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The Angels

The English word “angel” is derived from the Greek word “angelos,” and the Greek word, in turn, comes from the Hebrew word “Mal’ akh,” which stands for messenger. Throughout Scripture God’s angels are described as heavenly messengers, that act under God’s divine command to serve His perfect purposes and designs and to reflect His goodness, His majesty and His holiness. Angels are pure spirit creatures, created very good by God on the day that He created the heavens and the Earth, ex-nihilo. 

Pure Spirits

To say that angels are pure spirit beings is not to say that angels are of the same substance or essence of God. God is not an angel, and angels are neither an extension of God nor are they gods themselves. Scriptural passages that describe individuals who saw “the angel of the Lord”, as having seen God are best understood as theophanies or Christophanies, manifested appearances of God (Judges 13:21-22). 

Therefore, to say that angels are pure spirit beings is simply to say that angels are incorporeal creatures that inhabit the spiritual realm and as all creatures – having a beginning – angels are subject to both some form of time and space and are therefore neither Omnipresent nor eternal, as in having always existed.

Without Body

Although angels are capable of being temporarily manifest in various physical forms, angels – by the nature of spirit – (could be said to have a soul) are without bodily form and are therefore invisible. Hence, angels are genderless, they do not marry nor do they procreate and while angels are neither immortal nor incorruptible, neither do they -naturally – die or decay. Angels were given to have the attributes of personhood, will and emotion and they were endowed with wisdom, intelligence and power nearer in perfection and nature to God, than any other being created from nothingness. The implication of Hebrews 2:6-7 is not that man will become like or equal to the angels. Humans will never become angels after they die, and angels will never become humans.  Instead, the implication is that man will surpass the angels in glory and honor, in relationship, worship and service to God.   

Angels Have Limitation – Not Perfect

On the premise that God cannot create from nothingness – not derived of Himself – something that is equal to or greater than Himself,  it follows then that angels may be considered the greatest being God can create ex-nihilo. Many of the early church fathers – like Thomas Aquinas – understood angels to be the highest in hierarchy of God’s created beings. With this said, let’s say that the heavenly creatures known as angels – “for now” –  have greater ability to withstand, endure and draw nearer – have greater exposure – to God’s full glory than we as mere fleshly humans. However, even their exposure to and comprehension of God’s infinite full glory is limited (1 Peter 1:12).  These limitations are equally illustrated in Isaiah’s prophetic vision in which he saw seraphim – a type of angel – standing in close proximity to God and covering their faces and feet with their wings (Isaiah 6:2). This passage not only expresses their reverence and awe of God, but it also denotes their act of having to shield themselves from the radiance of God’s glory.

Now let’s go to the extreme among the angels and say that Lucifer – once an angel –  who prior to his fall from grace and becoming Satan –represented the absolute highest order of being that God can create from nothingness, ex-nihilo (Ezekiel 28:12-15).  While this passage addresses the king of Tyre, it provides a dual reference to Satan, the fallen spirit being who clandestinely operated behind the king of Tyre. The phrase “seal of perfection” suggests not that Lucifer was perfect as God is perfect but instead Lucifer was the epitome of an entity created very good, without flaw as per God’s perfect design and perfect purposes (Ezekiel 16:14). That Scripture describes Lucifer as having walked “in the midst of stones of fire” could be understood to mean that – in terms of hierarchy, the angel known as Lucifer – from among all created beings – had the most intimate knowledge, access and exposure to God’s glory.

Despite angels having greater, more intimate knowledge and exposure to God’s full glory, Lucifer and one third of the angels chose to reject and rebel – do mutiny – against God. Surely, unless one believes angels to somehow be inane – to have less intelligence or less knowledge and exposure to God’s glory than humans – one would be more than hard-pressed to explain how Satan and one third of these otherwise super intelligent beings – if having had unlimited knowledge of and exposure to the full glory of God – could have ever considered rebellion against God to be anything but futile. Therefore, when we read verses that describe angels as having seen the face of God, they must be understood as an idiom – a Hebrew expression – used to convey unmediated communication and not unlimited knowledge or exposure to the infinite glory of God (Matthew 18:10-11). 

Fallen Angels Cannot be Redeemed

For now, the heavenly creatures – spirit beings – known as angels have by their very nature, greater knowledge and exposure to God’s full glory than we have as corporeal creatures limited by flesh. Although Satan and demons are no longer regarded as angels, no longer messengers of, connected with or in communion with God and even though they may be considered dead, cut-off to God, they still exist as spirit beings. Angels of God need no salvation, Satan and his army of demons are without any possibility of salvation.

Angels were from the beginning created as Spirit Beings to have greater exposure and knowledge of God’s glory than creatures of flesh. With that greater ability, greater exposure, greater awareness, greater wisdom and greater knowledge comes greater responsibility. With greater responsibility comes greater accountability and liability (Luke 12:48). Angels, being created incorporeally – without body, without flesh – means there is no physical life in which one can give in payment for the debt of sin. There is no physical life to give in sacrifice. In other words, if God were to incarnate Himself as an angel, He would be incarnate as a being that cannot be put to death and therefore He could not make Himself a sacrifice for the sins of the fallen angels. Therefore, Fallen Angels – by their very nature of being spirit / without body – cannot be redeemed.

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