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Calliope was and is an angel, Archangel Calliel (Caliel, Tersatosoa, Tepisatosoa) who has entered the human lifewave incarnational cycle to be of assistance to humanity. One of the "Throne Angels", she often swiftly responded to pleas and prayers for help from people struggling with misfortune. Archangel Calliel Calliope was the Greek Goddess Muse of Eloquence and Epic Poetry. Known as "Beautiful Voice", her symbols were the stylus and wax tablets. Her son with the Greek god Apollo, the Thracian poet Orpheus, inherited her gift for music to the extent that it was said that his music not only could move people with its melodious, but, inanimate objects as well. Calliope was the most eminent and elder of the nine Muses, the Greek Goddesses in charge of the arts and sciences who were responsible for inspiring musicians, poets, and philosophers.
As an Archangel Calliel Calliope brings principled adoration, accommodating contact, and cordial
hopefulness to the Third Ray of Harmonics Restoration. Archangel Calliel Calliope instructs and infuses
candidates of harmonization with resolute fidelity, as they move forward, step
by step, from splintered chaotic discordance to integrated orderly harmonics.
The Sacred Site of Archangel Calliel Calliope and the Third Ray of Harmonics Restoration is the Wissahickon Creek and Wissahickon Valley, which is located in the environs of Philadelphia in Pennsylvania, U.S.A. Most of the twenty-three miles (thirty-seven kilometers) length of the Wissahickon Creek, runs by or through parkland as it flows through Northwest Philadelphia before emptying into the Schuylkill River at Philadelphia. The last few miles of the creek run through a deep forested gorge that encompasses about 1,800 acres. The gorge area is now part of the Fairmount Park system in Philadelphia. Even before the Wissahickon Valley became a park in 1868, it inspired painters and poets with its scenic beauty, and the creek was a popular place for summer canoeing and winter ice skating. Today it is a designated National Natural Landmark, and cyclists, fishers, hikers, horseback riders, joggers, nature enthusiasts, rock climbers, skiers, and walkers enjoy the bridges, landforms, natural areas, trails, woods, and watercourses.
The park also provides
habitat to a variety of vegetation and wildlife including acadian flycatchers,
deer, cerulian, hooded, migrating, warblers, grasshopper sparrows, raccoons.
Wissahickon Valley, which
is a forested gorge encompassing 1,800 acres in Philadelphia's Fairmount Park
System... Archangels of Twelve Universal Rays
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