Introducing
the Angels
Angels are glorious and magnificent creatures. They have been walking beside us and interacting with us from time immemorial. History is brimming with examples of our fascination with angels, and there is not a single ancient culture or religion that doesn’t incorporate some angelic archetype into its pantheon.
Why is this the case? Perhaps because humanity has always felt a deep-seated yearning to communicate with the Divine. And at the most basic level, an angel is God’s preferred mode of communication. The word angel literally means “messenger.” For thousands of years, angelic messengers warned people of impending floods, firestorms, and plagues; bestowed blessings; foretold riches; healed the sick; and announced the birth of great leaders.
But in today’s world, the desire to connect with angels often seems limited to those who are religiously devout and/or New Age. Let me point out, however, that there’s nothing particularly “New Age” about the angels. They’ve been weaving in and out of cultures for thousands of years! And just as angels are not necessarily “New Age,” they’re not necessarily “religious,” either. As messengers, they do not belong—nor have they ever belonged—to any particular faith. Sure, Judaism recognizes a handful, Islam mentions four, and Christianity recognizes several (with some denominations acknowledging dozens). But the fact that religions involve angels does not mean that angels are merely “religious” creatures.
Take, for example, the experience of my spirit guide, Jake. He shared with me that within seconds of crossing over, the first angels he encountered were Raphael, Michael, Gabriel, and Cassiel. Jake was young at the time of his death, only twenty-eight, and had never put much thought into religion or spirituality when alive. So when he came face to face with these archangels, he froze in fear. He immediately confessed, “I’m not Christian.”
Apparently, Gabriel arched his brow and cast a sidelong glance at his angelic brothers. He then returned his piercing gaze to Jake and shrugged. “Funny, neither are we.”
“They always say that,” one of the other archangels mumbled as they casually walked away. Stupefied, Jake turned his perplexed gaze to Cassiel, who had chosen to remain with him. This angel was dressed in street clothes, including a leather biker jacket and biker boots.
“Chill, man.” Cassiel threw his hands up to stop Jake from speaking. “You’re not going to Hell.” All Jake could do was shake his head, to indicate that of course, he’d rather skip that area if he had a choice. He just stood there in complete awe of Cassiel … such a pure and luminous being, yet dressed as if he belonged in a goth rock band.
That’s how I view the archangels in general. They’re spiritual rock stars who happen to have incredibly long shelf lives. Everyone knows them. Everyone wants to see them, talk to them, touch them, embrace them. And while I think Archangel Michael invented the “rock star” concept (as he definitely has the persona for it), you don’t have to stand in line at a holy shrine, repeatedly chant a prayer, or give offerings to get his autograph. Unless you want to. All the rituals and rites that we humans engage in are more for us than they have ever been for the Divine. If performing such tasks brings you comfort and the feeling of being closer to God, by all means continue what you’re doing. Raised Christian myself, I’ve spent countless hours in prayer, often praying until my knees went so numb I couldn’t stand up.
That was before I realized that my prayers were one-sided, however. I was doing all the talking and not very much listening. As Raphael told me years ago, “Everyone prays for answers, but no one sticks around long enough to hear them.” I was very much guilty of that. I either prayed scripted words for hours on end, or quickly lodged my grievances before jumping up to go on with my day. After all, in my Pentecostal upbringing, I was taught to “take it to the cross and leave it there,” meaning you didn’t ponder your problems, you didn’t worry about them, you didn’t try think them out. You simply took them to God and let God handle the rest. This was a test of your faith.
Well, that kind of faith didn’t get me far. I couldn’t just blindly believe. I mean, how do I know that God even received the prayer? How do I know that my prayer isn’t waiting in a queue behind six billion other prayers? Silly notions, sure. But long ago, I entertained them nonetheless.
Today, I prefer to balance faith with understanding and knowledge. Now, when I have questions for the Divine, I wait for the answer and pray that I’m receptive enough to hear it. If I’m aware that I’m not grounded, or if I’m caught up in a torrent of emotions, I usually say, “Get back to me as soon as you can.”
