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Endorsing, espousing, encouraging, advocating, and supporting both the everyday and extraordinary efforts of people to be noble, gallant, decent, good, and sanctified, they look after, preserve, and save them from harm. The Safeguard Omniangels retain, defend, uphold, shelter, and shield whenever and wherever vigilance serves as a vanguard hallmark.
Archangel
Gabriel has been appointed as the new Chieftain of the Safeguard Omniangels.
Archangel Gabriel will continue to serve the planet as an Archangel of the
Twelfth Ray of Divine Direction. The planetary Cosmic Benefactor Archangel for the Safeguard Omniangels is
Archangel Saraqael who is also a Chieftain of the Ministering Angels who
sit on the judgment councils. A Holy Seraph, who has jurisdiction over humans
who have committed spiritual sins, Archangel Saraqael will continue to serve the planet as an Archangel of the
Ninth Ray of Divine Protection.
The Sacred Site focal point of British Isles Oxfordshire Safeguard Omniangels is Wayland Smithy, which is located on the Ridgeway near Uffington White Horse in Oxfordshire in the British Isles. The Ridgeway was an ancient prehistoric path across high ground that extends from the Wash to Axmouth, Devon and includes Avebury about ten miles to the southwest, and the nearby Uffington White Horse. Situated in a Sacred Grove of Beech trees, the Neolithic earth covered long barrow and passage chamber date back to at least 5,500 years ago. The trapezoidal, wedge shaped mound was around fifty feet at its widest point and about one hundred ninety-six feet long. The small passage chambers were topped with a capstone. There were four gigantic sarsen stone megaliths that stood watch over the long entrance chamber, which lead to two opposing transept chambers and a terminal chamber. Archaeological excavations have found that the existing stone chambered, long barrow shaped mound was built about 3400 BCE upon the site of a smaller oval shaped timber chambered mound dating from around 3700 BCE. According to Scandinavian legends, a shamanic smith named Wayland lived there. If a traveller left a horse who had lost a shoe at the mound overnight along with a coin in payment on the top of the capstone, the horse would be re-shod by the morning and the money taken. Over the years, ancient Britons continued to follow the custom of making votive offerings to Wayland as a local god. Today offerings of flowers, grains, nuts and fruits are still left there by those who still follow the ancient ways.
The British Isles
Oxfordshire Safeguard Omniangels share this Sacred Site focal point with a group of Virtue
Omniangels, the
British Isles Oxfordshire Virtue Omniangels.
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