Gabriel (redirected fromGabriel the Archangel) Thesaurus Encyclopedia Ga·bri·el (gā′brē-əl) n. In the Bible, an angel who explained signs from God and announced the conception, birth, and mission of Jesus to Mary. In Islamic tradition, Gabriel is believed to have revealed the Koran...
A common misconception is that archangels constitute the highest rank of angel in Christianity; this likely stems from the etymology of their name, as well as their presentation in John Milton's Paradise Lost. In Judaism, the highest ranking angels such as Michael, Raphael, Gabriel and Uriel,...
9. They ' re angelic symbols passed on to mankind by the archangel gabriel大天使加百利的图腾通过这些天使样的标记向人类传递讯息 10. The metatron is a reference to the highest archangel of the kabbalah at kether or the crown梅塔特隆是卡巴拉提到的至高天使,是王冠,神之本体。 上...
Gabriel (redirected fromGabriel (archangel)) Thesaurus Encyclopedia Ga·bri·el (gā′brē-əl) n. In the Bible, an angel who explained signs from God and announced the conception, birth, and mission of Jesus to Mary. In Islamic tradition, Gabriel is believed to have revealed the Koran ...
Gabriel (redirected fromArchangel Gabriel) Thesaurus Encyclopedia Related to Archangel Gabriel:archangels Ga·bri·el (gā′brē-əl) n. In the Bible, an angel who explained signs from God and announced the conception, birth, and mission of Jesus to Mary. In Islamic tradition, Gabriel is be...
Gabriel (redirected fromThe Archangel Gabriel) Thesaurus Encyclopedia Ga·bri·el (gā′brē-əl) n. In the Bible, an angel who explained signs from God and announced the conception, birth, and mission of Jesus to Mary. In Islamic tradition, Gabriel is believed to have revealed the Koran...
Gabriel, in the three Abrahamic religions—Judaism, Christianity, and Islam—was one of the archangels. He was employed to announce the birth of John the Baptist to Zechariah and to announce the birth of Jesus to the Virgin Mary.
Archangel, any of several chiefs, rulers, or princes of angels in the hierarchy of angels of the major Western religions, especially Judaism, Christianity, and Islām, and of certain syncretic religions, such as Gnosticism. See