**Whether Angels can be considered Saints
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**Objection 1.***It would seem that angels cannot be numbered among the Saints because during the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, the one presiding says:…and furthermore, at benediction the one presiding says (and the people respond):So these would seem to be two separate groups of people
**Objection 2.***Further, the Holy Church has shown throughout Salvation History that she only canonizes those who have died in the Grace of God. Angels have no capacity for death and therefore cannot be canonized as such.
Objection 3.Further, Holy Mother Church makes a distinction between those whom she knows, through:
objective means (posthumous miracles)
through her own power of binding and loosing (as is the case withSt. Pope John XXIII)
by right of dying specifically for Christ (martyrdom). In this case one does not have the ability to recant the grace freely given. This makes their death the sacrifice “beyond which there is*no greater love”.
On the Contrary*the Catholic Church, which apparently is the arbiter of who is numbered among the Saints, has consistently referred to the angels as Saints.Mor Gabriel Monestaryis one of the oldest surviving Churches in the world, dedicated to St. Gabriel.
**I answer that,the term saint is a qualifier used tomean holybut a canonized Saint is an office, as is Angel. Angel is a job title meaningmessenger of God. Just as a person can be both a carpenter and a father, one can be an Angel and a Saint.
Reply to Objection 1*the words used in the sacred liturgies, whereas they are unsurpassed in beauty and reverence, are not, in and of themselves, theological treatises. Therefore, if you hear Jesus referred to as thrice Holy, that isn’t to say He isn’t also holy four times over as well.
Reply to Objection 2It is true that the relatively recently establishednorms of canonization*are more or less ignored when it comes to Biblical figures, when it comes to those who do not need the grace of Christ’s redemption to save them from death, St. Thomas Aquinqs says and so he lumps us all together in Heaven where Christ is the Head and we all (the Church) are His Body. And so, a thing that separates us from the Angels (the ability to die) does not separate us from becoming Saints any more than it separates Angels from being Saints.
**Reply to Objection 3.**Lastly, the Church, through Holy Scripture knows which of the Angels clung to the true light (The Trinity) or the false light (Lucifer) because those who clung to the truth are the heroes of the Bible. St. Raphael aids Tobias on his journey and saves him, his future wife’s honor and his father. St. Michael wrested from Lucifer the body of Moses and preserved the holy man from scorn. St. Gabriel, best of all, announced the birth of Christ to Mary. But, to even accomplish this task, they must have gotten their orders from God Himself and therefore “merited beatitude” asthe Angel I c Doctor says:…