Of Good Angels
“Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister
for them who shall be heirs of salvation?”
Heb.
1:14.
1. Many of the ancient Heathens had (probably from tradition)
some notion of good and evil angels. They had some conception of a superior
order of beings, between men and God, whom the Greeks generally termed demons,
(knowing ones,) and the Romans, genii. Some of these they supposed to be
kind and benevolent, delighting in doing good; others, to be malicious and
cruel, delighting in doing evil. But their conceptions both of one and the other
were crude, imperfect, and confused; being only fragments of truth, partly
delivered down by their forefathers, and partly borrowed from the inspired
writings.
2. Of the former, the benevolent kind, seems to have been the
celebrated demon of Socrates; concerning which so many and so various
conjectures have been made in succeeding ages. “This gives me notice,” said he,
“every morning, of any evil which will befall me that day.” A late writer,
indeed, (I suppose one that hardly believes the existence of either angel or
spirit,) has published a dissertation, wherein he labours to prove, that the
demon of Socrates was only his reason. But it was not the manner of Socrates to
speak in such obscure and ambiguous terms. If he had meant his reason, he would
doubtless have said so. But this could not be his meaning: For it was impossible
his reason should give him notice, every morning, of every evil which would
befall him in that day. It does not lie within the province of reason, to give
such notice of future contingencies. Neither does this odd interpretation in
anywise agree with the inference which he himself draws from it. “My demon,”
says he, “did not give me notice this morning of any evil that was to befall me
to-day. Therefore I cannot regard as any evil my being condemned to die.”
Undoubtedly it was some spiritual being: Probably one of these ministering
spirits.
3. An ancient poet, one who lived several ages before
Socrates, speaks more determinately on this subject. Hesiod does not scruple to
say,
Millions of spiritual creatures walk the earth
unseen.
Hence, it is probable, arose the numerous tales about the
exploits of their demi-gods: Minorum
Gentium. Hence their satyrs, fauns, nymphs of every kind; wherewith
they supposed both the sea and land to be filled. But how empty, childish,
unsatisfactory, are all the accounts they give of them! as, indeed, accounts
that depend upon broken, uncertain tradition can hardly fail to be.
4. Revelation only is able to supply this defect: This only
gives us a clear, rational, consistent account of those whom our eyes have not
seen, nor our ears heard; of both good and evil angels. It is my design to
speak, at present, only of the former; of whom we have a full, though brief
account in these words: “Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to
minister unto them that shall be heirs of salvation?”
I. 1. The question is, according to the manner of the Apostle,
equivalent to a strong affirmation. And hence we learn, First, that with regard
to their essence, or nature, they are all spirits; not material beings; not
clogged with flesh and blood like us; but having bodies, if any, not gross and
earthly like ours, but of a finer substance; resembling fire or flame, more than
any other of these lower elements. And is not something like this intimated in
those words of the Psalmist: “Who maketh his angels spirits, and his ministers a
flame of fire?” (Psalm 104:4.) As spirits,
he has endued them with understanding, will, or affections, (which are indeed
the same thing; as the affections are only the will exerting itself various
ways,) and liberty. And are not these, understanding, will, and liberty,
essential to, if not the essence of, a spirit?
2. But who of the children of men can comprehend what is the
understanding of an angel? Who can comprehend how far their
sight
extends? Analogous to sight in men, though not the same; but thus we are
constrained to speak through the poverty of human language. Probably not only
over one hemisphere of the earth; yea, or,
Ten-fold the
length of this terrene;
or even of the solar system; but so far as to take in one view
the whole extent of the creation! And we cannot conceive any defect in their
perception; neither any error in their understanding. But in what manner do they
use their understanding? We must in nowise imagine that they creep from one
truth to another by that slow method which we call reasoning. Undoubtedly they
see, at one glance, whatever truth is presented to their understanding; and that
with all the certainty and clearness that we mortals see the most self-evident
axiom. Who then can conceive the extent of their knowledge? not only of
the nature, attributes, and works of God, whether of creation or providence; but
of the circumstances, actions, words, tempers, yea, and thoughts, of men. For
although “God” only “knows the hearts of all men,” (“unto whom are known all his
works,”) together with the changes they undergo, “from the beginning of the
world;” yet we cannot doubt but his angels know the hearts of those to whom they
more immediately minister. Much less can we doubt of their knowing the thoughts
that are in our hearts at any particular time. What should hinder their seeing
them as they arise? Not the thin veil of flesh and blood. Can these intercept
the view of a spirit? Nay,
Walls within walls no more its passage bar, Than unopposing
space of liquid air.
