
Wrestling with Angels
I came across the phrase while reading Spotify the Gnostics, Here’s the First Church of David Bowie by Sean Manseau. Wrestling with angels. Some phrases arrive carrying more weight than their literal meaning. They feel older than language. Older than the person who spoke them. This was one of those phrases. The moment I read it, something in me recognised it before I had even fully thought about why. It immediately pulled me toward the story of Jacob beside the river Jabbok. Night falling. Isolation. A mysterious being appearing in the dark. Then the struggle itself, physical, spiritual, psychological, mythic, all at once. Jacob wrestles until dawn. He refuses to release the angel, even when the struggle wounds him. Even when it leaves him limping. And in the end, he emerges transformed, renamed, somehow more fully himself because of the encounter rather than despite it. It strikes me now that this might be one of the oldest surviving metaphors for consciousness itself. To think deeply is to wrestle with angels. Not the sentimental angels from greeting cards and Christmas ornaments. Not harmless beings of soft light and certainty. I mean the older kind. Terrible and illuminating. Messengers from dimensions of reality larger than the ego can comfortably contain. Forces that interrupt sleep. Ideas can behave like that. Questions can behave like that. A single insight can arrive and suddenly make your previous life impossible to fully return to. That, I think, is part of what has been happening to me