Who am I addressing when I say this? Whoever is closest to the phone up in Heaven. God has many faces and many voices, so I don’t discriminate among messengers. Cassiel, the Angel of Tears, is just as able as Gabriel, the Angel of Annunciation, to deliver a message.
Then again, there are moments when I’m in the mood for a particular angel. If I don’t feel like being chastised for something I know I did wrong, I try to avoid Gabriel (like a child hiding to avoid a much-deserved spanking). I may call on Michael, who is always all smiles. Or I may cuddle up against Sandalphon, letting his playful personality rub off on me. Or I may call on Raphael, if I need a shoulder to cry on. But if Gabriel is the one who shows up, after my first reaction (a groan, since he is the most meticulous and militant messenger in Heaven), I take a deep breath and a moment of silence to prepare myself for a good thrashing of some sort. Then I surrender. “Okay, Gabriel, lay it on me.”
What Angels Mean for You
In addition to their role as messengers, the job of the angels is to facilitate the manifestation of what Archangel Michael has called “God’s Great Equation.” Many of you might know this as “God’s Plan.” This is an important concept to understand before you engage with your angels.
So, before you go any farther in this book, ask yourself this question: Why do I want to communicate with the angels? Now, while this question may seem simple, the answer to it will determine how much long-term success you will have in engaging the angels. If you are looking to them to help you achieve the commonly sought-after goals of prosperity, health, love, family, and career, I suggest you close this book and take your money to a fortune-teller! Neither the angels nor myself are in the business of telling fortunes.
Likewise, the angels are also not in the business of making you happy. Will they offer comfort by being with you through your life’s challenges? Yes. Help you find the love of your life? No. The angels are here to help you establish a lasting and productive relationship with the Divine, not to fix what you might perceive as a broken existence. Your life is exactly how it should be. If you are meant to have that perfect job with the 401k, you will. If you’re meant to meet the perfect mate, you will. If you’re meant to get your dream job, the angels will make it happen. Likewise, if you’re meant get fired, the angels will make it so. The same goes for love and relationships, happiness and health, prosperity and wealth. The job of the angels is merely to help you understand why your life script has been written the way it has. They offer comfort and guidance that can help you in not begrudging your situation as much, if at all.
In sum, since our human existence has been scripted into God’s Great Equation (God’s Plan), the angels, in manifesting God’s Plan, are here to help guide us on the paths we have set out upon. They are here to offer wisdom, to inspire, to lend their ears and shoulders when we’re at our darkest hour. They are not matchmakers, brokers, job placement officers, or divorce lawyers.
One way to get out of the habit of looking to the angels to fix what we deem broken is to first set aside fixed ideas about what is good and what is bad. When we feel that life is going according to our agenda, when circumstances seem to be flowing in the direction we desire, we consider life good. When things are just the opposite, we consider life bad. But in order to make communication with the angels less of a headache—for us and probably for them as well—we have to understand that our celestial friends don’t work in terms of what makes us feel good or what makes us feel bad, but rather in terms of what serves a purpose.
There is but one law in the cosmos that is inescapable, and the angels adhere to it to the letter: the Law of Causality. Cause and effect. Every action has a reaction. This isn’t just a scientific theory—Jesus called it the Golden Rule, Buddha called it karma. And there’s a significant chance that you yourself have said on more than one occasion, “What goes around comes around.” The angels adhere to this rule and work to create the causes in our lives that will bring about a desired effect according to God’s will; and like dominoes, the rotation between cause and effect moves on into infinity.
That said, there are no accidents in our existence. There is no such thing as bad timing or rotten luck. There’s no such thing as too late, too early, too much or too little. Everything in our lives occurs exactly as it’s supposed to occur. Everything. This is why I cannot overemphasize that the angels do not work according to what pleases or displeases us, or by what we consider good or bad. Those are all human concepts and perceptions—something that the angels simply do not adhere to. They have one focus and one focus only: purpose.
