Daily Archives: June 5, 2012

Man in Relation to the Angels

Hello, friends, long time no see! Tonight I am answering a couple questions the very patient Jose’ asked me MONTHS ago!

Here is his question:

The question is on the Angels and where we stand in relation to them in the “Great Hierarchy”.


When I speak to most Protestants I find that they believe that it is man’s destiny to surpass Angels and stand nearer to God than they. Essentially, that Angels are closer to God FOR NOW because of man’s fallen nature, but that man was once closer to God than Angels in the time of Adam and Eve, and that humans shall be raised higher than Angels once again one day. Man, as God originally made him, is higher than the Angels.


Yet, as I watch EWTN I often find individual Theologian’s often putting Angels closer to God than man, by nature. In Psalm 8 we find a line that says “Only a Little lower than the Angels you made us”, and that to me sort of sealed the deal in favor of Angels, by nature, being closer to God. Recently, though, I have found that not all translators say the same in that Psalm. Some Translators actually say the PSalmist writes “Only a little lower than GOD you made us.” …That tips the scale in favor of my Protestant friends’ belief that MAN has the higher nature, fallen as it currently is. What do you think?

Great question!

To answer it I looked not only to Sacred Scripture, but also to the Angelic Doctor, St. Thomas Aquinas who, of course, is far wiser than I am!

First, to Scripture. I went to my 1966 Jerusalem Bible and inquired there first, with the passage in question: Psalm 8:5.

The Psalm states:

YHWH, our Lord,
how great your name throughout the earth!
Above the heavens is your majesty chanted
by the mouths of children, babes in arms.
You set your stronghold firm against your foes
to subdue enemies and rebels.
I look up at your heavens, made by your fingers,
at the moon and stars you set in place -
ah, what is man that you should spare a thought for him,
the son of man that you should care for him?
Yet you have made him little less than a god,
you have crowned him with glory and splendour
made him lord over the work of your hands,

set all things under his feet,
sheep and oxen, all these
yes, wild animals too,
birds in the air, fish in the sea
travelling the paths of the ocean.
YHWH, our Lord,
how great your name throughout the earth!

Now that we have the Psalm in front of us, we can consider the proper context. Notice first that the word “god” in this translation is not capitalized. The footnote for verse 8 states, “”The author is thinkin gof man in comparison with the mysterious beings that constitute the court of YHWH,

Ps 29:1+

, the ‘angels’ of Greek and Vulg. see Cf.

Ps 45:6+

With those directions, I look to Psalm 29:1:

“Pay tribute to Yahweh, you sons of God,
tribute to Yahewh of glory and power,
tribute to Yahweh of the glory of his name,
worship Yahweh in his sacred court.”


Psalm 45:6

“Your throne, God, shall last for ever and ever…”

Then I went to look at the margin to see what directions this Bible gives me for understanding Psalm 8:5.

It references Gen 1:26-28:

“God said, ‘Let us make man in our own image, in the likeness of ourselves, and let them be masters of the fish of the sea, the birds of heaven, the cattle, all the wold beasts and all the reptiles that crawl upon the earth.”

and

Wisdom 2:23:

“Yet God did make man imperishable,
he made him in the image of his own nature;
it was the devil’s envy that brought death into the world,
as those who are his partners will discover.”

and

Sirach (Ecclesiasticus) 17:1-4

“The Lord fashioned man from the earth,
to consign him back to it.
He gave them so many days’ determined time,
he gave them authority over everything on earth.”

Taking all those scriptures into consideration, it is clear that God did not establish Man to be above the angels. First, in looking at the Psalm itself in its full context, the Psalm indicates Man was granted dominion over the earth and the creatures of the earth; to wit, all the works of God’s hands here on earth. Man, too, was fashioned from the earth he rules.

Looking also at the fact that the word “god” is not capitalized, the footnotes in the Bible ring true; the word is not referencing the Lord, and doesn’t use the Tetragrammaton as it uses throughout the rest of the Psalm when speaking of the Lord. Rather, the reference to “mysterious beings” and the common language of the Greeks for “gods”, used poetically to mean “angels” in the Hebrew context does make sense. Therefore, the Psalmist was not saying that Man had ever been higher than the angels. If so, where is the reference to Man being set above the angels? It isn’t there.

