Asbeel (Heb. עזב azab "to abandon" + אל el "power, divinity", meaning "God has forsaken" or "deserter from God") is a fallen angel in Christian mythology that appears in the first book of Enoch, chapter 69, verse 5: Asbeel was listed as the second of five "satans" who led astray the Grigori by falling in love with humans. There was also Yeqon (or Yaqum, "he shall rise"), Gadreel ("wall of God"), Penemue ("the inside"), and Kasdaye ("Chaldean", "covered hand").
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| - Asbeel (Heb. עזב azab "to abandon" + אל el "power, divinity", meaning "God has forsaken" or "deserter from God") is a fallen angel in Christian mythology that appears in the first book of Enoch, chapter 69, verse 5: Asbeel was listed as the second of five "satans" who led astray the Grigori by falling in love with humans. There was also Yeqon (or Yaqum, "he shall rise"), Gadreel ("wall of God"), Penemue ("the inside"), and Kasdaye ("Chaldean", "covered hand").
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| - Asbeel (Heb. עזב azab "to abandon" + אל el "power, divinity", meaning "God has forsaken" or "deserter from God") is a fallen angel in Christian mythology that appears in the first book of Enoch, chapter 69, verse 5: Asbeel was listed as the second of five "satans" who led astray the Grigori by falling in love with humans. There was also Yeqon (or Yaqum, "he shall rise"), Gadreel ("wall of God"), Penemue ("the inside"), and Kasdaye ("Chaldean", "covered hand").
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