Difference between revisions of "Category:Angels & Demons (subject)"
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The Animal Apocalypse combines the two traditions. As four of the seven archangels are busy with the punishment of the Watchers, the remaining three can show Enoch to his watchtower. Together, all seven return at the time of the final judgment and lead the rebel angels before God’s throne where they are to receive their sentence (90:21). They remain unnamed. | The Animal Apocalypse combines the two traditions. As four of the seven archangels are busy with the punishment of the Watchers, the remaining three can show Enoch to his watchtower. Together, all seven return at the time of the final judgment and lead the rebel angels before God’s throne where they are to receive their sentence (90:21). They remain unnamed. | ||
The names of the four or seven archangels remains fluid in the Christian tradition, with the exception of [[Michael]], [[Gabriel]] and [[Raphael]]. Pseudo-Dionysius names the seven archangels as Michael, Gabriel, Raphael, Uriel, Camael, Jophiel, and Zadkiel. | The names of the four or seven archangels remains fluid in the Christian tradition, with the exception of [[Michael]], [[Gabriel]] and [[Raphael]]. Pseudo-Dionysius names the seven archangels as Michael, Gabriel, Raphael, Uriel, Camael, Jophiel, and Zadkiel. Pope Saint Gregory I lists them as Michael, Gabriel, Raphael, Uriel (or Anael), Simiel, Oriphiel, and Raguel. But there many other lists with different names, except the first three. In the Anglican tradition the "fourth" archangel is commonly identified as [[Uriel]]. | ||
====Bibliography==== | ====Bibliography==== |
Revision as of 07:58, 25 April 2019
Angels & Demons
Overview
The Four (or Seven) Archangels
As early as the Book of Watchers, there are lists that include either four (1 En 9:1) or seven archangels (1 En 20:1-8). The names of Gabriel, Michael and Raphael are present in both versions. As for the other archangels, sources offer a diversity of names.
In the Aramaic text of 1 En 9:1, the four archangels are: Michael, Gabriel, Raphael and Sariel. These are the names that are also attested in the War Scroll (1QM IX 15 16). The Greek version, however, has "Uriel" instead of Sariel (it could be a scribal error or an intentional alteration, due to to the prominent role of Uriel in 1En 19-21; 72-82). In the book of the Parables, "Phanuel" appears instead of "Sariel" / "Uriel" (1En 40:8 9; 53:6; 70:11, 16). By identifying the four archangels with the four heavenly beings known from Ezekiel’s inaugural vision, 1En 40:9 points to Ezek 1 as to the possible biblical background of the concept of four supreme angelic princes. A similar connection between the four archangels and the beings at the four sides of God’s throne is also drawn in Rabbinic writings (Num. Rab. 2:10; Pesiq. Rab. 46:3; Pirqe R. El. 4), with the sole exception that it is again "Uriel" and not "Phanuel" who is included in the lists.
The tradition of seven archangels also seems to come from Ezek 9. Here, the visionary beholds six men with deadly weapons in their hands who are accompanied by a further, different figure with a writing case (Ezek 9:2). The earliest extant list that contains their names is only attested in 1En 20. The chapter provides the names of the angels that accompany Enoch on his eastward journey which is reported in 1En 21 36. It mentions Uriel, Raphael, Raguel, Michael, Sariel, Gabriel and Remiel. The idea of seven archangels is stated in the Book of Tobit when Raphael reveals himself, declaring: "I am Raphael, one of the seven angels who stand in the glorious presence of the Lord, ready to serve him." (Tobit 12:15)
The Animal Apocalypse combines the two traditions. As four of the seven archangels are busy with the punishment of the Watchers, the remaining three can show Enoch to his watchtower. Together, all seven return at the time of the final judgment and lead the rebel angels before God’s throne where they are to receive their sentence (90:21). They remain unnamed.
The names of the four or seven archangels remains fluid in the Christian tradition, with the exception of Michael, Gabriel and Raphael. Pseudo-Dionysius names the seven archangels as Michael, Gabriel, Raphael, Uriel, Camael, Jophiel, and Zadkiel. Pope Saint Gregory I lists them as Michael, Gabriel, Raphael, Uriel (or Anael), Simiel, Oriphiel, and Raguel. But there many other lists with different names, except the first three. In the Anglican tradition the "fourth" archangel is commonly identified as Uriel.
Bibliography
- The Four (or Seven) Archangels in the First Book of Enoch and Early Jewish Writings of the Second Temple Period
In Depth
- Angels & Demons (sources) -- survey of ancient sources
Related categories
- Eschatology / Messiah / Devil
References
- Angels / Carol A. Newsom and Duane F. Watson / In: The Anchor Bible Dictionary (1992 Freedman), dictionary, 1:248-255
- Angels / Archie T. Wright / In: The Eerdmans Dictionary of Early Judaism (2010 Collins / Harlow), dictionary, 328-331
External links
- [ Wikipedia]
Pages in category "Angels & Demons (subject)"
The following 57 pages are in this category, out of 57 total.
