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Rick And Morty

God’s Most Powerful Angels In Christian tradition (based on Bible + Pseudo-Dionysius hierarchy), angels are ranked in 9 choirs. The highest & most powerful are closest to God: 1. Seraphim – Top tier. Six-winged, fiery beings of pure love & worship. Surround God’s throne, eternally chanting “Holy, holy, holy” (Isaiah 6:2–3). Closest to divine glory; considered the most powerful in raw proximity & intensity. 2. Cherubim – Guardians of God’s presence & knowledge. Multi-faced, winged (Ezekiel 10). Protected Eden (Genesis 3:24). Lucifer/Satan was traditionally a high cherub before falling (Ezekiel 28:14 – “anointed cherub”). 3. Thrones (Ophanim) – Wheel-like beings of divine justice/authority (Ezekiel 1). Represent cosmic order. Among named angels who act in the world, the seven archangels (from Tobit 12:15, Revelation 8:2, tradition) stand out as the most prominent/powerful servants: • Michael – The strongest named angel. “The archangel” (Jude 1:9). Leads heavenly armies, defeats Satan (Revelation 12:7–9), protects Israel (Daniel 12:1). Warrior prince; supreme commander in tradition. • Gabriel – Messenger of major revelations. Announces Jesus’ birth (Luke 1), interprets visions (Daniel). Stands in God’s presence; power in prophecy & strength. • Raphael – Healer & guide. Heals blindness, binds demons (Tobit). One of the seven before God’s throne. • Uriel – Wisdom & light. Illumination, repentance, judgment (apocrypha/Enoch). Others sometimes listed: Raguel (justice/peace), Sariel/Remiel (obedience), Jerahmeel. Key points: • Seraphim/Cherubim outrank archangels in hierarchy (pure divine proximity). • Michael is the active leader & most powerful named protector. • Angels are mighty (Psalm 103:20), but humans are special (created in God’s image, will judge angels – 1 Cor 6:3). This is the biblical/traditional core — no strict “power ranking” beyond roles & closeness to God.

EMME'C.teamupdate

She absolutely wasn't supposed to be here. This morning, my wife heard a soft desperate hushing from the shadows Tucked in a dark corner on a freezing concrete floor. she found a Boxer mama, No blanket. No food. No shelter. Just her alone against the world She was a white brindle Boxer with tired amber eves, a face showina too much cruelty but still soft and forgiving. She didn't run. She didn't growl. She gave the smallest weakest tail wag. Then we saw them - tiny, fragile puppies matching her coat, pressed to her belly on a torn blue blanket. Their eves were closed noses bright pink, bellies rising and falling gently. This mother had done evervthing alone. She gave the last ounces of her body heat produced milk despite starvation, and quarded her babies with quiet, undeniable strength. Exhaustion weighed heavilv on her yet she offered a soft. tired smile She endured the unimaginable. Protected fiercely. Loved without conditions. even when the world hadn't returned an ounce of kindness. This is a story of resilience, wrapped in brindle and white fur. Today, the Boxer family is safe, warm, fed, and surrounded by love. If vou wonder how strong love can be, look at a mother who had nothing... and still gave everything. #animallover #shelterdoc #kindnessmatters #HeroicMoment

LataraSpeaksTruth

Hiram Ford Douglass did not spend his life waiting for freedom to be handed to him. Born around July 26, 1831, in Virginia, he escaped slavery and made his way north. But he did not disappear quietly into private life. He became a writer, speaker, and editor who used his voice to challenge the country during one of its most violent and divided eras. By the 1850s, Douglass was already pushing arguments that went beyond simply ending slavery. He spoke about citizenship, political power, and the full place Black Americans should hold in public life. That made him more than an abolitionist. It made him part of a harder conversation many people were still avoiding. When the Civil War began, Douglass saw it as more than a fight to preserve the Union. He believed it had to become a fight that changed the condition of Black people in this country. He later became a commissioned officer in the Union Army, a rare position for a Black man in that period. That alone made his presence historic. But what stands out even more is that he was pushing these ideas before the nation was ready to fully hear them. He was not asking for sympathy. He was arguing for recognition, leadership, and rights. Hiram Ford Douglass died in 1868 at just 37 years old. His name is not as widely known as others from that era, but his work belongs in the record. He was one of the voices pressing this country to face what freedom was supposed to mean. Some people are remembered as symbols. Others helped shape the argument itself. Hiram Ford Douglass was one of them. #OurHistory #HFordDouglass #CivilWarHistory #AbolitionistHistory

RonC

Revelation Is Often Followed by Testing Throughout Scripture, a clear pattern appears in the spiritual life: revelation is often followed by testing. When God reveals truth, identity, or purpose, life soon presents situations that challenge whether that truth has truly taken root in the heart. Adam received God’s command in Eden, and shortly after faced temptation. Abraham received God’s promise, and later his faith was tested with Isaac. David was anointed king, yet endured years of trials before the throne. Even Jesus, after God declared Him His beloved Son at baptism, immediately faced temptation in the wilderness. This pattern teaches that spiritual knowledge must become lived conviction. Testing does not come to destroy faith but to strengthen it. As James 1:3 explains, “the testing of your faith produces perseverance.” Each challenge becomes an opportunity to apply what God has revealed. When believers respond with obedience and trust, revelation matures into character, and faith becomes deeper, stronger, and more firmly rooted in God’s truth.

LataraSpeaksTruth

I started doing this in July 2025. Let’s get that straight right now. I did not wait for Black History Month then, and I am definitely not waiting for it now. I have been posting these stories for months because this matters to me every day, not just when the calendar tells people it is time to pretend they care. Some of y’all really act like Black history is only allowed to exist in February…like it is some little seasonal display that needs to be packed up the second March hits. That logic is ridiculous. History does not expire because the month changed. The people I write about still lived. The things they endured still happened. The contributions they made still matter. And the truth does not suddenly become inappropriate just because it is no longer Black History Month. I have been doing this for months already, and I did not give a damn that it was not Black History Month when I started. I do not give a damn that it is not Black History Month now either. Black history is every day for me. Not when it is trendy. Not when it is convenient. Not when people feel socially obligated to clap for 28 days and then go right back to silence. Every day. And to be very clear…I give zero fucks about anybody who feels differently. If that bothers you, scroll. If it irritates you, good. If you think these stories need to wait until next February, that sounds like your issue, not mine. I will continue posting what matters when I feel like posting it. Not by permission. Not by season. And definitely not by the comfort level of people who only want history in small, digestible pieces. Deal with it.

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