
Remiel
Mercy of God
Affirmation
“I am reborn with every dawn and my hope is stronger than any dark night.”
Angel's message
“I, Remiel, come with the first light of dawn. What you have lived was not in vain: every dark night has been the silent gestation of who you are about to become. Rise now, because heaven's mercy does not ask that you deserve it, only that you open your eyes.”
Meaning
Remiel, "the Mercy of God", is the archangel of hope and spiritual resurrection. In Enochian tradition, he is charged with guiding faithful souls toward their awakening, the angel who watches over those awaiting a new beginning. His domain is the dawn: that instant when the darkest night yields to the first light. Remiel does not eliminate past suffering but gives it meaning by revealing it as preparation for something greater. When he appears, it indicates a cycle of darkness is reaching its end and renewal is imminent. He is the angel of those who have hit bottom and need a reason to rise.
In love
Remiel appears after deep romantic disappointments: painful breakups, betrayals, or long periods of solitude. His message is that love has not ended for you; it is only changing form. If you have lost hope of finding someone, Remiel reminds you that the capacity to love is reborn every dawn. For couples in crisis, he indicates the relationship can be resurrected if both choose to start anew with humility.
At work
Remiel indicates professional resurrection: a project that seemed dead revives, an opportunity appears after a period of stagnation, or your motivation returns after having lost it. If you were fired or recently failed, Remiel is the signal that closed door opened a path you cannot yet see. Do not seek to return to what was before: move toward what is coming.
Spiritual advice
If you are going through a difficult moment, remember: Remiel does not appear in the middle of the night but just before dawn. His presence today means the worst has passed, even if the pain is still fresh. Do something today that symbolizes a new beginning, however small: organize a space, write an intention, or simply go out to see the first light of day.
Tradition and sources
Appears in 1 Enoch 20:8 as the angel whom God exalts, responsible for guiding faithful souls toward their awakening. In the Apocalypse of Baruch (2 Baruch) he is attributed visions about the end of times. Some traditions identify him with Jeremiel, an etymological confusion that has persisted for centuries in angelology.







