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Postexilic Period:
During and after the Exile, under the influence of Babylonian and Persian systems of belief, a great change becomes noticeable in the angelic lore of the Jews. The more the monotheistic idea took hold of the people—permitting no being to interfere with the absolute supremacy of YHWH—the greater became the need of personifying the working forces of life, and of grouping them in ranks around the throne of God to form His royal court. His transcendent nature demanded a more definite system of heavenly functionaries attending Him and awaiting His commands. Gradually the celestial government was formed after the pattern of the earthly one, as it presented itself, imposing and well organized, at the Persian court.
Angelology Systematized.
But it is chiefly from a closer contact with Babylonia and her system of upper and lower spirits that the influx of new elements into Jewish Angelology can be traced; and this is confirmed by the rabbinical tradition, “The names of the angels were brought by the Jews from Babylonia” (Yer. R. H. i. 2, Gen. R. xlviii.). Ezekiel (ix. 2) already sees seven angels of God in human form (see Toy’s notes, “S. B. O. T.” xii.): six to do the work of destruction, and the seventh the heavenly scribe sent toward the Holy City. While all the revelations he receives come directly from the Lord, in one instance an angel in the form of a man acts as a divine interpreter, when the plan of a new city is mapped out for the prophet (Ezek. xl. 3). The prophet Zechariah, on the other hand, receives all his divine instructions no longer from God directly, but through “the angel of the Lord who talks with him” (Zech. i. 9; 14, ii. 2; iv. 1, 5; v. 10; compare also I Kings, xiii. 18). Instead of the Lord there appears to him “a man riding upon a red horse” as chief among those who “walk to and fro through the earth” (ib. i. 8-10). The four smiths (ib. ii. 3, Heb. [R. V. i. 20]; compare Ezek. xxi. 36) as well as “the man with a measuring line” (Zech. ii. 5, Heb. [A. V. 1]) are angels; and the scene of the accusation by Satan of the high priest Joshua while “standing before the angel of the Lord” (ib. iii. 1) must be placed in heaven, parallel to the scene in Job, i. 6-12, ii. 1-6. However, “the seven eyes of the Lord which run to and fro through the whole earth” (Zech. iv. 10), while betraying Babylonian influence, are only the symbolical representation of Divine Providence, and are not identical with the seven archangels or watchers, as Herzfeld (“Gesch. d. Volkes Israel,” iii. 287) and Kohut (“Jüd. Angelologie,” p. 6, note 17) believe.
It is in the Book of Daniel that a systematic classification of angels is first presented. In Josh. v. 15 reference is made to “the captain of the Lord’s host” (), still without name and individuality, and rather a mere manifestation of the Lord, as is seen from Josh. vi. 2. In Dan. x. 13, mention is made of “captains of the first rank,” A. V. “chief princes” (compare ib. xii. 1, “sar ha-gadol,” “the great captain,” A. V. “prince”) and “captains” (princes) of a lower rank, these being tutelary spirits of the nations, “the prince of Persia and the prince of Grecia” (ib. x. 20). Obviously, the underlying idea is the one expressed, if not already in Deut. xxxii. 8, at least in the Septuagint reading, “according to the number of the sons of God” (compare Targ. Yer. to the verse and to Gen. xi. 7, Ecclus. [Sirach] xvii. 17, Pirḳe R. El. xxiv., Isa xxiv. 21), that the seventy nations of Gen. x. each had their guardian angel in heaven; and that Michael, the guardian angel of Israel, ranks above the rest. He is one of the chief princes, his name signifying, “Who is like God?” being expressive of God’s greatness. The angel who interprets the visions to Zechariah appears in Dan. viii. 16, ix. 21, under the name of Gabriel (“the mighty man of God”). Above these two ranks a man-like being “clothed in linen,” whose fiery appearance overawes Daniel (viii. 15-17, x. 5-10, 16-18), and who swears “by him that liveth for ever” (xii. 7). He is probably identical with the angel who stands before the Lord,the malak panaw (Isa. lxiii. 9), according to the Masoretic text—not to be confounded, however, as is done by Oehler (p. 446) with “the son of man” mentioned in Dan. vii. 13, who is only a personification of Israel.
