Entertaining angels unawares

51qz4afx6xl__aa240_ Last week I posted on my first spiritual and pastoral mentor, Charlie Simpson. I mentioned his habit of reading reference books and announced my intention to remember this good man by reading a reference book, The Oxford Companion to Christian Thought. So far I’ve read amongst other things, about Peter Abelard, Abortion, Abraham, Adam and Allegory. And just read the article on Angels. Some of our hymns assume the reality and activity of these messengers from God – Wesley tells us to Hark! the herald angels sing; in Newman’s ‘Praise to the Holiest in the Height’, it’s the angels who are left gobsmacked (my word, Newman one of the finest prose stylists in the English language would eschew such slovenly syntax) – left gobsmacked at the coming of the second Adam to the fight and to the rescue. And Wesley again is the earth’s cheerleader, celebrating the mercy of God, ‘Let earth adore’, and then he advises angel minds to enquire no more.

The article clarified for me the status of angels, something I hadn’t thought much about –

the angels are not divine, but fellow servants of God with humanity, integral even if invisible elements of the cosmos, mightily influencing, for good and ill, according to their primordial option, the stage upon which the  history of salvation unfolds.

Beato25 In the Bible angels appear and act at key moments in the story – the three guests of Abraham turn out to be the angels unawares (and are immortalised in Rublev’s magnificent icon of the Holy Trinity); Jacob’s wrestling partner at the brook Jabbok is an angel who leaves jacob with the blessing of a limp(which triggered one of Charles Wesley’s greatest productions). They are protectors of God’s people and proclaimers of God’s purposes. Isaiah six gives a stunningly image-rich portrayal of the heavenly courts busy with the synchronised traffic of adoring praise at the speed of light. The Annunciation and the Nativity stories make sense only because God’s messengers interrupt the long slow history of human longing, with the ultimate news bulletin. And in the wilderness, and Gethsemane Jesus is strengthened, accompanied, supported, but then they withdraw and we are left to ponder the loneliness of the Son of God.

The article finishes:

‘The angels serve God and humanity, and especially Christ, God incarnate, the sole mediator. They labour invisibly, throughout the cosmos, to further the final unity of all things, in heaven and on earth, in Him.

I’m not sure how carefully I’ve considered a theology of angels before; I’m well impressed that Karl Barth and Karl Rahner both made significant space to expound the ministry and mystery of God’s messengers. And maybe now and again, when the good things happen, we should be more alert to the presence and action of God’s gophers.

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