Far more easily, then, and far more perfectly, than we can
read a man’s thoughts in his face, do these sagacious beings read our thoughts
just as they rise in our hearts; inasmuch as they see the kindred spirit, more
clearly than we see the body. If this seem strange to any who had not adverted
to it before, let him only consider: Suppose my spirit was out of the body,
could not an angel see my thoughts, even without my uttering any words? (if
words are used in the world of spirits.) And cannot that ministering spirit see
them just as well now that I am in the body? It seems, therefore, to be an
unquestionable truth, (although perhaps not commonly observed,) that angels know
not only the words and actions, but also the thoughts, of those to whom they
minister. And indeed without this knowledge, they would be very ill qualified to
perform various parts of their ministry.
3. And what an inconceivable degree of
wisdom must
they have acquired by the use of their amazing faculties, over and above that
with which they were originally endued, in the course of more than six thousand
years! (That they have existed so long we are assured; for they “sang together
when the foundations of the earth were laid.”) How immensely must their wisdom
have increased, during so long a period, not only by surveying the hearts and
ways of men in their successive generations, but by observing the works of God,
his works of creation, his works of providence, his works of grace; and, above
all, by “continually beholding the face of their Father which is in heaven!”
4. What measures of holiness, as well as wisdom, have
they derived from this inexhaustible ocean!
A boundless,
fathomless abyss, Without a bottom or a shore!
Are they not hence, by way of eminence, styled
the holy
angels? What goodness, what philanthropy, what love to man, have they drawn
from those rivers that are at his right hand! Such as we cannot conceive to be
exceeded by any but that of God our Saviour. And they are still drinking in more
love from this “Fountain of living water.”
5. Such is the knowledge and wisdom of the angels of God, as
we learn from his own oracles. Such are their holiness and goodness. And how
astonishing is their strength! Even a fallen angel is styled by an
inspired writer, “the prince of the power of the air.” How terrible a proof did
he give of this power, in suddenly raising the whirlwind, which “smote the four
corners of the house,” and destroyed all the children of Job at once! (Job 1.) That this was his work, we may easily learn
from the command to “save his life.” But he gave a far more terrible proof of
his strength, (if we suppose that “messenger of the Lord” to have been an evil
angel, as is not at all improbable,) when he smote with death a hundred,
four-score and five thousand Assyrians in one night; nay, possibly in one hour,
if not one moment. Yet a strength abundantly greater than this must have been
exerted by that angel (whether he was an angel of light or of darkness; which is
not determined by the text) who smote, in one hour, “all the first-born of
Egypt, both of man and beast.” For, considering the extent of the land of Egypt,
the immense populousness thereof, and the innumerable cattle fed in their
houses, and grazing in their fruitful fields; the men and beasts who were slain
in that night must have amounted to several millions! And if this be supposed to
have been an evil angel, must not a good angel be as strong, yea, stronger than
him? For surely any good angel must have more power than even an
archangel
ruined. And what power must the “four angels” in the Revelation have, who
were appointed to “keep the four winds of heaven!” There seems, therefore, no
extravagance in supposing, that, if God were pleased to permit, any of the
angels of light could heave the earth and all the planets out of their orbits;
yea, that he could arm himself with all these elements, and crush the whole
frame of nature. Indeed we do not know how to set any bounds to the strength of
these first-born children of God.
6. And although none but their great Creator is omnipresent;
although none beside him can ask, “Do not I fill heaven and earth?” yet,
undoubtedly, he has given an immense sphere of action (though not unbounded) to
created spirits. “The prince of the kingdom of Persia,” (mentioned Dan. 10:13, ) though probably an evil angel, seems
to have had a sphere of action, both of knowledge and power, as extensive as
that vast empire; and the same, if not greater, we may reasonably ascribe to the
good angel whom he withstood for one-and-twenty days.
