The Elohim : Hebrew name of God.
... Los we get too a sidelight on winged-ness as part of a supernatural power in creative activity. Blake has spoken of "Los, who is of the Elohim" 286 and mentioned "Elohim, who created Adam". 287 Now, Bateson 288 writes: "Blake's fine colour-print known as 'The Elohim Creating Adam' (1795) depicts the creator as a majestic winged human figure hovering in the air immediately above the newly created ...
... Persons of Drama LUCIFER - the Angel of Power. SIRIOTH - the Angel of Love. GABRIEL - the Angel of Obedience. MICHAEL - the Angel of War. RAPHAEL - the Angel of Sweetness. THE ELOHIM. BELIAL - the Angel of Reason. BAAL - the Angel of Worldly Wisdom. MOLOCH - the Angel of Wrath. SUN. ASHTAR - the Angel of Beauty. MEROTH - the Angel of Youth. Page 937 ...
... name must not be uttered (it is uttered only once a year, on the "Day of Atonement"; I think that's what it's called). It's the word Yahveh , and it must not be uttered. But the prayers speak of the "Elohim," and the Hebrew word "Elohim" is plural, meaning "the invisible lords." So there was no one and only God for Théon, only the unthinkable Formless; and all the invisible beings who claimed to be ...
... survived and is now included in Volume 7 of the Centenary Library Edition. In the Dramatis Personae figure Lucifer, Sirioth, Gabriel, Michael, Raphael, Belial, Baal, Moloch, Ashtorath, Meroth, Sun and the Elohim, but the dramatic fragment itself opens with a dialogue between Lucifer and Sun - Lucifer compelling obedience on the part of Sun - followed by a conversation between Lucifer and Belial, the Angels ...
... 146 fn. 36, 244 Druidism, 83 Duraiswamy, M.S., i, iv fn. 2 Dyne,Sonia,48fn. 17 Earth's Answer, 54,174,232 Eden,157,162 Eliot, T.S., 40,41,42,43,256 Elohim, 220 "Elohim Creating Adam, The", 226 Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics, The, 50 fn. 25 Energy, 70,140 English Blake, 53 fn. 1 English Romantic Poets, 42 fn. 27 Enitharmon ...
... must not be uttered. It is uttered only once a year, on the Day of Atonement- 1 think that's what it's called. The word is Yahveh, and should not be uttered. The prayers speak of 'Elohim,' and the Hebrew word Elohim is plural, meaning the invisible lords.' So, for Theon, there was no one and only God. but solely the Unthinkable Formless; and all the invisible beings who claimed to be one and only ...
... , and the word 'created' — brought out of nothing —was never written in these monuments of thought. It is a matter of forming, of bringing order out of the primeval chaos, and this work belongs to Elohim, the divine Formator, a work man must help, pursue, accomplish." Théon seems to be echoing an ancient Indian idea. For, "The Indian Scripture affirms in its doctrine that there is no such thing ...
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