Catechesis On The Angels by Pope John Paul II
Catechesis On The Angels by Pope John Paul II
Catechesis On The Angels by Pope John Paul II
In the perfection of their spiritual nature the angels are called from
the beginning, by virtue of their intelligence, to know the truth and
to love the good which they know in truth in a more full and perfect
way than is possible to man. This love is an act of a free will, and
therefore for the angels also freedom implies a possibility of choice
for or against the Good which they know, that is, God himself. It
must be repeated here what we already mentioned earlier in
regard to man: by creating free beings, God willed that there
should be realized in the world true love which is possible only on the
basis of freedom. He willed therefore that the creature, constituted
in the image and likeness of his Creator, should be able in the
greatest degree possible to render himself similar to God who "is
love" (1 Jn 4:16). By creating the pure spirits as free beings, God in
his Providence could not but foresee also the possibility of the
angels' sin. But precisely because Providence is eternal wisdom
which loves, God would have been able to draw from the history of
this sin, incomparably more radical inasmuch as it was the sin of a
pure spirit, the definitive good of the whole created cosmos.
2. In fact, as Revelation clearly states, the world of the pure spirits
appears divided into good angels and bad ones. This division is not
the work of God's creation, but is based on the freedom proper to
the spiritual nature of each one of them. It is the result of
choice which for purely spiritual beings possesses an
incomparably more radical character than that of man, and it
is irreversible given the degree of intuitiveness and penetration of
the good where with their intelligence is endowed. In this regard it
must also be said that the pure spirits were subjected to a test of a
moral character. It was a decisive test regarding first of all God
himself, a God known in a more essential and direct way than is
possible to man, a God who granted to these
spiritual beings the gift of participating in his divine nature, before
doing so to man.
In his general audience of August 6th, Pope John Paul II noted that the
modern mentality does not see the importance of angels. Yet in the
encounter with the world of angels, man comes to see his own being
not only as body but also as spirit.
In the recent catechese we have seen how the Church, illuminated
by the light that comes from Sacred Scripture, has professed
throughout the centuries the truth about the existence of the
angels as purely spiritual beings, with the Nicene-
Constantinopolitan Creed, and has confirmed this in the Fourth
Lateran Council (1215), whose formulation was repeated by the
First Vatican Council in the context of the doctrine on creation:
2. This "fall", which has the character of rejection of God with the
consequent state of "damnation", consists in the free choice of
those created spirits who have radically and irrevocably rejected
God and his kingdom usurping his sovereign rights and attempting
to subvert the economy of salvation and the very order of the
entire creation. We find a reflection of this attitude in the words
addressed by the tempter to our first parents: "You will become like
God" or "like gods" (cf. Gen 3:5). Thus the evil spirit tries to
transplant into man the attitude of rivalry, insubordination and
opposition to God, which has, as it were, become the motivation of
all his existence.
3. In the Old Testament, the narrative of the fail of man as related
in the Book of Genesis, contains a reference to an attitude of
antagonism which Satan wishes to communicate to man in order to
lead him to sin (Gen 3:5). In the Book of Job too, we read that Satan
seeks to generate rebellion in the person who is suffering (cf. Job
1:11; 2:5-7). In the Book of Wisdom (cf. Wis 2:24), Satan is presented
as the artisan of death, which has entered man's history along with
sin.
4. In the Fourth Lateran Council (1215), the Church teaches that the
devil (or Satan) and the other demons "were created good by God
but have become evil by their own will". In fact, we read in the Letter
of St. Jude: " . . . the angels who did not keep their dignity, but left
their own dwelling, are kept by the Lord in eternal chains in the
darkness, for the judgement of the great day" (Jude 6). Similarly, in
the second Letter of St. Peter, we hear of "angels who have sinned"
and whom God "did not spare, but... cast in the gloomy abysses of
hell, reserving them for the judgement" (2 Pet 2:4). It is clear that if
God "does not forgive" the sin of the angels, this is because they
remain in their sin, because they are eternally "in the chains" of the
choice that they made at the beginning, rejecting God, against the
truth of the supreme and definitive Good that is God himself. It is in
this sense that St. John writes that "the devil has been a sinner from
the beginning..." (Jn 3:8). And he has been a murderer "from the
beginning", and "has not persevered in the truth, because there is
no truth in him" (Jn 8:44).
