Bathym

The Fallen King of Counsel and Corrupted Foresight

Identity and Origin

Bathym was once a King angel of high standing, drawn from the clan of Archangel Jeremiel, the anointed Counsellor of Shamayim. Jeremiel’s anointing by The 24 Elders shaped every member of his lineage, imparting to them an innate disposition toward wisdom, foresight, gentle correction, and measured judgment. In Bathym, this inheritance found one of its purest expressions.

From his creation, Bathym was marked not by ferocity or command of armies, but by clarity of thought and restraint of spirit. He governed not through fear or dominance, but through counsel—guiding angels, resolving disputes, and discerning outcomes before they unfolded. Among the Kings, he was regarded as a stabilizing presence, one whose words carried weight precisely because they were never excessive.

Domain and Function in Shamayim

Bathym’s appointed domain was gentle instruction and foresight. He was entrusted with advising lower governors, interpreting long-range consequences of celestial decisions, and assisting Jeremiel in matters where wisdom was required without coercion. His foresight was not prophetic spectacle, but calm perception—the ability to see where a path would lead long before others sensed danger.

In Shamayim, Bathym stood as an example of what the Kings of Jeremiel’s clan represented: authority without arrogance, insight without manipulation, and loyalty expressed through patience rather than zeal.

After the First Fall

When Lucifer and his host were cast out during the war against Michael’s clan, Bathym did not waver. He neither questioned the judgment nor sympathized with rebellion. Like most of Jeremiel’s lineage, he accepted the decision of the Elders as necessary, though sorrowful. Wisdom, after all, does not deny grief—but it does not permit it to overturn order.

For a long season after the war, Bathym remained faithful. Yet this period also marked the beginning of quiet unrest within the ranks of Shamayim, especially among those tasked with observation beyond its borders.

The Seed of Dissent

The universe of Olam-Chuphshah, now occupied entirely by the fallen angels, became a point of contention. Many angels began to question why such vast dominion had been granted to those who had rebelled, while the faithful remained bound under law.

These thoughts lingered unspoken for years—until Eligos voiced them openly at Mizbeach-Halal. Eligos accused the Elders of injustice, arguing that Lucifer and his fallen host should have been confined to Tehom rather than granted an entire universe under no law.

Bathym listened.

Unlike others who reacted emotionally, Bathym examined the argument carefully. Eligos did not appeal to pride alone; he framed his rhetoric as a question of fairness, balance, and order—the very principles Bathym cherished.

The Peace Fall

When Eligos persuaded ten King angels to leave Shamayim in protest, Bathym was among them. His decision was not impulsive. He believed, mistakenly, that departure could serve as correction rather than rebellion—a silent protest meant to expose perceived imbalance without violence.

Under Gabriel’s supervision, the departure was peaceful. No battle was fought. No gates were breached. Bathym left Shamayim by choice, convinced that freedom from imposed law would allow a more honest existence.

This event would later be known as the Peace Fall.

Illusion of Freedom

In Olam-Chuphshah, Bathym quickly learned that freedom without law does not remain neutral for long. The universe was already under the influence of Satan, whose authority was absolute, though initially concealed.

Satan did not confront the Kings immediately. Instead, he allowed confusion, division, and uncertainty to grow. Only when return to Shamayim was no longer possible did he present his ultimatum: allegiance or opposition.

Bathym understood the trap instantly. The foresight that once guided others now revealed his own error—but too late.

The Strike Against Ahavah

Cornered by circumstance and pride, Bathym chose submission. When Satan orchestrated the Strike against Ahavah, Bathym stood among those who participated.

The moment the Strike occurred, judgment was immediate.
There was no trial.
No deliberation.
The sin was unforgivable.

Bathym’s kingly anointing was stripped away. His authority dissolved. His nature was inverted. Where wisdom once clarified, it now tormented. Where foresight once guided, it now replayed endless visions of what could have been prevented.

From King to Demon

Bathym ceased to be a King angel in that instant. He became a demon—cursed, condemned, and severed from the counsel he once embodied. His inherited gentleness from Jeremiel did not vanish; it corrupted. It became hesitation, regret, and self-accusation—tools of his own punishment.

Unlike demons driven purely by rage, Bathym’s suffering is internal. He remembers too clearly. He understands too well. His torment is the knowledge that his fall was not born of hatred, but misjudgment.

Possibility of Redemption

As with all who participated in the Strike, Bathym’s only escape from eternal condemnation lies in the redemptive path established by the Elders: repentance, memory stripping, and rebirth as a human—placing himself under the salvation brought by Yeshua.

Whether Bathym will surrender pride and accept that path remains unknown.
Wisdom, once lost, is not easily reclaimed.

Legacy

Bathym’s story stands as one of the most tragic within the celestial record. He was not deceived by ignorance, nor driven by ambition. He fell because he trusted his reasoning above submission.

In Shamayim, his name is remembered as a warning:

Even counsel must bow to authority.
Even foresight must submit to order.
And wisdom without obedience can still fall.

Bathym is no longer a King—but his fall continues to instruct all who remain faithful.

"The fragments you have read are but a whisper of the true Archive..."

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