I made the mistake of leaving the script of this sermon in the vestry at Mass today and, for the first time in a sermon, had to rely on Divine Guidance to preach without notes. As a result, I have had to amalgamate what I did say with what I planned to say. I hope this makes sense.
Sermon preached at
Our Lady of Walsingham and St Francis on the Feast of St Michael and All
Angels.
Picture an Angel - any angel you like. Perhaps one that
you’ve seen on a card or in a film, or, if you’ve been very lucky, one that
you’ve met. What do you see? For many people, years of Nativity plays have
taken their toll. Angels are little boys and girls dressed up in old white
(usually off-white) sheets or pillow cases with a pair of cardboard wings and a
halo made from a coat-hanger and tinsel. Or they are twee figures gazing out
from a Christmas card merrily playing harps and pipes.
Do you think that’s right? Where does it say in Holy
Scripture that Angels have wings? Where does it say they have halos?
What is the truth about angels?
[PAUSE]
The word “angel” simply means someone who has been sent. If
we look at all the appearances of angels in Holy Scripture, they always appear
with a job to do. They are beings with purpose. The first angel we encounter is
one of the Cherubim whom God sends to block our way back into the garden of
Eden.
On several occasions, we have angels doing what they seem to
be best at – announcing births! Hagar, Abraham and Sarah, Hannah, Menoah’s
wife, Zachariah, and of course Our Lady - all have an angel visit them to tell
them that they are going to have sons that will do marvellous things. Abraham
and Sarah have Isaac, Hannah has the prophet Samuel, Menoah and his wife have
Samson, Zachariah has St John the Baptist and, of course, Our Lady bears the
Lord.
At that point, we then have the famous heavenly host singing
“Glory be to God on High” which is where we imagine those tinsel covered angels
the most.
However, angels have other messages to give than simply
announcing hatches, matches and dispatches. They bear the commandments of God
to key figures. It was not the Lord in
the burning bush, but His angel. It was the angel of the Lord that went before
the Hebrews out of Egypt. The prophet Zechariah is instructed by an angel. It
is an angel that releases St Peter from prison.
Throughout Holy Scripture, we are presented with beings that
guide, prevent, announce, teach and even fight!
Fight? Is that something we expect angels to do?
[PAUSE]
In his Revelation, St John the Divine sees one of the most
disturbing sights in all of Scripture - War in Heaven! Angels fighting each other! It all makes
Heaven sound just as violent as Earth.
Let’s be clear about this war in Heaven, for in it, with St
John, we see St Michael fighting the dragon, Satan, and his host and casting
them out of Heaven. This tells us very clearly that angels, like us, have a
choice as to whether to follow God or not. It also tells us that there is no
room in Heaven for anything that is Evil.
This does, however, make it rather difficult for us on
Earth.
“Therefore rejoice ,
ye heavens, and ye that dwell in them. Woe to the inhabiters of the earth and
of the sea! for the devil is come down unto you, having great wrath, because he
knoweth that he hath but a short time. “
Isn’t that rather unfair on us who dwell on Earth? Do we now
have to put up with Heaven’s rejects making our lives a misery with all the
evil they can throw at us?
[PAUSE]
It is the Devil that accuses us before God. He is the one
who tempts us into sin and rejoices when we inevitably fall into that sin.
Remember that Satan seeks to be the greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven and now,
he becomes the least. It is his pleasure to take it out on us, but we should
not despair.
Listen carefully to what another voice from Heaven tells us.
“Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power
of his Christ: for the accuser of our brethren is cast down , which accused
them before our God day and night.”
We are being told one of the deepest of truths here. There
is Evil in our world and we fight against it and sometimes it seems that we are
destroyed by it. However, if we trust God, we will not be lost. God values each
human being so highly that “he shall give his angels charge over thee to keep
thee in all thy ways. They shall bear thee in their hands lest thou dash thy
foot against a stone.”
God sent His Son to save us from our sins and bring us back
to God, and our lives are guarded by angels. While we do suffer, they protect our
souls. If we trust God, it is His angels that will give us strength just as
they give strength to Our Lord Jesus as He agonises in the Garden of Gethsemane
about His impending crucifixion.
Angels may not prevent our pain and suffering, but they can
prevent our loss if we let them. The famous anthem at a Requiem Mass says, “May
angels lead thee into paradise…”
However, the sheer genius of the Angel's victory in Heaven which supports Our Lord and Saviour's victory over Sin and Death is that St Michael binds Satan's influence to our Earthly existence. Our Earthly existence ends with our physical death and, at the hands of a loving Creator, our bodily resurrection in Him where the effects of Satan cannot affect us. Satan's influence perishes with the Earthly. This is why he is fighting so hard to make us forget about God with all the fleshly temptations he can muster. Our Living Faith in God will keep us from that.
We are not often able to tell angels apart from ordinary
people, indeed, the writer of the letter to the Hebrews tells us “Be not
forgetful to entertain strangers: for thereby some have entertained angels
unawares .” We may only ever know them as folk dressed in dazzling white
standing in the the Lord’s tomb, telling us that He is risen. We should
however, be thankful for them and what they do for us, remembering that they,
like us, serve God.
Yet we should remember that an angel is simply someone who
has been sent by God. We too could become angels if God chooses to send us to
do His will. This give us a choice. Do we prefer a real halo bought by serving
God, or do we prefer a halo of tinsel?