Satan: cosmic liar and murderer
5. These texts help us to understand the nature and the dimension
of the sin of Satan, which consists in the denial of the truth about
God, as he is known by the light of the intellect and revelation as
infinite Good, subsistent Love and Holiness. The sin was all the
greater, in that the spiritual perfection and the epistemological
acuteness of the angelic intellect, with his freedom and closeness
to God, were greater. When, by an act of his own free will,
he rejected the truth that he knew about God, Satan became the
cosmic "liar and the father of lies" (Jn 8:44). For this reason, he lives
in radical and irreversible denial of God, and seeks to impose on
creation - on the other beings created in the image of God, and in
particular on people - his own tragic "lie about the good" that is
God. In the Book of Genesis, we find a precise description of this lie
and falsification of the truth about God, which Satan (under the
form of a serpent) tries to transmit to the first representatives of
the human race: God is jealous of his own prerogatives and
therefore wants to impose limitations on man (cf. Gen 3:5), Satan
invites the man to free himself from the impositions of this yoke, by
making himself "like God".
6. In this condition of existential falsehood, Satan - according to St.
John - also becomes a "murderer", that is one who destroys the
supernatural life which God had made to dwell from the beginning
in him and in the creatures made "in the likeness of God": the other
pure spirits and men; Satan wishes to destroy life lived in accordance
with the truth, life in the fullness of good, the supernatural life of
grace and love. The author of the Book of Wisdom writes: ". . .death
has entered the world through the envy of the devil, and those who
belong to him experience it" (Wis 2:24). And Jesus Christ warns in
the Gospel: "... fear rather him who has the power to destroy both soul
and body in Gehenna" (Mt 10:28).
7. As the result of the sin of our first parents, this fallen angel has
acquired dominion over man to a certain extent. This is the doctrine
that has been constantly professed and proclaimed by the Church,
and which the Council of Trent confirmed in its treatise on original
sin (cf. DS 1511): it finds a dramatic expression in the liturgy of
baptism, when the catechumen is asked to renounce the devil and
all his empty promises.
In Sacred Scripture we find various indications of this influence on
man and on the dispositions of his spirit (and of his body). In the
Bible, Satan is called "the prince of the world" (cf Jn 12:31; 14:30;
16:11), and even "the god of this world" (2 Cor 4:4). We
find many other names that describe his nefarious relationship with
man: "Beelzebul" or "Belial", "unclean spirit": "tempter", "evil one"
and even "Antichrist" (1 Jn 4:3). He is compared to a "lion" (1 Pet
5:8), to a "dragon" (in Revelation) and to a "serpent" (Gen 3). Very
frequently, he is designated by the name "devil": from the
Greek diaballein (hence diabolos), which means: to "cause
destruction, to divide, to calumniate, to deceive". In truth, all this
takes place from the beginning through the working of the evil
spirit who is presented by Sacred Scripture as a person, while it is
declared that he is not alone: "there are many of us" as the devils
cry out to Jesus in the region of the Gerasenes (Mk 5:9); and Jesus,
speaking of the future judgment, speaks of "the devil and his
angels" (cf. Mt 25:41).
8. According to Sacred Scripture, and especially the New
Testament, the dominion and the influence of Satan and of the
other evil spirits embraces all the world. We may think of Christ's
parable about the field (the world), about the good seed and the
bad seed that the devil sows in the midst of the wheat, seeking to
snatch away from hearts the good that has been "sown"in them (cf.
Mt 13:38-39). We may think of the numerous exhortations to
vigilance (cf. Mt 26:41; 1 Pet 5:8), to prayer and fasting (cf. Mt
17:21). We may think of the strong statement made by the Lord:
"This kind of demon cannot be cast out by any other means than
prayer" (Mk 9:29). The action of Satan consists primarily in tempting
men to evil, by influencing their imaginations and higher faculties,
to turn them away from the law of God. Satan even tempts Jesus (cf.
Lk 4:3-13), in the extreme attempt to thwart what is demanded by
the economy of salvation, as this has been pre-ordained by God.
It is possible that in certain cases the evil spirit goes so far as to
exercise his influence not only on material things, but even on
man's body so that one can speak of "diabolical possession" (cf. Mk
5:2-9). It is not always easy to discern the preternatural factor
operative in these cases, and the Church does not lightly support
the tendency to attribute many things to the direct action of the
devil; but in principle it cannot be denied that Satan can go to this
extreme manifestation of his superiority, in his will to harm and
lead to evil.