Secondly, then, I looked to St. Thomas Aquinas. In the Summa Theologica, Q108. Article 8, Reply 2, he states, “The angels according to the order of nature are between us and God”.

Now, that brings us to your second question:

I am aware that there is ONE human being that has risen above the Angels. That is, of course, the Queen of Angels the Holy Virgin Mary. Yet, I must consider that she is hardly the answer to that question. She is, after all, a VERY VERY SPECIAL human being. God touched her nature in a very special way at her very Conception. She had a very special relationship to God in His human life on Earth. And of course there is her EXTRAORDINARY virtue to consider. She has the whole package in a way no other human, that isn’t also God, has had or will ever have again. If we were talking math and statistics, I would consider the Virgin Mary an OUTLYER than skews the results. I can’t help but think, “Yeah, SHE is held in Higher esteem by our Lord than the Angels, but….Who ELSE could God hold closer to our older brothers, the Angels, than she? There can’t be anyone else.”

The Angels were created as pure spirit and in the beginning, had free will. It was the creation of Man and God’s plan of salvation that brought about the division of angels and demons; those who, led by Lucifer, cried out, “Non serviam! I will not serve!” made their final choice in that moment. That was the, for lack of a better term (in my vocabulary in any case) the particular judgment of the spiritual beings we call “Angels”. After that point, Angels no longer had free will because it was not and is not necessary. Angels are more intelligent than we are, they are always privy to the Divine Processions, always gaze upon the face of God, and always did.

Man was not created with the intelligence, or even the capacity for the intelligence of the Angels. Man was never higher than the angels (except for Mary).

As you alluded to, through the action of the Passion, Death, and Resurrection of Christ, God did indeed create Mary immaculately, preserving her from the stain of sin, and to her, He gave jurisdiction over the Angels. This is why she is called “Queen of the Angels” in one of her titles. It is why in art that the Archangel Gabriel kneels before her; the art is revealing this truth of who she was and more importantly, who she was asked to bear. It was her fiat that brought salvation into the world, and for this reason, she has been elevated the Spouse of the Holy Spirit, Queen of Angels, Queen of Heaven.

Keep in mind that Mary also had free will; she could have refused the Angel’s message. She could have said “no”. But no, she bowed her head and in joyful humility proclaimed, “I am the handmaid of the Lord. Be it done unto me according to Thy Word.”

And the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us.

We know how this story ends!

I hope that helps, Jose, and I hope my very brief, in-a-nutshell explanation suffices! Please let me know where I have been unclear or of course, if I botched an explanation. This, of course, is not meant to be an entire theology of the angels, but there are some wonderful books out there that cover the subject. I believe. Fr. Groeschel has one and I can think of a few others as well. Unfortunately I can’t recall their titles so hopefully someone will happen along and help us out!

Excerpt from:  

Man in Relation to the Angels

Ministry in the archdiocese of Osaka

When I came back after the sabbatical in 2009, the administration of our delegation thought it would be good for me to be in Itami, so that I could get myself involved in different works of the archdiocese of Osaka. Also, since we decided to build a “center” (new rectory) in Itami where some Oblates reside in community and work out of this place, I was assigned there.

It happened that in January 2010 when I went to live in Itami the archbishop of Osaka was looking for a priest to help two Christian communities. Knowing that team ministry is very common in Osaka especially in Kobe deanery, I was willing to help the bishop and did so BUT without a proper contract.

For the last two years (2010-2012) I have been helping Christian communities in Sanda & Sasayama. These are communities that were founded by the Paris missionary fathers, whose good work has been carried out by different priests, religious and laity for the last 60 years! I was happy to be part of that, though it was only for a short period of time.

A year ago the archbishop of Osaka asked me whether I would be willing to function as an “administrator” in Sanda. Also, since the present rectory in Sanda was not livable, he suggested that I live in an apartment close to the church. This did not sound like a good idea to me, because I am more for team ministry. I must also say that I wanted to become a religious because of community, and so do not want to live alone in an apartment.

I shared my thoughts and feelings with the council, and the council decided to write a letter to the bishop requesting him to find a replacement for me. From this spring a new team has been formed to take care of Sanda and Sasayama.

