
Angels Decoded
Messengers, Missions, and the God of Israel
Menachem Clausen(Author)
Legacy Light Press
Published on 20. October 2025
Book
Paperback/Softback
132 pages
979-8-232-05360-4 (ISBN)
Description
Before disclosure made headlines, the Hebrew Bible recorded encounters with non human agents that are precise, disciplined, and accountable. Angels Decoded reads those scenes plainly. A malakh is a sent messenger who carries a word not his own, acts within limits, and leaves.
Menachem Clausen begins with the story you can picture, then lets the classic readers speak in clear prose. Rashi, Ramban, Ibn Ezra, Radak, Malbim, and Onkelos help map what the text already shows. From Abraham's guests and Lot's door to Jacob's ladder and dawn wrestle, from Sinai's guarded boundary to Balaam's roadblock, Joshua's Captain, Gideon and Manoah, Elijah and Elisha, Daniel's court, Ezekiel's wheels, and the difficult line in Genesis 6, the pattern holds.
You learn a usable framework. One messenger, one mission. Delegated authority, as in My Name is in him in Exodus 23, without worship. Boundaries and timing that protect rather than perform. Selective visibility and jurisdiction under a single Sovereign. Modern parallels appear only as clearly labeled Mirrors, possibility not proof, so curiosity stays steady and worship stays rightly placed.
If you want Scripture first, trusted sources next, and only then careful echoes for today's claims, this book will steady your reading and sharpen your discernment.
More details
Language
English
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 7 mm
Weight
177 gr
ISBN-13
979-8-232-05360-4 (9798232053604)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Menachem Clausen is a Jerusalem-based writer and editor whose work turns classic sources toward lived practice. He gives steady attention to mesorah and to the limits of speculation, and uses contemporary science only as a clarifying analogy. His writing ranges from Jewish thought to public ethics. When not writing, he studies with neighbors and helps communities align words with deeds.