September 29: Feast of archangels
Michael, Gabriel and Raphael
The Responsorial (Psalm 138) invites us: “In
the sight of the angels I will sing your praises, Lord.” Daniel 7:9-14 describes
what we will praise God for: the outcome of our stewardship:
I saw
one like a human being coming with the clouds of heaven.... To him was given
dominion and glory and kingship... that shall never be destroyed.
The
word “angel” means “messenger.” Since the Church “exists to evangelize” (Pope
Paul VI), all Christians are “sent” as “ev-angel-ists.”
(“Ev-“ is from the Greek “eu,” meaning “good). We are all “angels” of the Good
News, commissioned and empowered for this by our baptismal consecration as prophets, priests, and kings
(stewards).
Today
the Church celebrates three angels who could well be the patrons of these three
functions of our mission.
As prophets we live “in the sight of the
angel” Gabriel, whose name means “El
(God) is strong.” Gabriel is an “interpreting angel” who explains things to the
prophets (see Daniel 8:16-26,
9:21-27. For the explanations here, see McKenzie, S.J., Dictionary of the Bible, and Leon-Dufour, S.J., Dictionary of the New Testament). He is
“the angel charged with the meaning of visions and of the unfolding of
history.” As prophets we are called to be strong in faith, “giving flesh” to God’s words in our moment of history
through changes that embody their meaning in action. Gabriel called Mary to
give flesh to the Word himself in a response of faith that changed l of human
history.
As priests we are consecrated to heal
through love, and to express our inner life to God and
others. And so we live “in the sight of” Raphael, whose name means “El heals.” Raphael is “the healer, the
expeller of demons... one of the seven angels who offer the prayers of God’s
people and enter the presence of the Holy One.”
As stewards of Christ’s kingship we are conscious of living “in the sight of” Michael,
whose name is the challenge, “Who is like El?”
He is “the ‘great prince who stands over your people’.... the heavenly spirit
who watches over the Jews.... the leader of the angelic hosts in the battle
between the dragon and his angels. In the Christian liturgy Michael is the
protector of the Church and the angel who escorts the souls of the departed
into heaven.” He gives us hope in our
task of bringing about change in the Church and the world (see Daniel 10:21, 12:1; Revelation 12:7).
In
Scripture “there is not always a sharp distinction between the angel as a
personal being and as a personification of the divine word or the divine
action.” We who have “become Christ,” sent as his risen body to reveal his
continuing presence and action on earth, should strive to make the distinction
between what we are as persons and what we do in action less and less visible
in our lives. As “angels” we say with Paul, “It is no longer I who live, but it
is Christ who lives in me” (Galatians 2:20).
As God
incarnate, the Son made flesh, Jesus is the “link” between heaven and earth. In
John
1:47-51 he tells Nathanael, “You will see heaven opened and the angels of
God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man” as they did on “Jacob’s
ladder” (Genesis 28:12). We are sent
as prophets, priests and stewards of
his kingship to be the link between the historical Jesus, who took flesh in and
of Mary, and the victorious Jesus who will come at the end of time.
Initiative: Be an
angel. Ev-angel-ize by embodying your
faith as prophet, expressing love as priest, persevering in hope as steward of the Kingdom.
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