| That
every individual
soul
has a guardian
angel
has never been
defined
by the
Church, and is, consequently, not an
article of
faith; but it is the "mind of the
Church",
as St.
Jerome expressed it: "how great the dignity of the
soul,
since each one has from his birth an
angel
commissioned to guard it." (Comm. in Matt., xviii, lib. II).
This
belief in guardian
angels
can be traced throughout all antiquity;
pagans,
like Menander and Plutarch (cf. Euseb., "Praep. Evang.", xii),
and
Neo-Platonists, like Plotinus, held it. It was also the
belief of the
Babylonians
and
Assyrians, as their monuments testify, for a figure of a
guardian
angel now in the British Museum once decorated an
Assyrian
palace, and might well serve for a modern representation; while
Nabopolassar, father of
Nebuchadnezzar the Great, says: "He (Marduk) sent a tutelary
deity (cherub)
of grace to go at my side; in everything that I did, he made my
work to succeed."
In the
Bible this
doctrine
is clearly discernible and its development is well marked. In
Genesis 28-29,
angels
not only act as the executors of
God's
wrath against the
cities of
the plain, but they deliver
Lot
from danger; in Exodus 12-13, an
angel
is the appointed leader of the host of
Israel,
and in 32:34,
God
says to
Moses: "my
angel
shall go before thee." At a much later period we have the story
of Tobias,
which might serve for a commentary on the words of Psalm 90:11:
"For he hath given his
angels
charge over thee; to keep thee in all thy ways." (Cf.
Psalm 33:8
and 34:5)
Lastly, in Daniel 10
angels
are entrusted with the care of particular districts; one is
called "prince of the
kingdom of
the Persians", and
Michael
is termed "one of the chief princes"; cf. Deuteronomy 32:8
(Septuagint); and Ecclesiasticus 17:17 (Septuagint).
This sums up the
Old
Testament
doctrine
on the point; it is clear that the
Old
Testament conceived of
God's
angels as His ministers who carried out his behests, and who
were at times given special commissions, regarding
men and
mundane affairs. There is no special teaching; the
doctrine
is rather taken for granted than expressly laid down; cf. II
Machabees 3:25; 10:29; 11:6; 15:23.
But in the
New
Testament the
doctrine
is stated with greater precision.
Angels
are everywhere the intermediaries between
God and
man;
and Christ
set a seal upon the
Old
Testament teaching: "See that you despise not one of these
little ones: for I say to you, that their
angels
in heaven
always see the face of my Father who is in
heaven."
(Matthew
18:10). A twofold aspect of the
doctrine
is here put before us: even little children have guardian
angels,
and these same
angels
lose not the
vision of
God by the fact that they have a mission to fulfil on earth.
Without dwelling on the various passages in the
New
Testament where the
doctrine
of guardian
angels is suggested, it may suffice to mention the
angel
who succoured
Christ
in the
garden, and the
angel
who delivered
St. Peter
from prison. Hebrews 1:14 puts the
doctrine
in its clearest light: "Are they not all ministering spirits,
sent to minister for them, who shall receive the inheritance of
salvation?"
This is the function of the guardian
angels;
they are to lead us, if we wish it, to the
Kingdom of
Heaven.
St.
Thomas teaches us (Summa
Theologica I:113:4) that only the lowest orders of
angels
are sent to
men, and consequently that they alone are our guardians,
though
Scotus and
Durandus
would rather say that any of the members of the
angelic
host may be sent to execute the Divine commands. Not only
the
baptized, but every
soul
that cometh into the world receives a guardian spirit;
St. Basil,
however (Homily on Psalm 43), and possibly
St.
Chrysostom (Homily 3 on Colossians) would hold that only
Christians
were so privileged. Our guardian
angels
can act upon our senses (I:111:4)
and upon our
imaginations (I:111:3)
-- not, however, upon our
wills,
except "per modum suadentis", viz. by working on our
intellect,
and thus upon our
will,
through the senses and the
imagination.
(I:106:2;
and I:111:2).
Finally, they are not separated from us after death, but remain
with us in
heaven, not, however, to help us attain
salvation,
but "ad aliquam illustrationem" (I:108:7,
ad 3am).
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