1
- Fall of the Rebel Angels (1504 Bosch), art
- Fall of the Rebel Angels (1515 Bosch), art
- Michael and the Rebel Angels (1524 Beccafumi), art
- God the Father, Michael and the Rebel Angels (1528 Beccafumi), art
- Fall of the Rebellious Angels (1554 Floris), art
- Fall of the Rebel Angels (1562 Bruegel), art
- Von den heiligen Engeln (1565 Garcaeus), book
- Temptation of Christ (1581 Tintoretto), art
- Michael and the Rebel Angels (1610 Cesari), art
- Michael and the Rebel Angels (1659 Canuti), art
- Michael and the Rebel Angels (1663 Giordano), art
- Michael and the Rebel Angels (1666 Giordano), art
- Michael and the Rebel Angels (1685 Le Brun), art
- Michael and the Rebel Angels (1720 Ricci), art
- Fall of the Rebel Angels (1760 Mayr), art
- An Inquiry into the Scripture Meaning of the Word Satan, and Its Synonimous Terms (1772 Barker), book
- Michael and the Rebel Angels (1793 Unruhe), art
- Fallen Angel (1847 Cabanel), art
- Angels: An Investigation of What Is Taught in Scripture concerning Them (1852 Nihill), book
- Temptation of Christ (1854 Scheffer), art
- Michael and the Rebel Angels (1866 Doré), art
- Ueber die jüdische Angelologie und Daemonologie in ihrer Abhängigkeit vom Parsismus (1866 Kohut), book
- Die Reden des Satan in der Heiligen Schrift (1875 Hoelemann), book
- Die paulinische Angelologie und Dämonologie (The Pauline Angelology and Demonology / 1888 Everling), book
- Rebel Angels (1893 Albano), art
- Die Geisterwelt im Glauben des Paulus (1909 Dibelius), book
- Angels in the Book of Enoch (1930 Kaplan), essay
- The Angel of Peace--Uriel--Metatron (1931 Kaplan), essay
- Fallen Angels (1952 Bamberger), book
- St Michael's Victory Over The Devil (1958 Epstein), art
- Angels and Principalities (1981 Carr), book
- Demonology of the Early Christian World (1984 Ferguson), book
- The Demise of the Devil: Magic and the Demonic in Luke's Writings (1989 Garrett), book
- The Great Angel: A Study of Israel's Second God (1992 Barker), book
- Angels at Qumran (1992 Davidson), book
- Angeli e demoni: il dramma della storia tra il bene e il male (1992 Marconcini), book
- A Thousand Thousands Served Him: Exegesis and the Naming of Angels in Ancient Judaism (1993 Olyan), book
- Darien: Guardian Angel of Jesus (1994 Elwood), novel
- Powers of Evil: A Biblical Study of Satan and Demons (1995 Page), book
- Angel Veneration and Christology (1995 Stuckenbuck), book
- Jesus and the Angels: Angelology and the Christology of the Apocalypse of John (1997 Carrell), book
- Engel in der apokalyptischen Literatur und ihre theologische Relevanz (1998 Dörfel), book
- Michael and Christ (1999 Hannah), book
2
- Oriel's Travels (2003 Harrison), novel
- The Fall of the Angels (2004 Auffarth/Stuckenbruck), edited volume
- Wrestling with Angels (2004 Sullivan), book
- Women, Men, and Angels (2005 Wold), book
- The Birth of Satan: Tracing the Devil's Biblical Roots (2005 Wray / Mobley), book
- Angels: The Concept of Celestial Beings (2007 Reiterer / Nicklas / Schöpflin), edited volume
- Angels and Orthodoxy (2007 Tuschling), book
- No Ordinary Angel: Celestial Spirits and Christian Claims about Jesus (2008 Garrett), book
- Angels: A History (2010 Jones), book
- Dark Mirrors: Azazel and Satanael in Early Jewish Demonology (2011 Orlov), book
- The Greatest Mirror: Heavenly Counterparts in the Jewish Pseudepigrapha (2017 Orlov), book
- Yahoel and Metatron: Aural Apocalypticism and the Origins of Early Jewish Mysticism (2017 Orlov), book
- Demons and the Devil in Ancient and Medieval Christianity (2011 Vos, Otten), edited volume
- Angyalok az ókortól Szent Tamásig (Angels from the Antiquity to Saint Thomas of Aquin / 2011 Xeravits, Tamási, Szabó), edited volume
Media in category "Angels & Demons (subject)"
The following 8 files are in this category, out of 8 total.
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- 1995 * Pagels.jpg 324 × 499; 48 KB
- 2004 Auffarth (ed).jpg 400 × 611; 234 KB
- 2005 * Reed.jpg 375 × 500; 40 KB
- 2005 Wright.jpg 333 × 499; 20 KB
- 2019 Stokes.jpg 333 × 499; 27 KB
- 2020 Reed.jpg 314 × 499; 27 KB
- 2023 Hamori.jpg 400 × 619; 379 KB