The Twelve deities or deific beings and the lesser divinities inhabiting Olympus, under the dominion of Zeus (Jove) were the Angels of that epoch or period when Greece attained her highest civilization; when the Arts of peace, alternating with the Conquests of war, were cultivated to the highest extent. The Homeric Epics and Lyrics not only give minute and particular descriptions of the abodes of the Gods (Angels) and Jove (Arch Angel), but inter-blend their lives with mortals, until in the Homeric Epics one cannot distinguish the "Gods" from human beings.

The reason is clear; these gods and goddesses of Homer's lays were impersonated "Attributes of Joy and Wonder and divinest Love."

The mingling of gods and human beings served to illustrate in a wonderful manner the mission and work of the Angels on Earth.

The warlike divinities culminating, according to Grecian mythology, in the birth of "Alexander the Great."

While all the arts, sciences, philosophies had yielded their fruitage in the perfection of the Athenian Group, without Greece there could have been no civilization.

The gentle Muses of Parnassus wafted the messages of love and peace, and all of Greece worshipped at the two shrines.

Yet love of pleasure and worldly power so far marred and dimmed the knowledge of higher things, that when the real Angels appeared and walked the Earth as men, teaching those rare prinriples of highest good, their philosophies (Ideals) superseded in the minds of those ready to receive them, the sense-worship of the pleasure-loving and worldly. And though the "hemlock was distilled" for Socrates, the glorious system founded by him, and more than borne forward by Plato, has thrilled and filled the world through the intervening centuries.

The Angels of Greece cannot be traced or named separately, but each student has access to the wonders in every direction of art, science and literature, that Greece has given to the world.

Without Greece modern civilization could not have existed.