![]() Simplicity of form is one of my guidelines.”Īt the sam e time, Susan was quoted on the website as adding, ““The name Willow Tree directly reflects my love and reverence of trees their graceful, columnar, beckoning, magical qualities. It’s the perfect example of ‘less is more’ – what is missing can speak volumes. Because of their religion, they did not embellish the faces I loved the simplicity and pureness of the way those dolls looked. At the time I created Willow Tree, I had never seen it done before, except for my knowledge of Amish women who would sew dolls for their children. It makes it more personal for the giver and the receiver to envision what or whom they want. When asked why her figurines have no faces, she responded: ‘This ties into the viewer becoming more of a participant in the understanding of the piece. “These sculptures were created by Susan, who says her inspiration comes from a love of family, friends, and nature. “I’m happy to report that there is nothing New Age about them,” asserted the broadcaster. Let us note a website by a Catholic television personality, “Women of Grace,” that looked into one source of faceless angels - a sweet woman named Susan Lordi - and issued a post called, “There’s Nothing Sinister About Those Faceless Willow Tree Sculptures” (which are often found in gift shops, including at Catholic hospitals). It seems unlikely that they are all hexed or even that most or many are. Now, before we all go about tossing out faceless angels, we should pray to the Holy Spirit ourselves. He had told me that there are satanic chants done over many of these faceless angels to bring harm to Christians who buy them and He was telling me again that it was through these statues that the demonic force was getting into the house and disturbing the woman’s peace.” ![]() ![]() They were angels which the Lord had warned me about several times before. “One was a small figurine in the bathroom, a little statue of a faceless angel, and there was another one in a room downstairs. “And I could see exactly what they were,” he quotes the mystic as explaining. O’Hare, “were like a channel or an antenna, something that would pick up radio signals, except that in this case the signals were demonic. Brian O’Hare, left, a retired assistant director of a large Irish college), said he was given a vision from the Lord of two objects that had been given to the woman. When he asked if there was something in her home that “was not of God,” the woman assured him, of course, there was not.īut Gillespie (as relayed by author Dr. The woman was suffering from the effects of it, even though she was going to Mass every day.” “And as she continued to talk, I felt the Lord telling me that something had been brought into her house and that there was demonic activity there. “As always, when I’m listening to people explaining their symptoms, I was already asking God to give me some insight into the root of this woman’s problem,” Gillespie told his biographer. It didn’t just fall it had been smashed into pieces. Among other things, a strange leak had developed in her upstairs bathroom, and the plumber was unnerved by the feeling he had trying to fix it, even mentioning to her that trying to fix it was “like wrestling with a demon,” and soon after a tile in the bathroom crashed inexplicably to the floor - causing an implausibly loud noise heard downstairs. She told John she was having great difficulty sleeping at night, feeling no peace in her home. In this fascinating book ( The Miracle Ship), John recounts the time a woman approached him after Mass in the sacristy (where he worked), acting very nervous and agitated. Like so many of you, we have them - faceless angels, given as gifts - and never really thought much about them, until going back through a book about the late Irish mystic and deliverance expert, John Gillespie, who was from Newry, Ireland.
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