9. To conclude, we must add that the impressive words of the
Apostle John, "The whole world lies under the power of the evil
one" (1 Jn 5:19), allude also to the presence of Satan in the history
of humanity, a presence which becomes all the more acute when
man and society depart from God. The influence of the evil spirit
can conceal itself in a more profound and effective way: it is in his
"interests" to make himself unknown. Satan has the skill in the
world to induce people to deny his existence in the name of
rationalism and of every other system of thought which seeks all
possible means to avoid recognizing his activity. This, however, does
not signify the elimination of man's free will and responsibility, and
even less the frustration of the saving action of Christ. It is, rather, a
case of conflict between the dark powers of evil and the powers of
redemption. The words that Jesus addressed to Peter at the
beginning of the Passion are eloquent in this context: "... Simon,
behold, Satan has sought to sift you like wheat: but I have prayed
for you, that your faith may not fail" (Lk 22:31).
This helps us understand how Jesus, in the prayer that he taught
us, the "Our Father", that is, the prayer of the Kingdom of God,
terminates almost brusquely, unlike so many other prayers of his
era, by reminding us of our condition as people exposed to the
snares of evil and of the evil one. The Christian, appealing to the
Father with the Spirit of Jesus and invoking his Kingdom, cries with
the power of faith. let us not succumb to temptation, free us from
evil, from the evil one. 0 Lord, let us not fall into the infidelity to
which we are seduced by the one who has been unfaithful from the
beginning.
GENERAL AUDIENCE AUGUST 20,1986
Christ's victory conquers evil
The Holy Father concluded his catechesis on God as the Creator of "the
things that are unseen" by speaking of the victory of Christ over the
spirit of evil.
1. Our catechese on God, the Creator of the things "that are
unseen", have brought fresh light and strength to our faith
concerning the truth about the evil one, or Satan; he is certainly not
willed by God, who is supreme Love and Holiness, and whose wise
and strong Providence knows how to guide our existence to victory
over the prince of darkness. The Church's faith, in fact, teaches us
that the power of Satan is not infinite. He is only a creature -
powerful, in that he is pure spirit, but nevertheless always a
creature, with the limits proper to creatures, subordinated to the
will and dominion of God. If Satan is at work in the world because
of his hatred of God and of his Kingdom, this is permitted by Divine
Providence which directs the history of man and of the world with
power and goodness (fortiter et suaviter). It is certainly true that
Satan's action causes much damage, both of a spiritual kind and also
indirectly of a material kind, to individuals and to society, but he is
not able ultimately to neutralize the definitive end towards which
man and all creation tend. the Good. He cannot block the
construction of the Kingdom of God, in which at the end there will
be the full realization of the righteousness and the love of the
Father for the creatures who are eternally "predestined" in Jesus
Christ, his Son and Word. Indeed, we can say with St. Paul that the
work of the evil one cooperates for the good (cf. Rom 8:28) and that
it helps to build up the glory of the "chosen" ones (cf. 2 Tim 2:10).
Total salvation
2. Thus, the whole history of humanity can be considered as
serving total salvation which means the victory of Christ over the
"prince of this world" (Jn 12:31; 14:30; 16:11). "You shall bow down
only before the Lord your God, you shall adore him alone" (Lk 4:8),
says Christ eternally to Satan. At a dramatic moment of his
ministry, when he was openly accused of casting out the demons
because of his alliance with Beelzebul, the chief of the demons,
Jesus replied with these words that are at once severe and
comforting. "Every kingdom that is divided falls into ruins, and no
city or family that is divided can stand upright. Now if Satan drives
out Satan, then he is divided in himself. How then can his kingdom
stand upright?... And if it is by the power of the Spirit of God that I
cast out the demons, then it is certain that the Kingdom of God has
come among you" (Mt 12:26-26, 28). "When a strong man, well
armed, guards his palace, all his goods are secure. But if one
stronger than he comes and overpowers him, he takes away the
armour in which he trusted, and divides his spoils" (Lk 11:21-22).
The words which Christ speaks about the tempter find their
historical fulfilment in the cross and resurrection of the Redeemer. As
we read in the Letter to the Hebrews, Christ became a sharer in
human nature even to the cross "in order to reduce to powerlessness,
by means of death, the one who has the power over death, that is,
the devil... and thus to free those who... were held in slavery" (Heb
2:14-15). This is the great certainty of the Christian faith: "the prince
of this world has been judged" (Jn 16:11); "the Son of God has
appeared, in order to destroy the works of the devil" (1 Jn 3:8), as St.