As a priest I never had any parish experience in Sri Lanka. For two years after my ordination I was involved in the ministry to the sick, after which I came to Japan. It is here in Japan that I really experienced parish ministry. Now for almost 12 years I have been doing it as a full timer in 3 different places. I like parish ministry and I enjoy doing it. But now I feel that I should give more time to social ministries (homeless, prisoners, migrants etc.), which according to my observation is given less importance by priests and religious.

I’m already part of the social welfare team of the archdiocese of Osaka, and I will help the diocese in that field. From this April I became a member of the team in charge of Kobe central block, and will assist Christian communities on Sundays and two days during the week. I am also thinking of giving my time to vocation work.

For me this is a new beginning. I do not know what God has in store for me, but trusting in His providence I go forward.

Source: 

Ministry in the archdiocese of Osaka

VIDEO: Eastern Christianity’s appeal

Read this article: 

VIDEO: Eastern Christianity’s appeal

Melkite priest rips Western media, says rebels have destroyed churches

SOURCE: Catholic Culture

A Melkite Greek Catholic archimandrite has denounced Western media coverage of the Syrian conflict.

“The reality on the ground is far from the picture that imposes disinformation in Western media,” said Msgr. Philippe Tournyol Clos. “Opposition forces have occupied two areas, Diwan Al Bustan and Hamidieh, where there are all the churches and bishoprics.

The picture for us is utter desolation: the church of Mar Elian is half destroyed and that of Our Lady of Peace is still occupied by the rebels,” he continued. “Christian homes are severely damaged due to the fighting and completely emptied of their inhabitants, who fled without taking anything. The area of Hamidieh is still shelter to armed groups independent of each other, heavily armed and bankrolled by Qatar and Saudi Arabia. All Christians (138,000) have fled to Damascus and Lebanon, while others took refuge in the surrounding countryside. A priest was killed and another was wounded by three bullets. Still a couple live there, but the five bishops have had to take refuge in Damascus and Lebanon.”

The rebels, he added, are particularly cruel to the Alawites, a Muslim sect whose members include the Assad family.

Additional sources for this story


Some links will take you to other sites, in a new window.

Continued here:

Melkite priest rips Western media, says rebels have destroyed churches

House on fire!

House on fire!

I was just sitting at my desk and heard a sudden slam and then a roaring rotary sound coming from the ceiling above me like a vacuum cleaner pressed on a hard wooden floor. Then came a rush of billowing smoke from the air conditioner vents above my head. My son was above me! My heart was pounding as I ran up to the third floor to check on Jordan… not home. Then I ran to be sure no one else was home. Then, standing  away from where the fire was growing I called 911. After an incredulous four transfers, I spoke with someone who finally dispatched the fire department.

The smoke continued to pour out the vents on the middle floor as I was quickly trying to determine what to grab. First, my personal laptop, then, my work laptop. My mind is racing. What will we need to keep going if the house burns down? Then, I grabbed my wallet and then my battered copy of Liturgy of the Hours. Then, my briefcase and my passport. A quick glance around to see how quickly the house was filling with smoke and then down to the first floor and outside of the house. I set all the things down on a table in the back yard.

I circled the house checking the roof on all sides. Then I went back in to see if I could get more important things but my motivation was low. I was just thinking about how to be strategic about the limited time I had. I thought about my wife’s icon of the Last Supper. I decided to go back up and look around to see if I could find the source of the fire to determine how much time I might have. By now it appeared that the billowing from the vents was slowing down and the loud whirring grinding sound had stopped.

I could hear the fire trucks in the distance and breathed a sigh of relief. I also noticed that though the smoke was still hanging around and that it didn’t smell like smoke.

The fire trucks arrived and did a thorough search – nothing. Their theory is that the air conditioning system in the attic was malfunctioning. What a relief! Even so, I am still shaky from the initial adrenaline rush of worry about my son on the top floor.

Looking back on my own feelings about the situation is curious. For the most part, other than my prayer book, I had no instinct to preserve anything sentimental. Once I knew my son was ok, I was only thinking about the practical implications of losing our home and how I could keep working and mitigate the damage. The computers were a logical choice. I had no instinct or motivation to carry anything else out as I waited for the firemen.

