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| Esoteric Esoteric traditions and Mysticism, Gnosticism, Wisdom Traditions and alternative thought. |
| View Poll Results: Do angels have free will? | |||
| Yes |
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20 | 55.56% |
| No |
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16 | 44.44% |
| Voters: 36. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#16 (permalink) | |
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moderator inaslittleas...
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Maryland
Posts: 7,446
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Re: Do angels have free will?
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v/r Q |
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#18 (permalink) |
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Soul Rebel
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: The Highlands of Scotland
Posts: 4,604
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Re: Do angels have free will?
Definitely an issue for Mysticism - would be great to see some old Mystic masters cracked out for this one with supporting quotes on the issue - Eliphas Levi and John Dee, etc.
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#19 (permalink) |
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Interfaith
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Essex, UK
Posts: 1,125
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Re: Do angels have free will?
Dear Didymus
Yes I see this as a problem, as we move further forward into the 21st century the boundaries and walls of separation are being brought down between science, religion and spirituality. But yet if religion is not prepared to allow these walls to come down religion will eventually be alienated by society which would be very sad for all those that lost their lives to sustain and maintain it. being love kim xx |
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#20 (permalink) |
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Near Boston
Posts: 1,919
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Re: Do angels have free will?
There is a wonderful analogy that Zalman Schachter-Shalomi gave when he was part of a Jewish delegation to the Dali Lama of the Jewish view of angels which I will paraphrase, that they are like the transformers on an electrical tower, bringing the electricity down to the lower levels.
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#21 (permalink) |
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In the Spirit
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: The Rockies
Posts: 3,109
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Re: Do angels have free will?
I voted no. I think for humans our last moment of free will is when we die and God asks us, "well, do you want to come in?" And I think He asks this question of everyone, regardless of what we believed or did in our lifetime. Heaven or hell might be our reflection on the realization that we have been asked this question.
I don't have a Biblical reason for this. Good thing I'm posting in the Alternative Section! ![]() |
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#22 (permalink) | |
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Between Here and There
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: A Bit North of Lovely Seattle
Posts: 1,466
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Re: Do angels have free will?
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#23 (permalink) |
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New Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 22
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Re: Do angels have free will?
Man is created from clay. Jinn (spirits) from the smokeless flame and Angels from a divine light called Nur. Both men and Jinn have been given free will. Some believe that satan was a fallen angel. Satan is from the jinn, and the jinn existed before the creation of man. Holy Quran (18:50).
Satan was among the assembly of angels at the time of the creation of Adam. God commanded that all prostrate before Adam and Satan refused as he was arrogant and thought himself better, as he was created from fire, and Adam from clay. His arrogance brought about his ruin, God cast him out and he asked God for respite until the last day. Satan vowed to lead man astray, but God promised he wouldn’t be able to lead astray the righteous believers in the Oneness of God. Angels have been blessed with powers that enable them to carry out their specific duties. They praise God and automatically obey his commands. They cannot disobey him. Angels are unlike man. They do not sleep, eat, require what humans need. The angel Gabriel appeared before Prophets, delivering messages from God. There are many different angels carrying out various duties. There is the angel of death called Izrael, and Israfil is the angel who will blow the trumpet on the last day. Every human is assigned an angel and it is their duty to record your every action and your every word. Anyhow I just wanted to share a muslims perspective. I think many people aren’t aware of Jinn and often confuse Jinn with angels and other things as well. Man and Jinn have been given free will to make their own choices. Man is tested and will be judged on Judgement Day. Angels are obedient and submissive loyal servants to God. http://www.geocities.com/islamicmira...ng_jennies.htm http://www.geocities.com/islamicmiracles/Angels.htm |
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#24 (permalink) |
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Near Boston
Posts: 1,919
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Re: Do angels have free will?
There is also the idea, within Judaism, related to the role of the angel, that they don't live or die, but that they appear when God wills a need for them and are gone when there is no longer a need for them. Some angels, there will always be a need for them. And some are needed for very specific things.
It is also said that angels are standing and humans are walking, in regard to free will. While angels will begin on a higher level, because a human has the ability to choose he can climb higher. So I voted no as well. That is not to say that I believe in angels, but I believe that their myth is too beautiful and constructive to be rejected entirely, that is to say that it is not a matter of belief, but of poetry, that keeps me thinking in terms of angels because on another level there are no angels, no transformers, and all is God. So I guess it's wrong of me to vote no or yes on the poll. Eh. |
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#25 (permalink) |
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Between Here and There
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: A Bit North of Lovely Seattle
Posts: 1,466
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Re: Do angels have free will?
Now as for angels...