7. The angels of God have great power, in particular, over
the human body; power either to cause or remove pain and diseases, either to
kill or to heal. They perfectly well understand whereof we are made; they know
all the springs of this curious machine, and can, doubtless, by God’s
permission, touch any of them, so as either to stop or restore its motion. Of
this power, even in an evil angel, we have a clear instance in the case of Job;
whom he “smote with sore boils” all over, “from the crown of the head to the
sole of the foot.” And in that instant, undoubtedly, he would have killed him,
if God had not saved his life. And, on the other hand, of the power of angels to
heal, we have a remarkable instance in the case of Daniel. There remained no
“strength in me,” said the prophet; “neither was there breath in me.” “Then one
came and touched me, and said, Peace be unto thee: Be strong, yea, be strong.
And when he had spoken unto me, I was strengthened.” (Dan. 10:17.) On the other hand, when they are
commissioned from above, may they not put a period to human life? There is
nothing improbable in what Dr. Parnell supposes the angel to say to the hermit,
concerning the death of the child: —
To all but thee, in fits he seem’d to go: And ‘twas my
ministry to deal the blow.
From this great truth, the heathen poets probably derived
their imagination, that Iris used to be sent down from heaven to discharge souls
out of their bodies. And perhaps the sudden death of many of the children of God
may be owing to the ministry of an angel.
II. So perfectly are the angels of God qualified for their
high office. It remains to inquire, how they discharge their office. How do they
minister to the heirs of salvation?
1. I will not say, that they do not minister at all to those
who, through their obstinate impenitence and unbelief, disinherit themselves of
the kingdom. This world is a world of mercy, wherein God pours down many
mercies, even on the evil and the unthankful. And many of these, it is probable,
are conveyed even to them by the ministry of angels; especially, so long as they
have any thought of God, or any fear of God before their eyes. But it is their
favourite employ, their peculiar office, to minister to the heirs of salvation;
to those who are now “saved by faith,” or at least seeking God in sincerity.
2. Is it not their first care to minister to our souls? But
we must not expect this will be done with observation; in such a manner,
as that we may clearly distinguish their working from the workings of our own
minds. We have no more reason to look for this, than for their appearing in a
visible shape. Without this, they can, in a thousand ways, apply to our
understanding. They may assist us in our search after truth, remove many doubts
and difficulties, throw light on what was before dark and obscure, and confirm
us in the truth that is after godliness. They may warn us of evil in disguise;
and place what is good, in a clear, strong light. They may gently move our will
to embrace what is good, and fly from that which is evil. They may, many times,
quicken our dull affections, increase our holy hope or filial fear, and assist
us more ardently to love Him who has first loved us. Yea, they may be sent of
God to answer that whole prayer, put into our mouths by pious Bishop Ken:
—
O may
thy angels, while I sleep, Around my bed their vigils keep; Their love angelical
instil, Stop
every avenue of ill! May they celestial joys rehearse, And thought to
thought with me converse!
Although the manner of this we shall not be able to explain
while we dwell in the body.
3. May they not minister also to us, with respect to our
bodies, in a thousand ways which we do not now understand? They may prevent our
falling into many dangers, which we are not sensible of; and may deliver us out
of many others, though we know not whence our deliverance comes. How many times
have we been strangely and unaccountably preserved, in sudden and dangerous
falls! And it is well if we did not impute that preservation to chance, or to
our own wisdom or strength. Not so: It was God gave his angels charge over us,
and in their hands they bore us up. Indeed, men of the world will always impute
such deliverances to accident or second causes. To these, possibly, some of them
might have imputed Daniel’s preservation in the lion’s den. But himself ascribes
it to the true cause: “My God hath sent his angel, and shut the lions’ mouths.”
(Dan. 6:22.)
4. When a violent disease, supposed to be incurable, is
totally and suddenly removed, it is by no means improbable that this is effected
by the ministry of an angel. And perhaps it is owing to the same cause, that a
remedy is unaccountably suggested either to the sick person, or some attending
upon him, by which he is entirely cured.
5. It seems, what are usually called divine dreams may be
frequently ascribed to angels. We have a remarkable instance of this kind
related by one that will hardly be thought an enthusiast; for he was a Heathen,
a Philosopher, and an Emperor: I mean Marcus Antoninus. “In his Meditations, he
solemnly thanks God for revealing to him, when he was at Cajeta, in a dream,
what totally cured the bloody flux; which none of his physicians were able to
heal.” And why may we not suppose, that God gave him this notice by the ministry
of an angel?