It is also fascinating to note (at least in my mind) that I just returned from Dallas where I offered a one-day retreat for an exemplary group of Catholic lay leaders. We ended the session with a discussion about appetites, desires, attachments, and the common love of created things that can displace our love for God and inhibit our growth to a deeper relationship with Him.

What would you take if your house caught on fire and you only had a few minutes to breathe (and you knew everyone was safe)?

PS: God is good. Lord have mercy on those who’s homes were really on fire.

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House on fire!

Pope: Milan and the Gospel of the Family

2012-06-06 Vatican Radio

In his weekly general audience Pope Benedict XVI reflected on his recent pastoral visit to Milan for the VII World Meeting of Families. Below the Holy Father’s remarks to English speaking pilgrims:

Dear Brothers and Sisters,
This past weekend I travelled to Milan for the Seventh World Meeting of Families, devoted to the theme: The Family – Work and Celebration. This joyful international gathering was an inspiring witness to the rich and varied identity of the family as a communion of love based on marriage, a sanctuary of life, a domestic church and the primary cell of society. It is in the family that we discover our God-given vocation to love, to enter into relationship with others and to live together in harmony. The dialogue which took place at the Feast of Testimonies provided an opportunity to reflect on some of the pressing challenges experienced by families today, including the difficulty of finding time to be together, even on the Lord’s Day. At the closing Mass I encouraged our Church communities to become ever more like families, celebrating that divine love which alone can transform our world. May the Meeting advance “the Gospel of the Family” and draw attention to the importance of families for the future of our societies.* * * * * I offer a cordial welcome to the Felician Sisters assembled for their General Chapter and I offer my prayerful good wishes for their deliberations. I thank the choirs for their praise of God in song. Upon all the English-speaking visitors, including those from England, Ireland, Sweden, Zimbabwe, Australia, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Vietnam and the United States of America, I invoke God’s blessings of joy and peace!

Source article: 

Pope: Milan and the Gospel of the Family

Pope sends Queen Elizabeth greetings for diamond jubilee

2012-06-06 Vatican Radio

A letter from Pope Benedict XVI to Queen Elizabeth II was read out at a Service of Thanksgiving here in Rome on Tuesday, the final day of celebrations for her diamond jubilee. The Service at All Saints Anglican Church in Rome was attended by Cardinal Angelo Sodano, Dean of the College of Cardinals, Cardinal George Pell of Sydney, Australia, religious leaders from many different Christian denominations, as well as ambassadors from countries around the world.

Read the full text of the letter below:

To Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II

I write to offer my warmest congratulations to Your Majesty on the happy occasion of the Diamond Jubilee of your reign. During the past sixty years you have offered to your subjects and to the whole world an inspiring example of dedication to duty and a commitment to maintaining the principles of freedom, justice and democracy, in keeping with a noble vision of the role of a Christian monarch.

I retain warm memories of the gracious welcome accorded to me by Your Majesty at Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh at the beginning of my Apostolic Visit to the United Kingdom in September 2010, and I renew my thanks for the hospitality that I received throughout those four days. Your personal commitment to cooperation and mutual respect between the followers of different religious traditions has contributed in no small measure to improving ecumenical and interreligious relations throughout your realms.

Commending Your Majesty and all the Royal Family to the protection of Almighty God, I renew my heartfelt good wishes on this joyful occasion and I assure you of my prayers for your continuing health and prosperity.

From the Vatican, 23 May 2012

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Pope sends Queen Elizabeth greetings for diamond jubilee

The New Abortion Caravan: stories and lessons from the road

There has been a steady stream of testimonies of changed hearts and minds since Tuesday when the tour began.

Today, the New Abortion Caravan hits Kelowna after a week in Vancouver, Burnaby, Surrey, Langley, Aldergrove, and Chilliwack.

There has been a steady stream of testimonies of changed hearts and minds since Tuesday when the tour began. One of our interns even bumped into someone, while dropping off our graphic postcards, who informed him that he’d just changed his mind on abortion because he walked past “Choice” Chain.

The New Abortion Caravan launch was incredible—the video can be watched here—with pro-life supporters from every age group coming out to support Canada’s largest ever cross-country pro-life initiative.