John bears witness. It is therefore the crucified and risen Christ who
has revealed himself as that "stronger one" who has overpowered
"the strong man", the devil, and has cast him down from his throne
The Church shares in Christ's victory over the devil, for Christ has
given to his disciples the power to cast out demons (cf. Mt 10:1 and
parallels; Mk 16:17). The Church uses this victorious power through
faith in Christ and prayer (cf. Mk 9:29; Mt 17:19ff.), which in
particular cases can take the form of exorcism.
3. It is to this historical phase of the victory of Christ that the
announcement and the beginning of the final victory, the Parousia,
belongs: this is the second and definitive coming of Christ at the
close of history, and it is towards this that the life of the Christian is
orientated. Even if it is true that earthly history continues to unfold
under the influence of "that spirit who now is at work in rebellious
men", as St. Paul says (Eph 2:2), believers know that they have
been called to struggle for the definitive triumph of the Good. "for
our battle is not against creatures made of blood and of flesh, but
against the Principalities and Powers, against those who hold
dominion over this world of darkness, against the spirits of evil that
dwell in the heavenly places" (Eph 6:12).
Definitive victory
4. As the end of the struggle gradually draws nearer, it becomes in
a certain sense ever more violent, as Revelation, the last book of the
New Testament, shows in a special emphasis (cf. Rev 12:7-9). But it
is precisely this book that emphasizes the certainty that is given to
us by all of divine Revelation, that the struggle will finish with the
definitive victory of the good. In this victory, which is contained in
anticipation in the paschal mystery of Christ, there will be the
definitive fulfilment of the first announcement in the Book of Genesis,
which is significantly called the Proto-Evangelium, when God
admonishes the serpent: "I will put enmity between you and the
woman" (Gen 3:15). In this definitive phase, God will complete the
mystery of his fatherly Providence and "will set free from the power
of darkness" those whom he has eternally "predestined in Christ"
and will "bring them over into the kingdom of his beloved Son" (cf.
Col 1:13-14). Then the Son will subject even the whole universe to
the Father, so that "God may be all in all" (1 Cor 15:28).
5. Here we finish the catecheses on God as the Creator of "the
things that are visible and invisible", which are united, in our
structuring of the catecheses, with the truth about Divine
Providence It is obvious to the eyes of the believer that the mystery
of the beginning of the world and of history is joined indissolubly to
the mystery of the end, in which the finality of all that has been
created reaches fulfilment. The creed, which unites so many truths
in such an organic manner, is truly the harmonious cathedral of the
faith.
In a progressive and organic way, we have been able to admire,
struck dumb with wonder, the great mystery of the intelligence and
love of God, in his action of creation, directed to the cosmos, to the
human person, and to the world of pure spirits. We have
considered the Trinitarian origin of this action and its wise
orientation towards the life of man who is truly the "image of God",
called in his turn to rediscover fully his own dignity in the
contemplation of the glory of God. We have been enlightened
about one of the greatest problems that perturb man and
characterize his search for truth: the problem of suffering and of evil.
At the root, there is no mistaken or wicked decision by God, rather
his choice - and in a certain manner the risk he has undertaken - of
creating us free, in order to have us as friends. Evil too has been
born of liberty. But God does not give up, and he predestines us
with his transcendent wisdom to be his children in Christ, directing
all with strength and sweetness, so that the good may not be
overcome by evil.
We must now let ourselves be guided by Divine Revelation in our
exploration of the other mysteries of our salvation. We have now
received a truth which must be profoundly important for every
Christian: that there are pure spirits, creatures of God, initially all
good and then, through a choice of sin, irreducibly separated into
angels of light and angels of darkness. And while the existence of
the wicked angels requires of us that we be watchful so as not to
yield to their empty promises, we are certain that the victorious
power of Christ the Redeemer enfolds our lives, so that we
ourselves may overcome these spirits. In this, we are powerfully
helped by the good angels, messengers of God's love, to
whom, taught by the tradition of the Church, we address our prayer:
"Angel of God, who are my guardian, enlighten, guard, govern and
guide me, who have been entrusted to you by the heavenly
goodness. Amen".
Taken from:
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