I know this may make the angels seem cold, callous, and detached from the human condition. But that couldn’t be further from the truth. Every human is here in this reality because he or she chooses to be. Everything that occurs in his or her life is a choice that was made before birth—the pleasant, as well as the not so pleasant. The angels are here, as our brothers and sisters in spirit, to guide us along our life paths, and it is with love and compassion that they inspire, comfort, teach, and guide us the way they do. They know that human life in this reality isn’t always enjoyable. Yet we humans always seem to come back here—and the angels walk by our sides, giving us what we need in order to get through our life lessons and the experiences that we’ve scripted for ourselves.
Before you can fully enjoy and utilize the relationship you establish with your angels, you must first own the responsibility for your life as the cocreator and coauthor of your circumstances. That includes the things that you feel you have absolutely no control over; before you were born into this world, you wrote down everything you wanted to experience in this lifetime. God approved it and trusted you enough to withstand it. The angels then moved in to help create the causes for events to happen. I know this may be difficult to believe, especially if you’ve suffered through a tragedy.
So, why would we choose to do something so seemingly insane? It’s like I told a radio talk show host a while back who refused to believe he was responsible for all the tragedy in his life: when we are in the realm of spirit, we know that this life or this reality is just an illusion. We don’t really get hurt—though we may feel it. We’re not really poor—though we may look it. We’re not really crazy—though we may act it. See, in the realm of spirit, we understand that none of this physical stuff matters in the grander scheme of things.
I liken this to playing video games. You can send your little character into a virtual war zone, but if he gets hurt, it’s not that big of a deal. If his wares are stolen, oh well, you work at trying to recoup your losses. If he even dies, you can either bring him back for another round or create a whole new character. All in all, there is time and energy invested, but you know that the existence of that character is quite trivial when looking at the broader picture of your life.
Now, don’t get me wrong. I’m not making our lives out to be as simple as a video game, because, unlike the video game, we can’t turn this existence off. We can’t just get up and leave life like we can the game console. And for some of us, we can’t even get a brief breather to regroup! Once we enter this reality with our scripts, we have to go through with it. This may sound bleak, but understand this if nothing else—if God didn’t think you could handle it, you would not be here.
So, we should actively keep ourselves in check, avoiding the spiritual snare of viewing everything as good or bad. Let such perceptions slip away to reveal what is truly important—the lessons we are here to learn, through this reality we have chosen to experience. The unrelenting coldness of the bank that has just put your house into foreclosure could be a lesson in not letting the attitudes of others affect your sense of self-worth, while the foreclosure itself is a lesson in detachment and impermanence—nothing lasts forever. The loss of a job that you had your heart set on lasting you to retirement could be a lesson in how to be more malleable and accepting of change. And the spouse who left you in the middle of all of this agreed to his or her role before you were born to teach you how to deal with issues of abandonment and betrayal.
None of those things are pleasant. We don’t need psychic powers to figure that out. But through all of the trying experiences, we can gain more insight on life, as well as use the experiences to bolster our strength and faith in ourselves and the Divine. And while it may be difficult to deal with pressing life issues such as these, keep in mind that you are still in God’s Great Equation—these experiences are also causes that will bring about other effects. You may read, several years down the road, that the house you lost was in a contaminated hot spot, rendering it uninhabitable. The job you lost may put you in a position to either take up employment with better benefits or encourage you to start your own business. And your spouse leaving you could have just opened the door for a mate who is better suited for you. It is because of possibilities like this that I encourage my clients—and often remind myself—to not begrudge difficult times, for they can and often do make way for better things.
This is where our connections to our angels come in. They help us process these experiences and learn our spiritual lessons, so that we are not blindly caught up in our egos, our pride, or our illusions of what we think life should be.
It is with this understanding that we should seek to engage our angelic guides. We should go to them for wisdom and encouragement, not pining for them to fix us or our broken lives. If we are supposed to be “fixed,” we will be. The outcome is already set in motion.
Parent Angels and Mentoring Angels
As I mention in my book Azrael Loves Chocolate, Michael’s a Jock, it’s a common belief that guardian angels are appointed to individuals at the time of their birth. According to this belief, the guardian angel is supposed to protect the person from disaster or adversity or injury, or from sinning altogether. It’s a comforting notion, isn’t it? Knowing that Archangel Michael is watching your back every time you leave the house and venture into this cruel, cruel world can do a lot for your confidence, to say the least.
