What the Church Wants Us to
Know About Angels
This second installment of our
Angelic Assistance Series follows from our first article concerning
the dangerous distortions about angels that come from our culture. To
guard against these erroneous ideas, it is important to know a few
basic truths about angels that only the Catholic Church teaches with
accuracy. Divorced from Christ’s true doctrine and Tradition, angels
become creatures of comfort. Their true nature, however, is not a
matter of comfort or being helpful in daily life; it is a matter of
our salvation.
The first thing to know is that
angels are purely spiritual
beings. Some writers of the early Church thought that angels’ bodies
may have been composed of some airy substance that made it possible
for people to see them from time to time. The Church, however, later
clarified that angels have nothing material whatsoever in them, not
even wisps of air or ether:
The profession of faith of the
Fourth Lateran Council affirms that God “from the beginning of time
made at once (simul) out of nothing both orders of creatures, the
spiritual and the corporeal, that is, the angelic and the earthly, and
then the human creature, who as it were shares in both orders, being
composed of spirit and body.” (Catechism,
337)
As pure spirits, angels are not
bound by the laws of physics or time that rule the material world, so
they come and go in our world as God wills. Since they have no
material bodies, they make themselves known to men by assuming
temporary human form, which they put on and take off like a very
elaborate costume. They usually come to deliver messages from God to
men, which is consistent with their name “angel” which means
“messenger”.
The second thing our Church wants
us to know about angels is that they are persons, not impersonal, disembodied spirits. In this, angels and
humans have something in common. Like us, angels have their own center
of identity consisting of individual minds and wills. Each angel is a
unique spiritual being. But since they don’t have material bodies,
angelic minds and wills are much stronger than even the strongest
human faculties, which are bound to the flesh.
A human mind, for example, gets its
information from the senses and does its thinking through the complex
mechanism of a brain. A human being can grow tired of thinking for
that reason! Angels have no such limitations. Whenever they turn their
minds to anything, they see it as sort of an instant snapshot, and
they perfectly
understand everything they
know. That amazing capacity is entirely beyond the human ability of
rational thought.
As purely spiritual creatures
angels have intelligence and will: they are personal and immortal
creatures, surpassing in perfection all visible creatures, as the
splendor of their glory bears witness. (Catechism, 330)
Along with their supreme
intelligence, the angelic will is flawlessly devoted to the will of
God (or perfectly rebellious against the will of
God as in the case of demons.)
This leads us to the third
important fact about angels: namely, that because they have free will
like us, some of them abused that free will and sinned. The rebellion
of the angels took place before time began, and we can read the
mysterious story of it in Chapter 12 of the Book of Revelation which
depicts St. Michael battling Satan and the rebellious
angels.
The spiritual rebels were cast out
of heaven and down to earth: “But woe to you earth and sea, for the
Devil has come to you in great fury”, says Rev 12:13. In that same
chapter it says the dragon’s tail “swept a third of the stars from the
sky” as he fell from heaven, which probably means that a third of the
angels rebelled with him and became demons.
No need to worry, though.
Two-thirds of the angels remained faithful to God, which is twice the
number of demons!
Scripture and the Church’s
Tradition see in this being a fallen angel, called “Satan” or the
“devil”. The Church teaches that Satan was at first a good angel, made
by God: “The devil and the other demons were indeed created naturally
good by God, but they became evil by their own doing.”
(Catechism, 391)
With the understanding that the
demons were originally created good, Catholics distance themselves
from esoteric religions (Buddhism, for example) that see good and evil
as equal forces in the world (i.e., the yin/yang
principle).
But we don’t believe that evil is
equal to good. We believe that evil is a corruption of the good, which
we will have to fight, like St. Michael and his angels, until the end
of time.
And on that score, God has not left
us spiritually helpless against the power of demons
either:
From its beginning until death
human life is surrounded by their watchful care and intercession.
“Beside each believer stands an angel as protector and shepherd
leading him to life” (St. Basil). Already here on earth the Christian
life shares by faith in the blessed company of angels and men united
in God. (Catechism,
336)
Thankfully, He has given each one
of us a spiritual companion called a Guardian Angel “to light and
guard, to rule and guide” us through the battlefield of this life to
the victory of heaven!
Source: Peter Darcy, Natures of Fire: God’s Magnificent
Angels,
2021.
Your friend in Christ,
Thomas McKenna
P.S. If you haven't had a chance to
join our special Operation Storm Heaven event with three Holy Masses
invoking the aid of St. Raphael the Archangel, take the opportunity submit
your intentions now.
http://www.catholicaction.org/
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