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Creation and the Angels
Creation
To create is to make things out of
nothing, with no material at all being used. We cannot ask: why did God
wait so long before creating the world, because before creation, there
is no time. Time is a measure of change on a scale of before and after
(Aristotle, Physics 4:11). Therefore when--if we may use that word at
all in speaking of eternity--there was no change, there was no time.
Time began to be when changing creatures came into being. Time is a
restless continuous set of changes. Ahead is a moment we call future--it
quickly changes into present--then quickly changes into past.
God could have created an everlasting
world, without beginning or end. But he chose to create a world with a
beginning--a time "before" which there was nothing. Genesis
1:1 tells us, "In the beginning, God created the heavens and the
earth." And Christ told His Father :"You loved me before the
foundation of the world" (John 17:24).
Why did God create? The purpose of the
created world is tied up with the purpose of man. St. Irenaeus wrote:
"In the beginning God formed Adam, not because He was in need of
humans, but so He might have someone to receive His benefits"
(Against Heresies 4. 14. 1). So we can say He always loved us, since He
always willed us the most basic good, existence. Beyond that, He wills
that, "all be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth" (1
Timothy 2:4). If to will good to another is to love, then this is really
love. But when we love, we need a starter, we need to see something good
or fine in another. But God loved us when we did not exist.
When we say that He created for His
own glory, we must understand these words the way Vatican I meant them:
He made a creature that by its very nature would give glory to God, even
though God gains nothing by that glory. (We read this in the acts and
decrees of Vatican I, found in Collectio Lacensis , VII. 116).
Similarly, He wants us to obey because all goodness says creatures
should obey their Creator, and because as St. Irenaeus said, He wanted
to have someone to whom to be generous in infinite goodness--but we must
cooperate to receive his gifts.
God keeps all things in existence by
the same power by which He brought them up out of nothing. "And how
could anything continue in being if you did not will it?" (Wisdom
11:25). Our dependence on Him for continued existence is like that of
the images on the movie screen on the projector.
Angels, Good and Bad
An angel is a pure spirit, that is, an
angel has no matter, no body. Each angel is a person, and has a mind and
a will like ours, but angels are of a nature higher than ours. They are
often sent by God for certain duties on this earth, in fact, the word
angel means "one who is sent" or "messenger." The
oldest references to angels in the Old Testament might leave us
wondering if angels are separate beings--or does the phrase
"messenger of God" merely means God? (cf. Judges, chapter 6).
But in the later part of the Old Testament and in the New Testament it
becomes entirely clear that they are distinct creatures. We see this by
many references to them in Scripture, e.g., Psalms 148:2; 103: 20-21;
Matthew 22:30; Luke 1:26; 2 Peter 2:4; Revelation/Apocalypse 5:11.
The angels were not created in heaven,
that is, with the vision of God. If they had had that, sin would have
been impossible. But God gave the angels some sort of command--we do not
know what--and some obeyed, some did not. Those who disobeyed were fixed
in evil, and became devils. When we sin, our intelligence is limited by
the material part of our intellect, the brain in our heads. For a
material brain is much less powerful than the spiritual intelligence our
souls have. This means that we seldom see things as fully as possible at
once. But an angel has no such limit, and hence sees everything as fully
as possible at once. So he cannot go back on his decision, and say:
"I see it differently now; I wish I had not done that".
The fallen angels, the devils, still
keep the great powers natural to a pure spirit. So they can do things
that seem like miracles to us.
The good angels are sent to guide and
protect us. They too have great powers. Each of us has a guardian angel.
This is implied in Scripture and is found in the constant Tradition of
the Church. After Peter was delivered from prison by angel, the
disciples said in astonishment: "It was his angel" (Acts
12:15).
Our guardian angels are able to put
good thoughts into our minds, and to protect us. Psalm 91:11 says:
"He will command His angels about you, to guard you in all your
ways." In time of temptation they can give us both light and
strength. They never stop praying for us, and they present our prayers
before God.
Clearly, it is only good sense to
venerate our guardian angel, to cultivate their friendship, to thank
them, to ask their help. So God said in Exodus 23:20-21: "Behold, I
am sending an angel ahead of you, to guard you and bring you to the
place I have prepared. Listen to his voice, and do not rebel against
him, for my name is in Him, and he will not forgive."
Because of their disobedience, the
wicked angels were condemned to eternal punishment. St. Peter, using
poetic language, says: "When the angels sinned, God did not spare
them, but consigned them to the pit of hell to be kept for the
judgment" (2 Peter 2:4).
As we said, the will of the devil is
fixed in evil, and so he tries to seduce people, to harm them
spiritually, and even to bring them to hell. He wants to lead us from
the faithful service of God. First Peter 5:8-9 advises: "Be calm
and watch, for your enemy the devil goes about seeking whom he may
devour. Resist him, strong in faith, knowing that your brothers all over
the world have the same trial."
God permits the devil to do this as a
result of His decision to create spiritual beings, having free will. To
thwart that regularly would be to contradict His own natural laws. He
does draw good out of evil: temptation gives us the opportunity to show
our faith and to trust in Him; it give us the chance to grow in virtue
by the struggle. And He has given us a powerful counterforce in our
Guardian Angels, and the Blessed Mother, and ordinary Saints.
Taken from The Basic Catholic Catechism
PART TWO: The Apostle's Creed
First Article of the Creed: "I believe in God the Father Almighty,
Creator of heaven and earth."
By William G. Most. (c)Copyright 1990 by William G.
Most
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St. Michael the Archangel
St.
Michael the Archangel, defend us in battle; be our safeguard against the
wickedness and snares of the devil. May God rebuke him, we humbly pray.
And do you, O prince of the heavenly host, by the power of God, cast
into Hell Satan and all the evil spirits who prowl about the world
seeking the ruin of souls. Amen.
Copyright ©
2002 Saint Michael Center for the Blessed Virgin Mary.
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