Well, as I discussed above, that’s actually all that Michael is doing—watching your back. What befalls us in our existence has everything to do with what God has set in motion for us, and little to do with whether or not our guardian angels are sleeping on the job. When I work with clients as an angel intuitive, I try to discourage them from using the term guardian angel—because we tend to place a lot of weight and misallocated faith on this concept. Instead, I encourage the use of two other terms: parent angel and mentoring angel.
Your parent angel is in many ways similar to the stereotypical guardian angel. This is the angel who is with you from the time of your birth until well after you have returned to the realm of spirit. He (or she) watches over you and the progress you make in the course of a lifetime. This angel is ever-present, and facilitating communication with him or her will help you to discover and better understand your life’s purpose. However, unlike the stereotypical guardian angel, your parent angel does not protect you from harm (as it is usually defined), unless it is God’s will to do so.
I’ve received countless emails from readers of Azrael Loves Chocolate, each expressing how he or she resonates with one particular angel and its viewpoints or demeanor. Likewise, in the course of working with this book, you’re going to quickly discover an angel you truly feel a heart connection with—one who not only makes you feel safe and secure, but whom you feel is like a close brother or sister, someone you can imagine yourself talking to on lazy Sundays while sitting on the front porch with a glass of iced tea. (Or not—Uriel and Cassiel aren’t the type for that. You’d most likely enjoy their company sitting among the armory of their mansions or on a church rooftop overlooking a cemetery. To each his own!)
Now, whether or not your connections with the angels are always pleasant is another story. My parent angel intimidates the dickens out of me. And he knows it. Sometimes I can get sassy around him, but for the most part I’m usually tiptoeing past him, if not trying to avoid him altogether. Militant, with a tongue sharper than a polearm, he brings to my life the discipline I often lack. (I’m a slacker child of the 1980s, so I need my parent angel to kick me in the rear now and again to get things done. Procrastinators unite … eventually!)
I know that when he comes to the fore to talk to me, the subject will usually be one of a serious nature. At this point I cringe, bear down, and prepare myself to face another life challenge. Despite trying to dodge him, like I used to dodge my very strict father when I was young, I love my parent angel very much. We share the same views about the human world and I feel safe and secure in his presence. And when I do leave this physical realm, it is back to him I will go to review my life and discuss what it has meant for me spiritually. However, since many of you don’t need a kick in the pants as often as I do, you will probably be much luckier and find great comfort in your parent angel.
The other angel that you will be working with—and at much closer range than your parent angel—is your mentoring angel. During angel consultations with clients, I focus on the angel or angels that I see in the foreground; these are the mentoring angels. If someone adores Michael but he’s not mentioned in the consultation, I tell them not to fret. Michael may be their parent angel, whereas the angel offering guidance in the consultation is the mentoring angel, there to help with the life lessons that need to be learned at that particular time. When it’s time to shift gears to the next lesson, another mentoring angel may step in.
Take my friend Lee, for example. Her parent angel is Uriel. In many ways, she mirrors this archangel’s demeanor: she has a mind for philosophy and religion, a passion for justice and human rights, and a cynical nature; if she could help Uriel usher in Armageddon herself, she would.
“I’m so ready to pack up and go home,” she often laments after watching too much negative news on TV. Like Uriel, she has a disdain for humanity’s seeming inability to live peacefully, but nevertheless still strives to create harmony within her immediate world, hoping that it’ll one day take root and grow. That’s idealistic, maybe, but she’s determined.
When I noted how much Lee’s personality matches Uriel’s, she immediately denied it: “But in the last reading you did for me, you said Gabriel was my angel.” That’s when I explained to her the difference between her parent angel, Uriel, and her current mentoring angel, Gabriel. We then made a small project of looking back into her past at distinct “seasons” of her life, to see which angels had been carrying her along in her life journey.