I said no. Angels are a Judeo-Christian-Muslim mythological creature- by mythological I do not mean false, but rather supernatural and requiring faith. Both Christianity and Islam rose from the foundations of Judaism, and Judaic scripture does not maintain that angels have free will, but rather that they are the messengers of God. Christians interpret Isaiah 14:12 as the fall of Lucifer, the Angel of Light, becoming Satan. However, Jews strongly maintain that this passage refers directly to Babylon and King Nebuchadnessar, as 14:4 directly names Babylon as the subject of prophecy: "you will take up this taunt against the king of Babylon." I am not sure why Christians interpret this as the fall of Lucifer and other angels, when it clearly prefaces the prophecy with the statement that it is about Babylon, which also makes perfect sense if you know the story of Babylon. Satan, meaning "adversary," was the angel of death and temptation. He could only act in accordance with God's will, just as all angels did. Angels in the OT were not all about helping people out- they were also messengers of stuff people didn't want to hear. Satan tested people's moral fabric. As a mystic, I do not think that the supernatural is limited to God and angels, so I have no problem believing angels are as the scriptures say they are- messengers of God, or extensions of His will, without free will, and yet still thinking there are other "supernatural" entities that do have free will. As one Irish woman put it in an interview- "You have God and Satan and angels over here, and faeries over there." That is, God and Angels (of which Satan apparently is one) do not preclude the existence of other realities and folks in them that we perceive as supernatural and/or spiritual, be they dragons, faeries, nature spirits, or whatever. I think, depending on our worldview, we interpret a wide variety of mythological creatures as fitting into systems to which they may not be a part. Thus, the faeries of the Celts became translated as angels and demons by Christianity, though people who believe in faeries and say they have experienced them say they are neither angels nor demons. I think some spiritual entities do have free will, but angels are not one of them, by their definition by the scripture of the cultures/religions that record them. |
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#26 (permalink) | |
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Junior Moderator, Intro
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Posts: 935
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Re: Do angels have free will?
Quote:
Now, to answer the main question: I don't think that angels have free will. Phyllis Sidhe_Uaine |
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#27 (permalink) |
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Freethinker
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Colorado Springs, Colorado
Posts: 918
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Re: Do angels have free will?
That is not to say that I believe in angels, but I believe that their myth is too beautiful and constructive to be rejected entirely, that is to say that it is not a matter of belief, but of poetry, that keeps me thinking in terms of angels because on another level there are no angels, no transformers, and all is God.
So I guess it's wrong of me to vote no or yes on the poll. Eh.[/quote] I think this is a particularly poignant perspective Dauer, and since we have defined Angels to some degree, how about defining what we mean by "Free will?" Some have said that man, having this free will can choose to either believe in God or not. But what kind of choice is this? To many who believe in an ultimate reality, or Divine Presence,this would be akin to a fish not believing in water! Philosophers have wrestled with the idea of free will for centuries, and certainly it seems that we indeed have the power of choice, what we shall build, how we orchestrate our lives, in effect, what kind of picture do we draw with the crayons we were given at birth? As we draw nearer to the Divine Presence, and consumately become more conciously in line with Divine Mind, so to speak, to choose to believe or not would become a moot point . Perhaps a being or entity (the Angels) so close to the Divine source would not need the kind of Free Will that serves only to separate man from his actual divine nature. |
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#28 (permalink) |
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Established member
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Northern Indiana
Posts: 375
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Re: Do angels have free will?
I think angels did have free will but they have a nature in which they won't go back on the original decision they made and since this original decision was to either support God or Reject him then they don't really have it anymore.
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#29 (permalink) |
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Near Boston
Posts: 1,919
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Re: Do angels have free will?
You raise a good point, Paladin. And something you raise also besides what is "free will" is "why don't angels have free will?" or rather "what is it that makes humans different from angels in this regard?" within this assumption that they don't. From a Jewish perspective free will is the ability to choose between the yetzer hara, evil inclination, the base drives (which are not actually evil in and of themselves) and the yetzer tov, the good inclination, which is the ability to get beyond them and traditionally to follow the mitzvot, the commandments.
I think the difference between the Jewish and Christian ideas comes from the fact that Judaism is covenantal and Christianity is based on belief. Issues in Christianity often revolve around belief whereas in Judaism they often revolve around action, although there are of course exceptions in either case. I'm not sure how the Jewish concept of free will would relate to the angels, who are spiritual beings. But on this matter of distance, there is much that Jewish mystical tradition has to say. But I am not qualified to talk on that much. Simply put, the beings of higher worlds, as it were, are more exposed to the oneness of God and less aware of their individuality. I'm also pretty sure that they do not partake of the klipa, the husk which is the absence of God, but I could be mistaken. But in this case the angels are often created by us through our actions (and maybe thoughts too) to send messages up the worlds or even, through our negative actions, to create evil, godless ones in the klipa. And here the image of the electric tower with the transformers becomes a little more clear, each angel carrying up to a higher angel and so on, or each angel carrying down from God in the same manner. Dauer |
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#30 (permalink) |
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moderator inaslittleas...
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Maryland
Posts: 7,446
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Re: Do angels have free will?
I think belief is not the issue. Choosing to accept, may be more accurate. We see this played out in everyday life. Consider court cases where the defendent refuses to accept the judgement given him, regardless of his inability to do anything about it. Defiance to the end, is very obvious in humans, why not angellic beings as well?
Free will is very much a part of what God seems to hold endearing to man. Like He wants and hopes we will "get it". We aren't "Pinnochio". Or perhaps we are, without the strings attached...But that would mean we are not yet fulfilled (we aren't fully Human yet). Angels...how did pride, anger and contempt develop in them? That is a very interesting question (the fallen ones). But we know that it did (based again on scripture). Please all, don't debase scripture as being in error, as without it we would not be having this conversation...in the first place. Let's look at it logically as we have been. v/r Q |
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