Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Angel Energy: How to Harness the Power of Angels in Your Everyday Life

Rate this book
The natural expression of the angels is Truth. If we deny the truth, we repress the energy of the angels. But when we fully accept the eternal verities of life, the angels go to work to bring everything up to the divine standard....
Within each one of us dwell the twenty-two angels, centers of Living Energy that provide us with all we need to sustain us on our journey through life. They await only our readiness.
However, the angels require our assistance to manifest changes in our lives. They are able to free us from disease and death, loneliness and unfulfillment, lack and limitation only when we free them. And so the author of the bestselling The Angels Within Us has written this book to help us set free the positive vibrations of these inner archetypes and their "nothing-is-impossible" energy.
Through meditations, affirmations, exercises, dialogues with the twenty-two angels, and true stories of the miracles and transformations wrought by them, he helps us liberate the power of the Divine within so that we
* Awaken our higher consciousness
* Heal the past
* Communicate with angels awake and dreaming
* Find our right livelihood
* Enjoy prosperity
* Open ourselves to physical healing
* Find fulfillment in our relationships
* Surrender to unconditional love
* And much more
Our angels are the very law of our being. This remarkable book helps us to connect and flow with their universal rhythm of wholeness, to become who and what we really are.

256 pages, Paperback

First published October 24, 1995

9 people are currently reading
35 people want to read

About the author

John Randolph Price

52 books38 followers
John Randolph Price was a CEO in the corporate world who together with his wife Jan, devoted more than 50 years to researching the mysteries of ancient wisdom and integrating those teachings with spiritual metaphysics.

In 1981, the Prices founded The Quartus Foundation, a spiritual research and communications organization in the Texas hill country town of Boerne, near San Antonio. Via the Quartus Foundation, the Prices originated World Healing Day, an event held on December 31st of each year.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
8 (36%)
4 stars
8 (36%)
3 stars
4 (18%)
2 stars
2 (9%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for Kiyoko.
557 reviews2 followers
December 6, 2016
This book is written on the premise that you believe not only in the existence of angels but also that you can see and talk to them in conversation whenever you like. Or at least you can with some practice. I don't think you would be convinced otherwise if you are not a believer to begin with.

I have limited knowledge of theology, but it seemed that as the book progressed, New Age thinking overcame the principles of the source and reason for the very existence of angels - God. Instead, ideas that we are God, we are the Light, and we can do anything with the correct attitude, began to creep into the pages. Which is too bad, because the book opened up with this delightful passage: "The [angel] archetypes are those energies which create and sustain our personal realities - aspects of God, if you will, that are experientially available to each and all of us."

Bravo! But then this turned up...

You are the only law and cause in your life. This means that nothing in the phenomenal world can cause suffering, sorrow, lack, conflict, accidents, failure, or danger because there is no power outside of you. There is no cause or law external to you. You are the great cosmic molder and your world is putty in your hands.


(I had to look up *molder* to put it in context. Good job, Mr Price! I like it when a book makes me drag out the dictionary.)

If you are a Christian, so long as you keep in mind where the path gets a bit funky, there are some delightful gems, among the ponderous Names of the Angels, which I found to be stodgy.

I marked up a dozen bits and pieces that appealed to my sensibilities. This book is on my Keep Shelf, for future quick review of what I found pertinent. Much of the book is relating personal, anecdotal experiences of others, along with the author. He writes of unannounced interventions, which I found more appealing than the "conversations" the author had with his summoned angels.
Displaying 1 of 1 review

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.