When Lee was a child, it was not uncommon for her Sunday school teachers to drag her out of class and take her to sit with her parents during the church service. She was far too probing and analytical for teachers and peers to handle, since she posed many philosophical questions. She quickly gained a reputation as the Sunday school menace.
“I got kicked out of Sunday school for asking if brothers had to marry their sisters, since Adam and Eve were the only two people God assigned to populate the world,” she told me one day, smirking impishly over a cup of tea. “The unanimous ewwww by the other students, and then the awkward silence of the teachers, told me I’d never be welcomed in Sunday school again.”
Keeping teachers and scholars—especially religious scholars, philosophers, and prophets—on their toes is one of Uriel’s main tasks. If he’s not engaging them directly, he’s working through those like Lee, who have him as a parent angel.
Lee and I then went on to note how her interests and hobbies have changed over the years, and what was going on in her life during those times. As a young child, she was very sickly and spent many days at home, drawing pictures of unicorns and fairies or arranging star constellations on her ceiling.
“Daydreaming about mystical lands or exploring other planets was the only thing that kept me from being fearful about the many hospital visits I had to make,” she said. Based on this, we could clearly see that Archangel Raphael, the Angel of Healing, was working in her life during that time, helping her cope by nurturing her imagination.
As a teen, Lee endured mental and physical abuse from her father. She also attended a school where she was the only minority student. The school made her feel very unwelcome. “I felt angry and alone, and the only place I could find peace was in a nearby cemetery. I’d sit there all day, just staring at the angel statues and mausoleums while listening to Bauhaus on my cassette player.”
We could see that Cassiel, the Angel of Tears, was present during this period, working closely with her. He lends his shoulder to those who feel victimized and unjustly persecuted; and the cemetery, along with the darker “goth” influence, is definitely his signature.
As she became an adult, Lee battled with the stresses of balancing college and employment, and it was during that time that she discovered Eastern philosophies, which taught her about stillness and meditation. It was also during that time that she became active in environmental protection work. There is no doubt that Chamuel, the Angel of Nature and Enlightenment, had stepped in during this phase of her life, helping her find harmony while fostering her connection to Mother Earth.
At the time of our conversation, Lee was nearing her forties and had found herself at a crossroads in her life. When Gabriel showed up in her consultation with me, it was because she felt she lacked direction, and she was willing to surrender to the will of God and go wherever God instructed. When such declarations are made, Gabriel will offer guidance. He is the Angel of the Annunciation, sent to us to deliver messages and insight into our life’s purpose.
So, as Lee’s story illustrates, there is a different angel—a mentoring angel—for each season of our life. I’m sure that if you look back, you’ll see where you had a Michael phase or a Sandalphon phase. But at the core, you’re still much the same person, with the same passions and interests. Despite all the changes Lee went through, she never lost her interest in religion and philosophy, nor her desire to help bring peace to the world.
As you’ll find while working with this book, the angels are highly consistent beings. Through keeping a log of what you’re dreaming about, what you’re focusing your waking hours on, or even what is attracting your interest, you’ll be able to discern which mentoring angel is walking by your side. Each angel has an area of expertise, and his or her presence will not only bring you comfort during the lessons and challenges you encounter, but will also bring to light areas of your life that need attention.
Archangels Covered in this Workbook
As is indicated in various religious texts, archangels (such as Gabriel, Michael, and Raphael) are the angels specifically delegated the task of working with humans. They’re also known as “Chief Angels.” Although the title “archangel” is only mentioned twice in the Bible, other Christian texts (such as the Book of Tobit, the Book of Enoch, and St. Thomas Aquinas’ Summa Theologica) list many angels by name, explaining angelic hierarchy and duties and relating stories of the angels’ direct interactions with humanity. Of course, the definition and categorization of the term angel remains controversial among theologians; my best understanding is that although other “angels” (those lower in the angelic hierarchy) can deliver messages, they more often act as “helper” angels, dealing with elements of nature in the human world rather than with humanity itself. (It is also suggested that angels communicate among themselves, and some are tasked with interacting with human souls stuck between worlds, and with souls in other realms.) There is general agreement, however, that it is the archangels who communicate God’s messages to us.
