The Strength of the Holy Father
Among the countless beings formed in the light of Ahavah, there are those created to rule, those created to teach, and those created to build. Michael was created to fend.
He is one of the Twelve Archangels of Shamayim—later eleven after the fall of Lucifer—anointed by the Council of the 24 Elders with a title no other bearer has ever shared: “Michael, the Strength of the Holy Father.” This was not merely an honorific; it was a declaration of function. Michael is not strength in theory, nor courage in words, but strength made manifest—instinctive, immediate, and immovable.
Origin of a Warrior
Michael was born from nine hundred and ninety-nine (999) converging star-lights of the Machar-Nogah universe, a realm associated with hope, restoration, and balanced futures. Unlike beings forged from chaos or abstraction, Michael’s essence was refined purpose. From the moment of his awakening, he carried a commanding presence that required no intimidation to inspire obedience.
His clan, bearing his anointing, inherited the same resolute stature. They were not expressive angels. They did not laugh often. Humor did not move them. Celebration did not distract them. Duty defined them.
Yet Michael was not without warmth.
Michael and Lucifer — Brotherhood Before the Fall
Before rebellion fractured Shamayim, Lucifer alone could make Michael smile.
They trained together. They fought together. They shared silence together. Lucifer learned combat not as an enemy but as an artist, sparring with Michael in what appeared to be harmless displays of martial brilliance. Michael never suspected that these lessons—freely given—were being passed secretly to Lucifer’s angels.
What Michael taught was discipline.
What Lucifer learned was ambition.
When Lucifer later requested that angels and archangels be allowed to dwell freely in Olam-Chuphshah, beyond Elder law, the council permitted it. During this era, angels occupied planets, including Jupiter, where Michael once resided. They were allowed to create creatures—beasts that worshipped their makers rather than Ahavah. It was an experiment in freedom, creativity, and delegated authority.
Michael never approved of it.
But he obeyed.
The Lion of Worship
In Shamayim, worship transforms all beings—but Michael’s transformation was singular. When Ahavah’s presence fills the realms, Michael assumes his glorious form:
a lion with four wings, blazing with controlled fury and sacred authority.
This form is not symbolic. It is functional. The lion represents dominion; the wings, transcendence. Michael does not worship passively. His worship is defensive loyalty, a declaration that nothing may approach the Holy Father unchecked.
In his human-like form, Michael appears South American in appearance, grounding his celestial identity in a form destined to reappear in human history.
The Casting Down of Lucifer
When Lucifer attempted to overthrow the hierarchy established by Ahavah and enforced by the Elders, Michael did not debate.
He acted.
He confronted Lucifer, defeated him, and cast him out of Shamayim. In that moment, Michael renamed him: Satan.
Not as mockery—but as designation. The adversary. The opposer. The one who stands against order.
Michael did not rejoice in this victory. He did not celebrate. He never does.
Judgment in the First World
After the fall, when demons began corrupting early humanity, Michael became instrumental in enforcing cosmic balance. In The First World, Satan weaponized colossal creatures—dinosaurs and monstrous hybrids—to dominate humanity.
Michael intervened.
Alongside Raguel, he annihilated the possessed creatures with surgical precision, moving at the speed of light, erasing them completely. Raguel later covered the act by redirecting a space rock to strike the earth—masking divine judgment as natural catastrophe.
Michael disapproved of the collateral damage.
But the threat was neutralized.
To Michael, mercy without containment is negligence.
The Flood — Strength Without Display
When the Flood came, Michael took command.
Unlike Apollyon’s brutal efficiency or Raguel’s spectacle, Michael wielded power without visible strain. No glowing eyes. No summoning of legions. He personally sealed Noah’s ark, commanded the oceans, dissolved demonic possession, and forced Satan into temporary retreat.
Michael released Satan deliberately—not out of mercy, but to demonstrate a truth:
Power drawn from Ahavah’s presence is infinitely greater than stolen power.
Defender of Sacred Order
Michael later confronted the Holocheists' leader during their testing, almost defeating their leader Camael in combat—not to humiliate, but to establish hierarchy. The Holocheists would eventually be bound to Michael’s will, because war requires decisiveness, and Michael alone possesses instinctive clarity in conflict.
Even the Elders acknowledge this unpredictability. Michael does not always follow expectations—but he never betrays alignment.
Incarnation as Simon Peter
When the path of redemption opened and celestial beings began incarnating as humans, Michael entered history as Simon Peter, one of Yeshua’s disciples.
The instinct remained.
When Yeshua was arrested, Peter drew a sword and struck—cutting off an ear. It was the same reflex Michael had displayed when casting Lucifer down. Defend the Lord. Act first. Ask later.
Even rebuked, the essence did not change.
Michael’s strength is not aggression.
It is response.
The Nature of Michael
Michael is not driven by emotion.
He is driven by alignment.
He does not crave authority.
Authority rests naturally upon him.
He does not seek glory.
Glory follows obedience.
When Yeshua finally wears the three crowns and peace reigns forever, Michael will rule with strength. He will stand.
Because some beings were created to lead kingdoms.
They were created to ensure that nothing ever threatens them again.
And so Michael remains—The Strength of the Holy Father.
"The fragments you have read are but a whisper of the true Archive..."