Created Spirits
by John A. Hardon, S.J.
This issue of the Catholic Faith
concentrates on the angels. It is impossible to exaggerate the importance of understanding
the role of angels in our lives. A good index of loyalty to the Catholic faith is the
acceptance of angels as created by God. They are now living in two states of being:
Those in heaven, who also minister to our needs on earth; and those in hell, who are
demons and are bent on seducing the human race from its allegiance to God.
The existence of angels, their spiritual
nature, the fact that there are good and bad angels, the fall of the evil spirits of their
own free will, and the role of the devil in bringing about the fall of man are doctrines
of the Catholic faith solemnly proclaimed by the Church.
It is not surprising that there is a
flood of literature on the angels in our society today. As a people become more
materialistic, their native intelligence and the grace of God arouse them to a realization
that there is more to reality than just what is perceptible by the senses. They come to
realize that the dictionary definition of "nonsense" as "things of no
importance or value" is not true . The infinite Creator of the universe is not
perceptible by the senses. But who in his right mind would say He is nonsense.
The popes of the twentieth
century have been especially zealous in promoting devotioin to the angles, and warning the
faithful against the machinations of the evilk spirits.
No one has improved on St. Francis de
Sales' exhortation, "Make yourself familiar with the angles, and behold them
frequently in spirit for, without being seen, they are present to you."
After all, that is
what prayer is all about. It is communication of spirit with spirit. The more
we communicate with the angelic spirits who surround us, the more closley we draw to the
Almighty Spirit who is our God.
© Copyright 1998 Inter
Mirifica
(© Copyright 1998, As translated into HTML
for Catholic
Information Center on Internet by Jill Gooler
9/19/98)
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