Monday, 26 August 2019

Angels

We see more demons than angels in works of fantasy although demons are meant to be fallen angels. Both Poul Anderson and James Blish give us demons and the Heavenly messenger in Anderson's Operation Chaos is not an angel but a sainted soul. Angels were big in the Bible, Dante and Milton but have moved to the fringe.

Reflecting on his guiding computer, SM Stirling's and David Drake's Raj Whitehall wonders:

"...how an angel came to be condemned to the cislunary sphere of Fallen corruption."
-The Hammer, CHAPTER NINE, p. 455.

CS Lewis' Ransom rose above that sphere:

"When I attempted to give Oyarsa some idea of our own Christian angelology, he certainly seemed to regard our 'angels' as different in some way from himself. But whether he meant that they were a different species, or only that they were some special military caste...I don't know."
-CS Lewis, Out Of The Silent Planet IN Lewis, The Cosmic Trilogy (London, 1990), pp. 1-144 AT Postscript, p. 142.

And neither do we!

3 comments:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

But angels are still pretty "big" among Catholics! A common belief is that we all have guardian angels, good spirits allowed by God to do as much as they are allowed to do to help us. And September 29 has been aside by the Catholic Church for honoring the archangels Michael, Gabriel, and Raphael. And Isaiah 6 gives us a glimpse of the seraphim attending God in the Temple of Jerusalem (some believe the Person Isaiah saw was the pre-Incarnate Logos, Christ).

Sean

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

Sean,
But I knew a Jesuit who argued that Biblical angels were personifications of the presence of God and met a Catholic layman who argued, like van Rijn, that God was modeled on Earthly rulers, adding that He was therefore imagined in a court full of courtiers.
Paul.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

But that Jesuit was absolutely wrong! The Catholic Church does not believe or teach that the angels were mere manifestations of the presence of God. Rather, the Church has insisted since at least the Fourth Lateran Council that the angels are real, non-corporeal beings created by God. And I think you forgot Nicholas van Rijn simply said that we pray to, and address God in terms similar to what was done for earthly rulers.

I see nothing odd or wrong in believing God has a COURT!

Sean