D
Dorothy
Guest
And, in the prayer to our Guardian Angel we start by saying…“Angel of God” .
Before I pray to my angel I say…“Guardian Angel”.
Before I pray to my angel I say…“Guardian Angel”.
I agree.First, let me begin by saying that I haven’t named my guardian angel and I always thought the practice was a bit strange.
Here is the official document on the Vatican websiteThe article quotes, out of context, a Vatican document entitled “*Directory on Popular Piety and the Liturgy”. *According to the quote, which is given with no context, the practice is discouraged, not forbidden. The level of the authority of the document is not given.
In the light of this authoritative teaching and of other pronouncements of the Church’s Magisterium on the pious practices of the Christian people, and drawing on pastoral cases that have emerged in recent years, the Plenary of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, held September 26-28 2001, approved this present Directory which considers, in general terms, the relationship between Liturgy and popular piety, restates the principles regulating that nexus, and stipulates guidelines for their fruitful implementation in the particular Churches, in accordance with their specific traditions. By cultivation of a positive and encouraging pastoral stance towards popular piety, therefore, it for the Bishops in a special way to value popular piety, whose fruits have been, and remain, of major importance in conserving the faith of the Christian people.
Having received the approval of the Supreme Pontiff JOHN PAUL II to publish this “Directory on Popular Piety. Principles and Guidelines” (Letter of the Secretariat of State, Prot. N. 497.514 of 14 December 2001), the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments is pleased to publish it in the hope that both Pastors and faithful may draw from this instrument, encouragement to grow in Christ, through him and with him, in the Holy Spirit to the praise of God the Father in heaven.
Anything contrary not withstanding.
From the offices of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, 17 December 2001.
The relevant sectionJorge A. Card. Medina Estévez
Prefect
Popular piety encompasses many forms of devotion to the Guardian Angels. St. Basil Great (+378) taught that “each and every member of the faithful has a Guardian Angel to protect, guard and guide them through life”(292). This ancient teaching was consolidated by biblical and patristic sources and lies behind many forms of piety. St. Bernard of Clarivaux (+1153) was a great master and a notable promoter of devotion to the Guardian Angels. For him, they were a proof “that heaven denies us nothing that assists us”, and hence, “these celestial spirits have been placed at our sides to protect us, instruct us and to guide us”(293).
Devotion to the Holy Angels gives rise to a certain form of the Christian life which is characterized by:
• devout gratitude to God for having placed these heavenly spirits of great sanctity and dignity at the service of man;
• an attitude of devotion deriving from the knowledge of living constantly in the presence of the Holy Angels of God;- serenity and confidence in facing difficult situations, since the Lord guides and protects the faithful in the way of justice through the ministry of His Holy Angels.Among the prayers to the Guardian Angels the Angele Dei(294) is especially popular, and is often recited by families at morning and evening prayers, or at the recitation of the Angelus
Popular devotion to the Holy Angels, which is legitimate and good, can, however, also give rise to possible deviations:
• when, as sometimes can happen, the faithful are taken by the idea that the world is subject to demiurgical struggles, or an incessant battle between good and evil spirits, or Angels and daemons, in which man is left at the mercy of superior forces and over which he is helpless; such cosmologies bear little relation to the true Gospel vision of the struggle to overcome the Devil, which requires moral commitment, a fundamental option for the Gospel, humility and prayer;
• when the daily events of life, which have nothing or little to do with our progressive maturing on the journey towards Christ are read schematically or simplistically, indeed childishly, so as to ascribe all setbacks to the Devil and all success to the Guardian Angels. The practice of assigning names to the Holy Angels should be discouraged, except in the cases of Gabriel, Raphael and Michael whose names are contained in Holy Scripture.
Loving Disciple, I noticed your post in particular as just the other day I had read a blog entry from someone about the name “Ariel” - I will quote below but please do go and read the original post by blogger ‘supertradmum’.and My Guardian Angel and I have agreed on the name Ariel. If the Angel gives it’s constant to be called something is that a sin I wonder.
The Second point I want to make is very serious. There is a “church” in America, based on New Age heresies, which honors an angel named Ariel. There is no angel in the Catholic Tradition by that name, although it is used, of course, in literature. A church in the Quad-City area of Iowa and Illinois claims that Ariel has appeared and given special, that is Gnostic, knowledge to the people of that congreagation. Ariel is not an angel of the main Judeo-Christian tradition, but part ofcabal-ismand other forms of mysticism, which are not Christian.*
Confusion reigns. A daughter of a friend of mine was given a statue, bought at a Catholic religious supply shop, labeled “Ariel, Patron of Confirmation”. NO. NO, NO.
I explained that this angel, especially in the New Age mysticism of the local church in her area, could very well be an evil demon, or, at best, a hallucination. That someone is making statues,labelingthese as partons of Confirmation, and selling these in a Catholic shop, makes me wonder as to the intelligence or real spirituality of the makers, suppliers, and sellers.
Be on your guard for false teachings. Again, New Age groups are susceptible to this type of manifestation, as these “chuches” tend towards Gnosticism.
Link to original post on etheldredasplace.Again, do not buy anything “iffy” just because it is popular. I have written on this before, but the great angels in the window at St. Mary of the Angels reminded me both of the glory and the dangers of angels, of whom there are, dear readers, two varieties-those from heaven and those from hell.
You do realize private revelation and disobedience are not synonymous with each other, right? There have been many private revelations over the years that have been denounced by the Church, only to be rescinded at a later date once the understanding of their purpose becomes clear. Discovering a name does not necessarily imply authority over another. Do you have authority over friends, parents, children, or family because you know their names?So the Church has forbidden us to do something, and speaks with the authority given to her by Christ, the authority to bind and loose, and so people will continue with private revelation and disobedience “as long as God/the angel says it’s OK?” God has said it’s not OK! Any angel who whispers in your ear that it’s OK is not of God!
If the Pope has advised that you don’t do it then just be obedient. Your angel would approve. That was easy!I wonder if I have broken this rule.and My Guardian Angel and I have agreed on the name Ariel. If the Angel gives it’s constant to be called something is that a sin I wonder.
Well, this pope today has apparently repudiated the “discouragement” of this practice because he recounted tenderly the letter of a young disabled boy who named his angel Eusebius.If the Pope has advised that you don’t do it then just be obedient. Your angel would approve. That was easy!
Ah well, I didn’t know that when I was a child and I named my guardian angel. Oh well.Naming Your Guardian Angel: Don’t Do It
by Dr. Taylor Marshall
You are not allowed to name your Guardian Angel. Some Catholics practice a devotion of giving personal names to their guardian angels. However, the Holy See does not allow this practice and formally discourages it. Read More]