In chapter 3, you will find information about sixteen archangels. These are the archangels I’ve connected with, as well as established a personal rapport with, over my years working as an angel intuitive.
How, you may ask, do I actually go about meeting the angels? By a process I call reverse angel-neering. In essence, an angel initiates contact with me first, before I research his or her background. This is a validation method that I have been using for years now, and it’s a wonderful faith-builder—I get to know an angel, and then find out that the books and scriptures support what I’ve already discovered. It’s fun and inspiring. Reverse angel-neering also helped me shape the format of this workbook, since my goal is to help you build faith in yourself and your own intuitive abilities.
For the sixteen archangels in chapter 3, I list many of their universal traits or “associations” (derived from research and channeling). I then provide space for you to write down how you perceive the angel. Your list will probably include things that seem to differ from, or merely play upon, the traits I’ve listed—since how these universal elements manifest (in the angel’s gender, hair color, specific items of clothing, etc.) may be different for each person.
Angelic personalities can manifest in a variety of ways because they come to us in forms that we are comfortable with. Like humans, angels will put on a different “face” depending on the particular person they’re mentoring. Just as you may not be the same person at home as at work, with your friends as with your family, the angels shift their demeanors in much the same fashion.
I’ve learned from Archangel Michael that because angels appear differently to different people, throughout history people have assumed that the angel they’ve connected with is not the angel they’ve learned about in their religious lore, from other villagers, or from their spiritual leaders. Michael indicated that this is why there are so many names of angels—people thought that the angel they met was one who perhaps had never connected with humanity before. In reality, people just saw different avatars, or incarnations, of the same angels. But the list of angelic names kept growing. Language factored into this phenomenon as well, of course, as angel names bounced from one region to another.
Let’s take a look at Archangel Gabriel as an example. Many of my readers think that I depict the Angel of Annunciation as being too stringent. (Heck, even Gabriel says I’m too hard on him.) But the side of Gabriel that is militant and commanding is usually the only side I see. Apparently, I’m comfortable with that.
Now, say you connect with Gabrielle, his female form. You will find her to be as comforting as a spring breeze and as tender as a loving mother. She never has a harsh word to say. Her voice is soft, her approach is nurturing, and she’s always ready to wrap her large, billowing wings around you. You know those mystical, magical, glowing angels you tend to see on the front of angel books? Well, they’re a perfect representation of Gabrielle.
But I get the snap-to-it, march-to-my-tune, do-it-or-else army lieutenant Gabriel, who has on more than one occasion said to me, “Suck it up, soldier.”
Now, imagine this was a thousand years ago, and you and I lived in two different villages, separated by thousands of miles. This is before the invention of the printing press. This is before any reliable mode of long-distance communication had been established. How do we reconcile that the angel working in my life and the angel working in your life (at the same time) are both Gabriel? We couldn’t possibly! The angels seem like two different entities, right?
And I’m sure that for many of you, your boss would say the same if he got a chance to peek into your personal life at home. Or vice versa, if your mother could see how you really are in an office environment.
At this point you may be asking, “Well, how many angels are there, really?” Scholars and theologians have debated the number of angels for centuries. According to various historical texts and religious authorities, there are only seven archangels—one for each of the seven heavens. However, these same sources differ as to who, exactly, these seven archangels are. Ultimately, based on my research along with what I have personally encountered, I must say that the number of angels and archangels cannot ever be accurately measured. Not only because there are too many of them, but because we’d have to first establish how to count them.
For example, if I talk to five different clients in the same day and all of them happen to have Gabriel as their mentoring angel, it doesn’t mean that Jessica gets him on Sunday and Louise gets him on Tuesday. Gabriel can split into five Gabriels and walk with each client. And so this becomes our dilemma—do we count only one Gabriel, or all five? All of them are individuals who work independently of the Source angel. When the angel has served his purpose, he returns to his Source until needed again.
