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St_Redemption
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My wife just asked me this question and I could only name two, St Michael and Gabriel. What are some of the others which are mentioned Biblically or through Church teaching/doctorine?
Raphael and LuciferMy wife just asked me this question and I could only name two, St Michael and Gabriel. What are some of the others which are mentioned Biblically or through Church teaching/doctorine?
You are correct. Those three are in the Catholic bible.I think that Catholic teaching only names three: Sts Michael, Gabriel, and Raphael.
Good point. I sincerely hope that this doesn’t get into a nit-picky dialogue.And Eastern Catholics, which means he is recognized by the Church.
Here we go again…![]()
Gabriel is known for being God’s primary messenger - I read somewhere that after Lucifer fell (and became Satan), he took Lucifer’s place. Regardless, Gabriel first appears in the Book of Daniel, announcing the “Seventy weeks (ie, 490) of years” before the coming of the messianic age following the return of the exiles. Seriously. And then, he announces to Mary that the fulfillment of said prophecy will start with her - close to the number of years put forth in the Book of Daniel (and Jesus quite often uses Daniel’s language “Son of Man” to refer to Himself).Can anyone tell me what the angels are known for? I know Gabriel came to Mary. Was Michael guarding the gates of heaven?
Thanks
St. Michael the Archangel stood up to Lucifer who did not want to serve, and said “Who is like God?”Can anyone tell me what the angels are known for? I know Gabriel came to Mary. Was Michael guarding the gates of heaven?
Thanks
Lucifer was his name before he fell and took some angels with him for refusing to serve Jesus. His name changed as he changed from an angel of incredible beauty, intelligence and light to Satan.Interesting how Lucifer still crops up.
Where is Lucifer mentioned as the name of an angel?
Yes, I’ve heard this all since I was a child.Lucifer was his name before he fell and took some angels with him for refusing to serve Jesus. His name changed as he changed from an angel of incredible beauty, intelligence and light to Satan.
Throughout Sacred Scripture, we find mention of Satan, the devil. The word Satan comes from the Hebrew word , meaning to oppose, to harass someone; so Satan would be the tempter, the one to make up trip and fall, the one to turn us from God. The word devil is derived from the Greek , meaning an accuser, a slanderer. Other synonyms for Satan in Sacred Scripture are the Evil One, Beelzebub, the Accuser, the Tempter, the Great Dragon and the Ancient Serpent. Even Lord of the Flies.
We believe that in the beginning, God created Satan as a good angel: (Lucifer) the Lateran Council IV (1215) stated, “The devil and the other demons were indeed created naturally good by God, but they became evil by their own doing.” These angels irrevocably chose through their free will to rebel against God and not to serve Him. For this rebellion, they were cast into hell. Sacred Scripture attests to this belief. Our Lord, speaking of the final judgment, said, “Then (the Son of Man) will say to those on His left, ‘Out of My sight, you condemned, into that everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels’” (Mt 25:41).
Lucifer means Light…perhaps that name was given to him because he was so beautiful and full of the Light of God at his beginning?Yes, I’ve heard this all since I was a child.
I accept that the Devil is a fallen angel. This is affirmed by both Scripture and Tradition and is of the faith.
But where is it stated this angel’s name was Lucifer?
It still doesn’t answer the question as where we even got that name.Lucifer means Light…perhaps that name was given to him because he was so beautiful and full of the Light of God at his beginning?
I believe the link I provided mentioned it.Yes, I’ve heard this all since I was a child.
I accept that the Devil is a fallen angel. This is affirmed by both Scripture and Tradition and is of the faith.
But where is it stated this angel’s name was Lucifer?
I checked, but it didn’t give a source. It just repeated the claim as fact, that the devil’s name before the fall was Lucifer. But there’s no backing from either Scripture of Magisterial pronouncements.I believe the link I provided mentioned it.
Catholic Encyclopedia: DevilThe Syriac version and the version of Aquila derive the Hebrew noun helel from the verb yalal, “to lament”; St. Jerome agrees with them (In Isaiah 1.14), and makes Lucifer the name of the principal fallen angel who must lament the loss of his original glory bright as the morning star. In Christian tradition this meaning of Lucifer has prevailed; the Fathers maintain that Lucifer is not the proper name of the devil, but denotes only the state from which he has fallen (Petavius, De Angelis, III, iii, 4).
In the Old Testament we have a brief reference to the Fall in Job 4:18: “In his angels he found wickedness”. But to this must be added the two classic texts in the prophets:
How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, who didst rise in the morning? how art thou fallen to the earth, that didst wound the nations? And thou saidst in thy heart: I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God, I will sit in the mountain of the covenant, in the sides of the north. I will ascend above the height of the clouds, I will be like the most High. But yet thou shalt be brought down to hell, into the depth of the pit. (Isaiah 14:12-15)
Demons are the Angels Who Fell by Their Disobedience to the Will of God, by Fr. John A. Hardon, S.J.This parable of the prophet is expressly directed against the King of Babylon, but both the early Fathers and later Catholic commentators agree in understanding it as applying with deeper significance to the fall of the rebel angel. And the older commentators generally consider that this interpretation is confirmed by the words of Our Lord to his disciples: “I saw Satan like lightning falling from heaven” (Luke 10:18). For these words were regarded as a rebuke to the disciples, who were thus warned of the danger of pride by being reminded of the fall of Lucifer. But modern commentators take this text in a different sense, and refer it not to the original fall of Satan, but his overthrow by the faith of the disciples, who cast out devils in the name of their Master. And this new interpretation, as Schanz observes, is more in keeping with the context.
The study of the evil spirit is the science of demonology. As we enter this dark ocean, it is important to understand our vocabulary. Since the dawn of revealed history, believers in the one true God have used four principal names for the angels who fell from Divine friendship. They are called demons, or devils, or Satan, or Lucifer.
Lucifer. In the common teaching of the Fathers of the Church, the name “Lucifer” is identified with Satan, the leader of the fallen angels. In the Church’s writings, Lucifer is the “Prince of Darkness,” who before he fell was an angel of light. The name comes from the Latin lucifer, “light bearer.”