While a number of media outlets did contact us—the Vancouver Sun interviewed Stephanie Gray, as well as a CBC reporter on the ground at the rally—for the most part the media remained quiet, with a few exceptions (like CKNW Radio). The reason for that is pretty simple—at the launch of the New Abortion Caravan, there was no way to make the pro-lifers look bad, and there was no way to make the pro-“choice” movement look good. The media often tries to catch the pro-life movement with their pants down—instead, they found that the pro-abortion movement already had their pants off.

The reaction of the pro-“choice” crowd to the New Abortion Caravan has been varied. The presence of SFU professor Dr. Alexander Moens raised the ire of the pro-abortion crowd, including the SFU Women’s Centre. Although he represented no one but himself at the Launch, a small segment of SFU students have still been attempting to have him disciplined for having a different opinion than them (and one backed by science and philosophy, no less). While Simon Fraser University’s President Andrew Petter has ignored these juvenile whimperings thus far, these sophisticated ideologues have gone as far as to suggest putting a bloody tampon on his desk.

Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada director Joyce Arthur is infuriated by the New Abortion Caravan, responding in fine form by intellectually calling it “The New Abortion Crapavan” and saying angrily that, “I cannot even call itself what ‘they’ want. It’s such a sacrilege.” She responded to debate on Facebook by deleting all comments and banning the users, confirming that the pro-abortion ideology cannot stand on its own two feet and is clearly ready to join history’s trash heap of failed ideologies.

There are always lessons to be learned on the road, and a particularly poignant one surfaced as well. Jamie, one of the head protestors at the New Abortion Caravan and a particularly vociferous one at that, wrote the following on a blog:

“Today was also different than in the previous weeks, in that the pro-lifers who stand out on that corner shaming women for accessing an abortion weren’t so quick to accuse women of being sluts, tell me I’m disgusting and should be ashamed of myself, or tell my fellow pro-choice demonstrators that I am asking to be raped multiple times and deserve it. I guess someone had a talk with them after I shouted and swore at them at top volume, informing every one of their peers from the CCBR ‘caravan’ what kind of people they really are. If that is the case, CCBR, I owe you my gratitude for getting their slut-shaming bullsh** out of my streets. But I’m not satisfied with that, because I’ve become more intimately educated about your cause in the mean time, and can no longer think of it as a joke. [Emphasis mine.]

I find it hard to believe that pro-lifers are actually standing on street corners saying the disgusting things that Jamie says they do, but if this is indeed the case, they should be ashamed of themselves. The sign Jamie was carrying indicated that she had been raped. Hatred on behalf of pro-lifers towards those we are trying to reach is never acceptable, but is particularly destructive in this scenario. The entire basis for the pro-life position is that every human life has inherent dignity and beauty, and that includes those of all worldviews. As Martin Luther King Jr. said, “Whom you would change, you must first love. And they must know that you love them.” Hatred has no place in the pro-life movement. It is a cancer that will destroy us. The New Abortion Caravanners follow in the footsteps of those that fought hatred with compassion.

To follow our New Abortion Caravan:

Follow us on Twitter here.

Subscribe to us on YouTube here.

Follow us on Facebook here.

Check out our Caravan schedule here.

Check out a few of our media appearances below:

On CBC News, on CBC Radio, on Breaking Kelowna Local News, on Chilliwack Today, and (surprise!) on Yahoo Sports.

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The New Abortion Caravan: stories and lessons from the road

Patriarch calls for dialogue after Syrian crosses into Lebanon


Patriarch calls for dialogue after Syrian crosses into Lebanon

Country’s security and political situation tested after clash in coastal city of Tripoli


Ahmad Sadek, a 13-year-old Syrian boy, receives medical treatment from a nurse in a government hospital in Tripoli, Lebanon, June 4. Omar Ibrahim / CNS.

The B.C. Catholic

features a story from

Catholic News Service’s

Doreen Abi Raad about Labanon’s political and security situation affter Syrian forces clashed in the city of Tripoli:



Warning that Lebanon is going through a critical juncture, Maronite Catholic Patriarch Bechara Rai called for national dialogue to address the security and political situation in the country.

During his June 3 homily at Bkerke, just north of Beirut, the patriarch condemned the previous day’s clashes in the northern coastal city of Tripoli between Sunni groups opposing Syrian President Bashar Assad and Alawites who support the Syrian leader. At least 14 people died and more than 50 were wounded.

Read the full story at

The B.C. Catholic

website.