Heavenly Fridays – Angels Everywhere

When I met Bree Ervin, well, everyone has a “how I met Bree Ervin” story, but here is mine.  I was walking through a crowded hotel lobby at the Pikes Peak Writers Conference, and I bumped into this red-headed demon, who said, and I quote, “I’m Bree, and I was told, in no uncertain terms, that I needed to meet you.”  And meet me she did.  We talked about God, atheism, faith, hope, love, and the greatest of these…is love.  I love Bree Ervin.  She is a dynamo: writer, publicist, wife, mother, poet, warrior, queen.  And so, I enlisted her to write a blog on angels, thinking she would say no.

She said yes.  This is the result.  Take it away, Bree!

* * *

The truth is, I don’t believe in angels. I don’t believe in God. Or Hell. Or Demons. Or the Devil either. I am an Atheist.

I tell you this to establish a baseline for what comes next.

Angels are everywhere.

That might seem like a contradiction.  After all didn’t I open with the promise of not believing in angels, with the statement that I am a militant Atheist?

Sure. But in this, like in most things in life, you have to look a little closer.

I don’t believe in semi-divine beings with wings and a penchant for fighting over God’s favor. I find there is quite enough of that down here in the human realm, why sully up the heavens with it?

And yet, it turns out that angels, real honest to goodness angels are, in fact, everywhere. And no, I’m not talking about the Victoria’s Secret babes either, they’re even more improbable than the little godlets we all get so worked up about.

I mean angels. Real angels.

Let me explain.

Angel means messenger.

It comes from the Greek – ἄγγελος and before that, the Hebrew – מלאך. Both of these words mean messenger. In fact, if you read the Bible in its original form you will discover that most of the angels described in its pages are not supernatural, paranormal beings with wings – but people. That’s all, just people. People with a message.

Some of these angels became prophets or priests. Some were just one time runners. Many became scapegoats.

I tell you this, not to take away whatever magic or power you wish to imbue the world with, because while I may not believe in God or angels, I do believe in Magic. No, I tell you this to open your eyes and mind and heart to the magic and power that really is here.
Because when we break through the semantics of what we’d like an angel to be, to discover what an angel actually is, a shift happens. A very important shift.

Suddenly angels are everywhere.

When we begin to look at the world, and the people around us, as if they might hold a piece of the divinity we seek, we open ourselves to a new realm of possibility. It is one that we do not have to tithe for, or pray for, or be judged by. It is not one we have to fear. It is, instead, a reality of exaltation.

When you see the person making your morning latte not as a loser who couldn’t do any better, but as a piece of the divine, who just might be carrying a message for you, your perception shifts. You listen closer, you open yourself more, you see deeper.

Then, one day, the full shift comes and you realize that if all of these people that you interact with on a daily basis are part of the divine, then you must be too. If they are your angels, your messengers, then you are theirs. All at once it matters what you say and how you act.

When we see each other not as competition, but as compatriots all trapped in the same endless maze, it becomes that little bit easier to offer a helping hand. When we start to really account for all the help we receive every day from friends, family and anonymous strangers, it goes beyond that and becomes a genuine obligation.

Aaron Ritchey’s book, The Never Prayer, asks the question, “When do we struggle to change the world and when do we let go and embrace life’s broken beauty?”

When we open our eyes to the miracles of life all around us, when we open our hearts to the messages laid out before us, when we begin to see the angels everywhere – the answer becomes simple. We struggle to change the world, always. For we are the angels we’ve been waiting for.


Bree Ervin can be found ranting at her blog, working at her website, and wasting time at facebook/bannedthoughts and on twitter @thinkbanned where she believes she is an angel of common sense.

Thanks, Bree, I owe you my life.  And dude, you used Greek and Hebrew on my website.  I’m so in love with you again.

 

Holy Action! Angels and Demons on Film

Chris Devlin, you say?  Really.  Do you know Chris Devlin?  She is an angel.  On Monday, I blogged about angels, real angels, and I talked about Linda Rohrbough.  Who I am currently interviewing.  I could do a week of posts on Chris Devlin.  I would not be the writer I am today without her.  I wouldn’t be half the man I am today.  Not a quarter.  She is the literal wind beneath my wings. Yeah, I’m tearing up right now.  A little about Devlin.  She never sleeps.  She is kind to a fault.  She has lots of friends.  And she helps me.  Lord, does she help me.  Like today.  She is kicking off my Heavenly Friday blog post by blogging on angels.  One more thing about the Devil in Devlin.  She is kind of a media-T.V.-movie-Buffy-the-Vampire-Slayer-Battlestar-Galactica-all-things-Joss-Whedon junky.  And when I say junky, I mean hardcore.  And away we go.  Take it Devlin!

Devlin here. Aw, the things Aaron says. I’m getting all verklempt. Like, Buffy Season 3, prom episode verklempt. Quick, let’s talk about pop culture.