So, given an angel’s ability to multiply, his ability to adjust his personality and appearance based on a person’s comfort level, and the multitudes of languages in the world, you can see how we’ve ended up with more angel names than we can shake a stick at. Thankfully, each Source angel has a unique energy signature, which never changes regardless of how the angel alters his appearance, gender, or demeanor. This energy signature also remains constant throughout the angel’s many avatars or incarnations. This workbook will teach you how to detect this signature, so that you will know which angel you’re connecting with regardless of how he may appear to you.
That said, I don’t recommend flipping through the pages just to pick a specific angel to work with. Let the angel pick you first, and then move forward to create and establish your connections.
A Note on Ascended Masters and Spirit Guides
I would be remiss not to note, here, that the heavenly hosts known as angels are not the only ones who can offer guidance and wisdom to those who earnestly seek it. For some of us, divine guidance may come from other (or additional) sources. While this book focuses primarily on connecting with the angels, you can certainly use the exercises and suggestions I provide to try to connect with your ascended masters and spirit guides.
Ascended masters are those beings who walked the Earth as humans and then transcended this reality after having acquired great wisdom and great knowledge of the spiritual world. The list of ascended masters is extensive and includes Jesus, the Virgin Mary, Buddha, and Kwan Yin. In New Age circles, this class of spiritual beings also includes gods from around the world and throughout history. I can personally attest that ascended masters may be figures whom many consider mythological—I have had encounters with Brighid, of Celtic lore; Pele, the Hawaiian goddess of volcanoes; and Diana, the ancient Roman goddess of the moon. This list of ascended masters may seem overly inclusive or fanciful to some, but as a child of the Creator I have come to know and appreciate the Divine’s many radiant facets. And as a messenger myself, I must respect the beliefs of all those I connect with, as well as whatever incarnation God chooses to present himself in.
Spirit guides, meanwhile, are the souls of those who have lived a human existence and moved on, but who have not made a unique mark on history for their wisdom, spiritual leadership, etc. Your spirit guide could be anyone: a dear friend or relative, a cherished role model, even a beloved cultural icon. Your spirit guides are present mainly to comfort and encourage you—they possess an energy that you are already familiar with. However, keep in mind that these guides are still learning about both the human and the spirit realms, and may not have the understanding of the inner workings of these realms that the angels and ascended masters do. So, while it’s perfectly fine to want to connect with your dearly departed Aunt Sarah, know that her role in your life is more for solace and support. The archangels and ascended masters are the ones who are better equipped to actually guide you through life’s most challenging moments.
Communication vs. Connection
I believe that everyone has the ability to connect with the angels, ascended masters, and spirit guides. But because everyone is different, the biggest task is determining how each individual achieves this. If a person does not connect through clairaudience and clairvoyance, as I do, she may be proficient in dream work or clairsentience.
Although we’re used to seeing angel books talk about “communicating” with heavenly beings, I prefer to refrain from overusing this word and instead use the word “connect” when possible. When people say “communicate,” I believe it often evokes a mental picture of speaking directly to the angels. I must say that while not everyone may possess the ability to communicate with the angels, everyone certainly can connect with them.
That said, the fact that I use clairaudience and clairvoyance to connect with the angels does not in any way give me bragging rights. It’s quite the contrary, actually. I’m such a skeptic sometimes, I have to hear, or see, or even feel my angel’s presence in order to be receptive to his or her messages. You may be much more accepting than I’ll ever be—dreams or perhaps the slightest intuition may suffice. Everyone is different.
The best way to establish a connection with the angels is to simply ask them to come into your life. If you actively seek them out, they will make their presence known to you. Approach them with a genuine yearning to connect, and the courage to surrender to the understanding that you have not been, and never will be, in control of what happens in your life. Until you truly accept this into your heart, connecting with the angels is going to prove to be a daunting task, as you tussle between what you think should be and what actually is—according to God’s will.
While we struggle to understand the notion that we’re really locked in for the ride and there’s no exit ramp until it’s over, life moves on. The angels are constantly delivering divine insight and wisdom. I encourage everyone to approach the angels with an open heart, mind, and soul, for they will lovingly embrace you and guide every step of your life’s journey. The key is to be willing to walk with the angels, no matter where they take you.