Read more: jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=1521&letter=A&search=angelology#ixzz0fSxKNTZf
During and after the Exile, under the influence of Babylonian and Persian systems of belief, a great change becomes noticeable in the angelic lore of the Jews. The more the monotheistic idea took hold of the people—permitting no being to interfere with the absolute supremacy of YHWH—the greater became the need of personifying the working forces of life, and of grouping them in ranks around the throne of God to form His royal court. His transcendent nature demanded a more definite system of heavenly functionaries attending Him and awaiting His commands. Gradually the celestial government was formed after the pattern of the earthly one, as it presented itself, imposing and well organized, at the Persian court.
Angelology Systematized.
But it is chiefly from a closer contact with Babylonia and her system of upper and lower spirits that the influx of new elements into Jewish Angelology can be traced; and this is confirmed by the rabbinical tradition, “The names of the angels were brought by the Jews from Babylonia” (Yer. R. H. i. 2, Gen. R. xlviii.). Ezekiel (ix. 2) already sees seven angels of God in human form (see Toy’s notes, “S. B. O. T.” xii.): six to do the work of destruction, and the seventh the heavenly scribe sent toward the Holy City. While all the revelations he receives come directly from the Lord, in one instance an angel in the form of a man acts as a divine interpreter, when the plan of a new city is mapped out for the prophet (Ezek. xl. 3). The prophet Zechariah, on the other hand, receives all his divine instructions no longer from God directly, but through “the angel of the Lord who talks with him” (Zech. i. 9; 14, ii. 2; iv. 1, 5; v. 10; compare also I Kings, xiii. 18). Instead of the Lord there appears to him “a man riding upon a red horse” as chief among those who “walk to and fro through the earth” (ib. i. 8-10). The four smiths (ib. ii. 3, Heb. [R. V. i. 20]; compare Ezek. xxi. 36) as well as “the man with a measuring line” (Zech. ii. 5, Heb. [A. V. 1]) are angels; and the scene of the accusation by Satan of the high priest Joshua while “standing before the angel of the Lord” (ib. iii. 1) must be placed in heaven, parallel to the scene in Job, i. 6-12, ii. 1-6. However, “the seven eyes of the Lord which run to and fro through the whole earth” (Zech. iv. 10), while betraying Babylonian influence, are only the symbolical representation of Divine Providence, and are not identical with the seven archangels or watchers, as Herzfeld (“Gesch. d. Volkes Israel,” iii. 287) and Kohut (“Jüd. Angelologie,” p. 6, note 17) believe.
It is in the Book of Daniel that a systematic classification of angels is first presented. In Josh. v. 15 reference is made to “the captain of the Lord’s host” (), still without name and individuality, and rather a mere manifestation of the Lord, as is seen from Josh. vi. 2. In Dan. x. 13, mention is made of “captains of the first rank,” A. V. “chief princes” (compare ib. xii. 1, “sar ha-gadol,” “the great captain,” A. V. “prince”) and “captains” (princes) of a lower rank, these being tutelary spirits of the nations, “the prince of Persia and the prince of Grecia” (ib. x. 20). Obviously, the underlying idea is the one expressed, if not already in Deut. xxxii. 8, at least in the Septuagint reading, “according to the number of the sons of God” (compare Targ. Yer. to the verse and to Gen. xi. 7, Ecclus. [Sirach] xvii. 17, Pirḳe R. El. xxiv., Isa xxiv. 21), that the seventy nations of Gen. x. each had their guardian angel in heaven; and that Michael, the guardian angel of Israel, ranks above the rest. He is one of the chief princes, his name signifying, “Who is like God?” being expressive of God’s greatness. The angel who interprets the visions to Zechariah appears in Dan. viii. 16, ix. 21, under the name of Gabriel (“the mighty man of God”). Above these two ranks a man-like being “clothed in linen,” whose fiery appearance overawes Daniel (viii. 15-17, x. 5-10, 16-18), and who swears “by him that liveth for ever” (xii. 7). He is probably identical with the angel who stands before the Lord,the malak panaw (Isa. lxiii. 9), according to the Masoretic text—not to be confounded, however, as is done by Oehler (p. 446) with “the son of man” mentioned in Dan. vii. 13, who is only a personification of Israel.
Read more: jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=1521&letter=A&search=angelology#ixzz0fSxKNTZf