terminates in a serpent's tail. While commonly regarded as the creation of the Rabbis of the early Middle Ages (the first traceable mention of Lilith occurs in a 10th-century folktale called the "Alphabet of Ben Sira"), Lilith is in fact drawn from the "lili", female demonic spirits in Mesophotamian demonology, and known as "ardat lili". The Rabbis read Lilith into Scripture as the 1st temptress, as Adam's demon wife, and as the mother of Cain. In Talmudic lore, as also in the cabala ("The Zohar"), most demons are mortal, but Lilith and two other notorious female spirits of evil (Naamah and Agrat bat Mahlat) will "continue to exist and plague man until the Messianic day, when God will finally extirpate uncleanliness and evil from the face of the earth." In Scholem's article one of the medieval writers in the magazine "Mada'e ha Yahudut" (II, 164ff.), Lilith and Sammael are said to have
"emanated from beneath the throne of Divine Glory, the legs of which were somewhat shaken by their [joint] activity." It is know, of course, that Sammael (Satan) was once a familiar figure in Heaven, but not that Lilith went by a score of names, 17 of which she revealed to Elijah when she was forced to do so by the Old Testament prophet.

The names of Lilith: Abeko, Abito, Amizo, Batna, Eilo, Ita, Izorpo, Kali, Kea, Kokos, Lilith, Odam, Partasah, Patrota, Podo, Satrina, Talto. Lilith is also named "Astaribo" in medieval magic, "Avitue" in Rabbinic lore, "Bat Zuge" is a term for the evil Lilith when she is regarded as the 10th of the 10 unholy sefiroth or divine emanations issuing from the left side of God

Naamah (Pleasing) In the Cabala, one of 4 angels of prostitution, all mates of Sammael, the other 3 being Lilith, Eisheth Zenunim, and Agrat (Iggereth) Bat Mahlat. According to Rabbi Isaac, the sons of God, specifically Uzza and Azael, were corrupted by Naaman. Rabbi Simeon called her mother of demons, and Rabbi Hiya believed she was the "great seducer not only of men but of spirits and demons," and that, with Lilith, she "brought epilepsy to children." In "The Legends of the Jews I, 150", Naamah is the mother of the devil Asmodeus by the angel-demon Shamdan. In Genesis 4:22, Naamah is a mortal, the sister Tubal-cain.

Ouestucati A female angel of an hour who comes from the hesperides and brings the sea wind. She is called "the lady of chaste hands" by Hilda Doolittle in the latter's poem "Sagesse". In the Cabala, Ouestucati is the corresponding angel of Iehuiah: an angel of the order of thrones or of powers, a protector of princes, and one of the 72 angels bearing the mystical name of God Shemhamphorae

Pistis Sophia (Faith, Wisdom) A female aeon, one of the greatest in gnostic lore. She is said to have procreated "the superior angels." It was Pistis Sophia who sent the serpent to entice Adam and Eve. According to the "Texts of the Saviour", she is the mother of Barbelo.

"One of the aeonial beings who bears the name Sophia ("Wisdom") is of great importance to the Gnostic world view. In the course of her journeyings, Sophia came to emanate from her own being a flawed consciousness, a being who became the creator of the material and psychic cosmos, all of which he created in the image of his own flaw. This being, unaware of his origins, imagined himself to be the ultimate and absolute God. Since he took the already existing divine essence and fashioned it into various forms, he is also called the Demiurgos or "half-maker" There is an authentic half, a true deific component within creation, but it is not recognized by the half-maker and by his cosmic minions, the Archons or "rulers"."

"Deity: The Supreme Father God or Supreme God of Truth is remote from human affairs; he is unknowable and undetectable by human senses. She/he created a series of supernatural but finite beings called Aeons. One of these was Sophia, a virgin, who in turn gave birth to an defective, inferior Creator-God, also known as the Demiurge, meaning "public craftsman" in Greek. This lower God created the earth and its life forms. This is the God of the Hebrew Scriptures (Old Testament), a deity who was viewed as fundamentally evil, jealous, rigid, lacking in compassion and prone to genocide. The Demiurge "thinks that he is supreme. His pride and incompetence have resulted in the sorry state of the world as we know it, and in the blind and ignorant condition of most of mankind."" Copyright © 1996, 1999 & 2000, Author: B.A. Robinson

Rachel (A Ewe) In the Cabala, the Shekinah when "re-organized" as the Celestial Bride on her way to reunifications with God. She is one of the 4 matriarchs, rulers of the province in Heaven reserved for the daughters, wives, and sisters of the great Hebrew patriarchs.

