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Galactic Omniangels have additional roles and tasks as consensual resolvers, readiness measurers, and trustworthy upholders of cosmic sanctions and divine prerogatives. They cull flawless evolutionary experiences and help align the actions, intentions, and thought patterns of this local universe with cosmic divinity. Showing, typifying, characterizing, illustrating, and explaining As Above So Below endeavors of mentors to be loving, caring, harmonious, nurturing, and illuminating, they make clear, reveal, educate, and teach others to fish. The Galactic Omniangels elucidate, influence, demonstrate, exemplify, and cultivate whoever and whatever example functions as an uplifting prototype.
Archangel Urimiel has been appointed as the Chieftain of the Galactic
Omniangels. Archangel Urimiel (Uriel) will continue to serve the planet as an
Archangel of the Eighth Ray of Divine Coordination. The planetary Cosmic
Benefactor Archangel for the Galactic Omniangels is
Archangel Cervizel who is also a Chieftain of the Principalities, a
protective order of angels that inspire humanity to make discerning decisions.
Archangel Cervizel will continue to serve the planet as an Archangel of the
Twelfth Ray of Divine Direction.
The Sacred Site focal point of the America Western Galactic Omniangels is Willamette Park, which is located by the Willamette River at SW Macadam and Nebraska in Portland, Oregon, U.S.A. Encompassing 30.4 acres, Willamette Park was founded in 1929 as a Corbett, Terwilliger, and Lair Neighborhood and Community Park. The park is a treed natural area and greenway with a picnic shelter and playgrounds. There are also hiking and biking trails within the park, as well as, a boat ramp and a Willamette River walkway. Fed by rainfall and snowmelt from the Cascade and Coast Mountain Ranges, the Willamette River is the largest river in Oregon. The river flows one hundred eighty-six miles from Eugene northward to Portland where it joins the Columbia River. The Willamette River watershed is around 11,500 square miles in size. Almost three fourths of it are forested with expanses of old growth trees and wilderness areas. It is also home to about three-fourths of the state's population, and around two thirds of Oregon's crops. Eighteen amphibian species, one hundred fifty-four bird species, thirty-one fish species, and sixty-nine mammalian species are native inhabitants of the Willamette River Basin.
Today nearly all the
native prairies and savannas are gone along with the meadowlarks who depended on
them. Old Growth Forests have been logged and converted to younger plantations
or farmland, greatly diminishing the available habitat for forest species like
spotted owls. Damming, diking, and dredging the river have left salmon
populations threatened. Water pollution problems have left 1,600 stream miles of
the Lower Willamette River with limited water quality. There are also
groundwater problems in some areas.
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