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Angels Purpose
In the Bible, angels are a medium of God's power; they exist to execute God's
will. Angels reveal themselves to individuals as well as to the whole nation, to
announce events, either good or bad, affecting humans. Angels foretold to
Abraham the birth of Isaac, to Manoah the birth of Samson, and to Abraham the
destruction of Sodom. Guardian angels were mentioned, but not, as was later the
case, as guardian spirits of individuals and nations. God sent an angel to
protect the Hebrew people after their exodus from Egypt, to lead them to the
promised land, and to destroy the hostile tribes in their way (Ex. 23.20, Num.
20.16).
In Judges (ii. 1) an angel of the Lord—unless here and in the preceding
instances (compare Isa. xlii. 19, Ḥag. i. 13, Mal. iii. 1), a human messenger of
God is meant—addressed the whole people, swearing to bring them to the promised
land. An angel brought Elijah meat and drink (I Kings, xix. 5); and as God
watched over Jacob, so is every pious person protected by an angel, who cares
for him in all his ways (Ps. xxxiv. 7, xci. 11). There are angels militant, one
of whom smites in one night the whole Assyrian army of 185,000 men (II Kings,
xix. 35); messengers go forth from God "in ships to make the careless Ethiopians
afraid" (Ezek. xxx. 9); the enemy is scattered before the angel like chaff (Ps.
xxxv. 5, 6).
A Christian putto; angel from the Melbourne General CemeteryAvenging angels are
mentioned, such as the one in II Sam. xxiv. 15, who annihilates thousands. It
would seem that the pestilence was personified, and that the "evil angels"
mentioned in Ps. lxxviii. 49 are to be regarded as personifications of this
kind. "Evil" is here to be taken in the causative sense, as "producing evil";
for, as stated above, angels are generally considered to be by nature beneficent
to man. They glorify God, whence the term "glorifying angels" comes (Ps. xxix.
1, ciii. 20, cxlviii. 2; compare Isa. vi. 2 et seq.).
They constitute God's court, sitting in council with Him (I Kings, xxii. 19;
Job, i. 6, ii. 1); hence they are called His "council of the holy ones" (Ps.
lxxxix. 7, R. V.; A. V. "assembly of the saints"). They accompany God as His
attendants, when He appears to man (Deut. xxxiii. 2; Job, xxxviii. 7). This
conception was developed after the Exile; and in the Zechariah, angels of
various shapes are delegated "to walk to and fro through the earth" in order to
find out and report what happens (Zech. vi. 7).
In the prophetic books, angels appear as representatives of the prophetic
spirit, and bring to the prophets God's word. Thus the prophet Haggai was called
God's messenger (angel); and it is known that "Malachi" is not a real name, but
means "messenger" or "angel". In I Kings, xiii. 18, an angel brought the divine
word to the prophet.
In some places, it is implied that angels existed before the Creation (Gen. i.
26; Job, xxxviii. 7). The earlier Biblical writings did not speculate about
them; simply regarding them, in their relations to man, as God's agents.
Consequently, they did not individualize or denominate them; and in Judges,
xiii. 18, and Gen. xxxii. 30, the angels, when questioned, refuse to give their
names. In Daniel, however, there occur the names Michael and Gabriel. Michael is
Israel's representative in Heaven, where other nations—the Persians, for
instance—were also represented by angelic princes. More than three hundred years
before the Book of Daniel was written, Zechariah graded the angels according to
their rank, but did not name them. The notion of the seven eyes (Zech. iii. 9,
iv. 10) may have been affected by the representation of the seven archangels and
also possibly by the seven Amesha Spentas of Zoroastrianism (compare Ezek. ix.
2).
Angels in the Tanakh
Appearance of angels Angels
Purpose Angels of the Old
Testament New Testament
Angels
Islamic Angels
Latter-Day Saint Angels
Gender
of angels Hierarchy of Angels
Spiritual Ideas Main Page
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