6. And how often does God deliver us from evil men by the
ministry of his angels! overturning whatever their rage, or malice, or subtlety
had plotted against us. These are about their bed, and about their path, and
privy to all their dark designs; and many of them, undoubtedly, they brought to
nought, by means that we think not of. Sometimes they blast their favourite
schemes in the beginning; sometimes, when they are just ripe for execution. And
this they can do by a thousand means that we are not aware of. They can check
them in their mid-career, by bereaving them of courage or strength; by striking
faintness through their loins, or turning their wisdom into foolishness.
Sometimes they bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and show us the
traps that are laid for our feet. In these and various other ways, they hew the
snares of the ungodly in pieces.
7. Another grand branch of their ministry is, to counterwork
evil angels; who are continually going about, not only as roaring lions, seeking
whom they may devour, but, more dangerously still, as angels of light, seeking
whom they may deceive. And how great is the number of these! Are they not as the
stars of heaven for multitude? How great is their subtlety! matured by the
experience of above six thousand years. How great is their strength! Only
inferior to that of the angels of God. The strongest of the sons of men are but
as grasshoppers before them. And what an advantage have they over us by that
single circumstance, that they are invisible! As we have not strength to repel
their force, so we have not skill to decline it. But the merciful Lord hath not
given us up to the will of our enemies: “His eyes,” that is, his holy angels,
“run to and fro over all the earth.” And if our eyes were opened, we should see,
“they are more that are for us, than they that are against us.” We should
see,
A
convoy attends, A ministering host of invisible friends.
And whenever those assault us in soul or in body, these are
able, willing, ready, to defend us; who are at least equally strong, equally
wise, and equally vigilant. And who can hurt us while we have armies of angels,
and the God of angels, on our side?
8. And we may make one general observation: Whatever
assistance God gives to men by men, the same, and frequently in a higher degree,
he gives to them by angels. Does he administer to us by men, light when we are
in darkness; joy, when we are in heaviness; deliverance, when we are in danger;
ease and health, when we are sick or in pain? It cannot be doubted but he
frequently conveys the same blessings by the ministry of angels: Not so sensibly
indeed, but full as effectually; though the messengers are not seen. Does he
frequently deliver us, by means of men, from the violence and subtlety of our
enemies? Many times he works the same deliverance by those invisible agents.
These shut the mouths of the human lions, so that they have no power to hurt us.
And frequently they join with our human friends, (although neither they nor we
are sensible of it,) giving them wisdom, courage, or strength, which all their
labour for us would be unsuccessful. Thus do they secretly minister, in
numberless instances, to the heirs of salvation; while we hear only the voices
of men, and see none but men round about us.
9. But does not the Scripture teach, “The help which is done
upon earth, God doeth it himself?” Most certainly he does. And he is able to do
it by his own immediate power. He has no need of using any instruments at all,
either in heaven or earth. He wants not either angels or men, to fulfil the
whole counsel of his will. But it is not his pleasure so to work. He never did;
and we may reasonably suppose he never will. He has always wrought by such
instruments as he pleases: But still it is God himself that doeth the work.
Whatever help, therefore, we have, either by angels or men, is as much the work
of God, as if he were to put forth his almighty arm, and work without any means
at all. But he has used them from the beginning of the world: In all ages he has
used the ministry both of men and angels. And hereby, especially, is seen “the
manifold wisdom of God in the Church.” Meantime the same glory redounds to him,
as if he used no instruments at all.
10. The grand reason why God is pleased to assist men by men,
rather than immediately by himself, is undoubtedly to endear us to each other by
these mutual good offices, in order to increase our happiness both in time and
eternity. And is it not for the same reason that God is pleased to give his
angels charge over us? namely, that he may endear us and them to each other;
that by the increase of our love and gratitude to them, we may find a
proportionable increase of happiness, when we meet in our Father’s kingdom. In
the mean time, though we may not worship them, (worship is due only to our
common Creator,) yet we may “esteem them very highly in love for their works’
sake.” And we may imitate them in all holiness; suiting our lives to the prayer
our Lord himself has taught us; labouring to do his will on earth, as angels do
it in heaven.
I cannot conclude this discourse better than in that
admirable Collect of our Church: —
“O everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the
services of angels and men in a wonderful manner; grant that as thy holy angels
alway do thee service in heaven, so by thy appointment they may succour and
defend us on earth, through Jesus Christ our Lord.”