My friend Aaron has written an awesome book about the age-old war in heaven between angels and demons, The Never Prayer. Here are some more badass messengers of heaven and action heroes of hell. (I do more blogging about pop culture at chrisdevlinwrites.com.)

 

Hammiest Lucifer
Tie: Robert De Niro as Louis Cypher (geddit?) in Angel Heart and Al Pacino as the most demony ‘adversary’ of them all in The Devil’s Advocate.

Best Angel Name
Clarence Oddbody; It’s a Wonderful Life

Most Beautifully Filmed Angels
Wim Wender’s Wings of Desire

Hottest Angels
Cary Grant as Dudley; The Bishop’s Wife
Misha Collins as Castiel; Supernatural
Paul Bettany as Michael; Legion
David Boreanaz as Angel: Angel (Okay, he wasn’t really an angel, per se, though he was a demon. And he was certainly hot.)

 

Scariest Demon Ever
The one in Paranormal Activity
Respectable Second Place Scariest Demon Ever
Pazuzu; The Exorcist

Best Gabriel
Tie: Christopher Walken in The Prophecy and Tilda Swinton in Constantine
Walken is, of course, Walken and he does his thing with a wink and a vicious smile as he saunters through the mortal world, looking for an evil human soul. He even blows a trumpet as a glibly homicidal Gabriel. But Tilda Swinton holds her own as another fallen Gabriel in Constantine as she plays in some serious heavenly traffic. Bonus points for the androgynous-fabulous suits.

Most Intentionally Funny Demons
Evil Dead II

Most Unintentionally Funny Demon
Azazel; Fallen

Best Sid Vicious Leather-Cool Demon
Pinhead; Hellraiser

Hottest Homo-erotic Subtext
Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt; Interview With The Vampire

 

 

 

 

 

Demon We’d Most Like to Play Kitten Poker With
Clem: Buffy the Vampire Slayer

Best Vision of Hell
The scorched-and-burned post-apocalyptic Mad Max movie on fire in Constantine.

Okay, who’d I miss? Who are your favorite demons, angels and those where you can’t tell the difference?

Send Me An Angel, Johnny Angel, or Seven Spanish Angels, or an Angel that Flies from Montgomery…

There are angels.

And I don’t mean fakey, Battlestar Galactica angels.  Spoiler alert, but hey, they spoiled it.  Not me.  And I don’t mean brooding vampires.  Love that Angel.  Love that Buffy show.  It’s real good, like them french-fried taters.  Hmmm, humm.

I have been touched by angels.  And not in the Michael Landon type of way.  And before all you TV people get up in arms and barrage my website with comments, let me just say, I know Michael Landon did Highway to Heaven.  Please.  Do you think I went to prom or kissed a girl ever when I was in high school?  No.  I stayed at home, watching angel shows, and crying.  Thanks so much for bringing up such painful memories.

When people show up at the right place, at the right time, to help you out, well, those are angels.  Later this week I am interviewing Linda Rohrbaugh, and she, my friends, is an angel.  And many of you who will stumble upon my blog will know what I am talking about.

I was at my first ever writer’s retreat, and had my first ever rejection, from my first ever agent, in person.  Most of you have gotten a nasty letter.  Or better, the anonymous email.  Or better.  You were ignored by the universe because you aren’t even worth the stomp on the ant that is your soul.  You are less than ant.

Well, I got stomped.  Now, the agent who did it was very nice and kind and my horror story isn’t what others are.  She just saw me as I was, a rank amateur, and she tried to be helpful.  And every word knifed me good.  Some people call it a slingblade, and I took one to the groin.  To mix metaphors, I was reduced to ashes.  Cut up, tore up, my dream, gone.  Goodbye, cruel world, I’m leaving you today.  Cue Pink Floyd.

I was on my way to shave off all of my body hair and do drugs until I methed my heart out of my chest so I could slice that up, cook that up on a spoon, and inject my own heart back into my veins.  Actually, that’s not true.  I was fully clean and sober.  I was going to eat a pound cake.  First rejection is such drama.

And who found me?  Linda Rohrbough.  She was at the right place, at the right time, and she has a servant’s heart.  She was an angel.  She gave me the rules of writing.  Which I still have.  And she helped me to stand up.  And convinced me I didn’t need the pound cake.  And we have kept in touch, and she continually has lifted me up and let me go beyond myself, what I can do.

Robert Browning wrote, “A man’s reach must exceed his grasp, or what’s a heaven for?”  And that is what an angel does.  Helps us reach beyond ourselves.

And do you know what the coolest thing in the world is?  You don’t need to have wings, a halo, a mighty sword, or even faith in the Divine.  All you need to be an angel, right now, is a caring heart and the courage to reach out.

Of course, this is all in the The Never Prayer.  One of my characters says, “Heaven is empty.  We must be the angels.”  I don’t know about the empty heaven part, but it’s hard down here on earth.  We all need as much help as we can get.

And do you know the hardest place for me to be an angel?  In my own home.  With my friends and family.  Sad, but it’s true for me.  And true for a lot of people.

So be an angel tonight.  For someone who needs it.