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Restoration Omniangels have additional roles and tasks as renewal artisans, therapeutic healers, and remedial recoverers of useful assets and valuable resources. They breathe life into stagnate situations and get stalled processes laden with potential to develop into beneficial progressive courses of action. Reinforcing, reviving, stimulating, enlivening, and energizing the corrective curative wholehearted efforts of people to be regenerated, reawakened, revitalized, refreshed, and rejuvenated, they patch up, fix, repair, and put things back together. The Restoration Omniangels recover, invigorate, cure, and strengthen whatever and whichever remedy helps to perpetuate wholesome living.
Archangel Brigiel Brighid has been appointed as the Chieftain of the
Restoration Omniangels. Archangel Brigiel Brighid will continue to serve the
planet as an Archangel of the Seventh Ray of Mythos Transformation. The
planetary Cosmic Benefactor Archangel for the Restoration Omniangels is
Archangel Galgliel who is also a sun wheel governor of the yearly seasonal
cycles, and a Chief of the Galgalim merkabah charioteer angels who sing
celestial divinity songs. Archangel Galgliel will continue to serve the planet
as an Archangel of the Eighth Ray of Divine Coordination.
The Sacred Site focal point of the America Missouri River Restoration Omniangels is Ponca State Park, which spans the scenic Missouri River bluffs about two miles from the town of Ponca, Missouri. The park is at the eastern gateway of a fifty nine mile section of the Missouri National Recreational River. Both the town and park of Ponca are named after Chief Ponca Standing Bear who won the battle to have Native Americans declared a "person" under American law. The park is also part of the Lewis and Clark Historical Trail, and the vibrant qualities of its diverse bars, chutes, and islands demonstrate what most of the "Big Muddy" was like before it was channelized.
Encompassing 892 acres of thickly treed rolling hills with
seventeen miles of trails, the area provides habitat for a variety of flora and
fauna including bobcats, coyotes, grey foxes, indigo buntings, northern orioles,
opossums, raccoons, red breasted grosbeaks, red foxes, ruby throated
hummingbirds, scarlet tanagers, turkey vultures, warblers, white tailed deer,
and wild turkeys. At the heart of the park is an ancient oak tree about
three hundred twenty years old that is called the "Old Oak Tree".
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