Savatri (Savitri, Savitar) One of the 7 or 12 adityas or "infinite ones" (angels) in Vedic lore. He (or she) is a sun god or goddess, and is described as having "a golden hand, golden eyes" and "drawn by luminous brown steeds with white feet." In Vedic hymns Savatri is identified with Prajapati, the Creator. "Upon that excellent glory/of the god Savitar may we meditate;/May he stimulate our prayers."

Shekinah (Hebrew, "shachan", meaning "to reside"--Schechinah , Matrona. The female manifestation of God in man, the diving "inwohnung" (indwelling) . Also, the "bride of the Lord", compatible with the shakti of Shiva. The expression "the Shekinah rests" is used as a paraphrase for "God dwells." In Genesis 48:16 "the Angels which redeemed me from all evil, " uttered by Israel (Jacob), applies to the Shekinah, according to "The Zohar" (Balak 187a).
In the New Testament sense, the Shekinah is the glory emanating from God, His effulgence. The passage in Matthew 18:20 is translated by C. W. Emmet in Hastings, "Dictionary of the Bible" to read: "when two sit together and are occupied with the word of the Law, the Shekinah is with him." As interpreted by the Rabbi Johanan ("Midrash Rabba"; Exodus), Michael is the glory of Shekinah.

The Shekinah is the liberating Angel, manifesting in her male aspect as Metatron. In the Cabala, she is the 10th sefira Malkuth, otherwise the Queen. The creation of the world was, according to "The Zohar", the work of the Shekinah. Here, too, the Shekihah is spoken of as "abiding in the 12 holy chariots and the 12 supernal hayyoth." Elsewhere in "The Zohar" she is mentioned as a messenger from on high who, when she first appeared to Moses, was called an angel, just as she was called by Jacob. In "The Zohar" (Exodus 51a) she is "the way of the Tree of Life" and the "angel of the Lord." Maimonides in "moreh Nubuchim" regarded the Shekinah as an intermediary between God and the world, or as a perphrasis for God. [Rf. "Universal Jewish Encylopaedia" , vol. 9, p. 501.] The Shekinah has been identified with the Holy Ghost and the Epinoia of the gnostic Valentinus. Of her it has been said (Waite, "The Holy Kabbalah") "Behold, I send and angel before thee, to keep the in the way"
(Exodus 23.20), which has also been applied to Metatron and John the Baptist, "the forerunner angel." According to legend (Ginzberg, "The Legends of the Jews II", 148 and 200), Aaron died by a kiss from the Shekinah. In the same source (II, 260) it is related that Abraham caused the Shekinah to come down from the 2nd Heaven. And Talmud tells us that when God drove Adam out of the earthly paradise, the Shekinah remained behind "enthroned above a Cherub under the Tree of Life, her splendor being 65,000 times brighter than the sun," and that this radiance "made all upon whom it fell exempt from disease"; and, further, that then "neither insects nor demons could come nigh unto such to do them harm." An account somewhat at variance with the foregoing is given in Scholems' two works: "Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism" and "Jewish Gnosticism, Merkabah Mysticism, and Talmudic Tradition", where it is reported that the Shekinah was sent into exile on Adam's fall and that "to lead
the Shekinah back to God and to unite her with Him is the true purpose of the Torah." A reference to the dwelling place of the Shekinah occurs in "Canticles Rabba 6": "The original abode of the Shekinah was among the tahtonim [that is, among the lower ones: human beings, earth]. When Adam sinned, i [the abode] ascended to the 1st Heaven. With Cain's sin, it ascended to the 2nd Heaven. With Enoch's, to the 3rd. With the generation of the Flood, to the 4th. With the generations of the Tower of Babel, to the 5th. With the Sodomites, to the 6th. With the sin of the Egyptians in the days of Abraham, to the 7th." Corresponding to these there arose 7 righteous men who brought the Shekinah back to earth again. They were Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Levi, Kehath (Levi's son and Moses' grandfather) , Amram, and Moses. A haggadah about the Shekinah is that she hovers over all conjugal unions between Jewish husbands and wives and blesses such unions with her presence. [See "Talmud Shabbath
55b"; "Bereshith Rabba" 98, 4. In this reference, cf. the Roman goddes Pertunda, presider over the marriage couch.]

Woman Clothed with the Sun "And there appeared a great wonder in heaven; a woman clothed with the sun, and the moon under her feet, and upon her head a crown of 12 stars. And she being with child cried, travailing in birth, and pained to be delivered" (Revelation 12:1-2). This is perhaps the only instance in angelology where a heavenly creature is pregnant. From the text, she is the celestial prototype or counterpart of the Virgin Mary, mother of the son of God. According to Heckethorn, "The Secret Societies of All Ages and Countries" (I, 108), the Woman Clothed with the Sun stems from the Egyptian Isis.

* www.bethcoleman. net/angelqueen. html *

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