Charles McBryde’s Reviews > Omens of the Millennium: The Gnosis of Angels, Dreams & Resurrection > Status Update
Charles McBryde
is on page 75 of 255
In Avicenna’s angelology, the monotheistic cosmos of the Koran tends to be dispersed into a kind of pragmatic polytheism, much resented by literalist orthodoxy in Islam, both now and then. The tension in all angelology, then and now, is between monotheism and the elevation of other heavenly beings to a status that seems to rival God’s. And yet the major monotheisms—X, J, Z, I—are all pervaded by angels.
— Nov 24, 2025 11:59AM
Like flag
Charles McBryde’s Previous Updates
Charles McBryde
is on page 122 of 255
We die solitary deaths, but dream communal dreams.
— Nov 24, 2025 12:20PM
Charles McBryde
is on page 109 of 255
Yet psychoanalysis was, and is a shamanism; its affiliations with occultism or parapsychology are far more authentic than its supposed links to biology, as a discipline… Freud attempted a remarkably successful (though impermanent) usurpation of the dreamworld, particularly in the West.
— Nov 24, 2025 12:19PM
Charles McBryde
is on page 108 of 255
A grand charismatic, with extra extraordinary, well-nigh hypnotic powers of suggestion, Freud must have recognized, sometimes “unconsciously,“ that he had a marked telepathic or clairvoyant effect upon his patients. Though the greatest of demystifiers, surpassing Nietzsche and Marx, Freud almost allows himself to hint that he is a secular Messiah.
— Nov 24, 2025 12:17PM
Charles McBryde
is on page 106 of 255
Freud‘s ambition was prophetic; though intensely secular, he belonged to be the profit of a new revelation, possibly even a new Jewishness, though hardly a new Judaism. In a marvelous irony, he intended to establish his status as a prophet by denying to dreams any prophetic function whatsoever.
— Nov 24, 2025 12:15PM
Charles McBryde
is on page 98 of 255
In Homer, the dream is a person or a god, frequently seeking toward off impending disaster from a hero… As messengers, as guardians, as thresholds to transcendence, some of our dreams appear in distinguishable from angels, and may as well be seen as such. The Zoroastrian Avesta, the Bible, the Quran, the Sufis, and Kabbalists all concur with Indian and Chinese sacred texts in treating dreams as divine epiphanies.
— Nov 24, 2025 12:13PM
Charles McBryde
is on page 89 of 255
The Talmud says that a dream is only 1/60 part of prophecy, so presumably, even the holiest of answering angels who govern the dream realm can mistake the future.
— Nov 24, 2025 12:10PM
Charles McBryde
is on page 80 of 255
Smith evidently studied Kabbalah, and came to the understand that as the resurrected Enoch, his ultimate transformation would be into the Angel Metatron… who is also the angel Michael and the resurrected Adam. Though orthodox Islam refuses such an identification for Muhammad, the Sufis insisted upon it, and Joseph Smith thus brings together the three great esoteric traditions of Gnosticism, Sufism, and Kabbalah.
— Nov 24, 2025 12:09PM
Charles McBryde
is on page 78 of 255
The likelier interpretation is that ancient, medieval, and modern Gnosis all seek to answer an authentic and lasting spiritual need, which is to reconcile time and death with our intimations of immortality.
— Nov 24, 2025 12:05PM
Charles McBryde
is on page 77 of 255
We have always been a religiously fecund nation, particularly from about 1800 on. Since our religion tends to be experiential and pragmatic, it increasingly has departed from European Christianity, where institutional, historical, and theological aspects of the faith have remained relatively strong. Since we tend to be heterodox, even when we assert otherwise, angels return to us from the spiritual repression…
— Nov 24, 2025 12:04PM
Charles McBryde
is on page 76 of 255
It is an ancient pattern among monotheists that the gods of other faiths and nations are demoted to the status of angels (or of demons). As guardian angels of rival states, these former gods easily could be associated with evil and with pestilence.
— Nov 24, 2025 12:00PM

