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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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#77 (permalink) |
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Will you also go away?
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 2,201
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Re: Do angels have free will?
There is one argument ...
... if angels do not possess free will, that is cannot think for themselves, then they would be very inefficient messengers, because they would not be able to dialogue with the person to whom they transmit the message, but rather spout, somewhat parrot fashion, words they have learnt, but don't understand? Thomas |
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#78 (permalink) | |
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Executive Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Southern Maryland
Posts: 1,970
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Re: Do angels have free will?
Quote:
"Unto whom it was revealed, that not unto themselves, but unto us they did minister the things, which are now reported unto you by them that have preached the gospel unto you with the Holy Ghost sent down from heaven; which things the angels desire to look into." Seems to me this suggests curiousity and intent on the part of angels. They are not autonomous beings. I would go so far as to say that this would be a similiar state that we as humans will find ourselves in heaven. Jesus hinted at this also in his dialog with the Sadduccees: "For in the resurrection they neither marry, nor are given in marriage, but are as the angels of God in heaven." - Matthew 22:30 Satan, who was Lucifer, the Star of the Morning, got too high on his perch, being the Archangel, and through willful action, fully knowing what it would irrevokably cost him, rose up against God and was thus cast down. My feeling is in what ever realm he resided in after his fall, he wasn't as evil, but rather in the progression of time, he became more and more evil. |
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#79 (permalink) |
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Where is the Love???
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Adolescence
Posts: 4,244
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Re: Do angels have free will?
Lucifer, first comes into light in most bibles.... 14th book of Isaiah... Oh old test? Funny how a LATIN name is in HEBREW manuscripting.... Is this book talking of Satan? Oh no? A fallen king of Babylon? Yes.... MAN changed, this into a story of a "fallen angel", Lucifer, (Latin translation; Bringer of Light.) Ironically.... the Prince of "darkness" lol..... And!!! What I love is the irony of the christians that call Satan, Lucifer... You do realise that is the same title given to jesus in 2ndpet 1:19 and Rev22:16... Right? What is going on in Job: 38:7? We could do that silly number game that Leo started on this.... jesus is Lucifer? So Lucifer is Satan? lol SO A=1x9 B=2x9 C=3x9 D=4x9.... And so on... lol JESUS = J(90) E(45) S(171) U(189) S(171) zomg!!! 666.... MESSIAH = M(117) E(45) S(171) S(171) I(81) A(9) H(72) ZOMG!!! 666... (maybe it is more than just People "editing" the Hebrew texts!! No... It's just me playing silly b*ggers with numbers.....) Thought maybe interesting to look at these "versions" of your verse... Liber Isaiae: 14:12 Quomodo cecidisti de caelo, lucifer, fili aurorae? Deiectus es in terram, qui deiciebas gentes, ![]() How you have fallen from heaven, O star of the morning, son of the dawn!" The New American Standard Bible. "How you are fallen from heaven, O shining star, son of the morning!" The New Living Translation. "How you are fallen from heaven, O Day Star, son of Dawn!" The Revised Standard Version. How you are fallen from heaven, O Day Star, son of Dawn!" The New Revised Standard Version "How hast thou fallen from the heavens, O shining one, son of the dawn!" Young's Literal Translation. "How art thou fallen from heaven, O day-star, son of the morning!" American Standard (1901). "King of Babylon, morning star, you have fallen from heaven," New Century Version. "King of Babylon, bright morning star, you have fallen from heaven!" The Good News Bible in Today's English Version. Will the real morning star, please stand up! Please stand up! Please stand up! |
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#80 (permalink) | |
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: London, UK, Malkhut she'be'Assiyah
Posts: 1,444
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Re: Do angels have free will?
Quote:
a) the place you choose to ride is wrong: on a busy road, across someone's pristine lawn, down a pedestrian street b) how you ride it: cutting people up, running over stuff, going the wrong way up streets, jumping lights c) associated acts: if you ride without a helmet and someone hits you in a car, you're more likely to be hurt, which causes them some degree of guilt because you didn't take care. i don't agree that there is such a thing as a morally neutral act, therefore it is impossible to separate an act of freewill from one with some kind of moral consequences. bear in mind that what may seem "good" or "evil" to us may look completely different on G!D's moral compass, hence theodicy. b'shalom bananabrain |
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#82 (permalink) | |
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at peace
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,267
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Re: Do angels have free will?
Quote:
You probably already know all of this, but I thought I'd post to bump the thread because I was hoping for a number of Christian responses. I want to understand the issue better. Should we ask on that board? (It isn't that I mind hearing the non-Christian viewpoint, just that I am trying to narrow it down a bit.) InPeace, InLove |
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#83 (permalink) |
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Will you also go away?
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 2,201
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Re: Do angels have free will?
According to the New Jerome Biblical Commentary, and the notes in the New Jerusalem Bible, the most part of Isaiah 14 (4-21) is a 'masal', a Hebrew term which the Greek translates as 'metaphor' (although in the Hebrew has a much broader meaning), and in this case comprises a Taunt-Song against the King of Babylon.
The terminology used, specifically the reference to the Day Star, 'shining star, son of the dawn' (v12) which the Vulgate translates as Lucifer, is in Hebrew 'heylel' which is a pun on the name Helel ben Shahar, a figure who, in Canaanite mythology, ascended Mount Zaphon, the mountain of the gods, to make himself equal to Elyon, 'the Most High' (Elyon is used in v14, and as 'Most High' is a name of The Lord, but it is also the name of El, the Canaanite divinity), and for which presumption he was cast down into the netherworld. Isaiah is then likening the Babylonian king, probably Nebuchadnezzar (Jerusalem's destroyer), or Nabonidus (the last king of Babylon) to Helel ben Shahar. The previous verse "Thy pomp is brought down to the grave, [and] the noise of thy viols: the worm is spread under thee, and the worms cover thee" (v4) signifying that in the end even he is destined for the grave. +++ The Patristic Fathers sought always to bring out the spiritual reading of the text (explicit to the Hebrew), a metaphysical context more acessible to the Hellenic mind rather than an apparently cosmological one (apparently because Hebrew cosmology is founded on the Immanent and active Presence of God, something absent in Hellenic philosophical cosmology). So they translated 'Day Star' as Lucifer ('light bearer'), and as some scholars saw the principle of the fall in the account ... "For thou hast said in thine heart, I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God: I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation, in the sides of the north: (Canaanite myth) I will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will be like the most High. Yet thou shalt be brought down to hell, to the sides of the pit." (v 13-15). ... Lucifer became a name, and largely the name, of the devil. Since in Abrahamic belief there is no evil in God, then the devil must be a created being which became corrupt, and in this sense the only form of corruption is that which is contrary to the Divine Will, for it corrupts what is essentially good, and does so at the level of the will. So Satan, or Lucifer, was created as an angelic being, but fell. The sin of Satan and the sin of Adam are essentially the same – in putting one's self-will before the Divine Will. Thomas |
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#84 (permalink) |
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Will you also go away?
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 2,201
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Re: Do angels have free will?
Jean Danielou SJ wrote:
"The word angel has an essentially concrete value. It designates a supernatural being which manifests itself. However, the nature of this supernatural being is not determined by the expression, but by the context." "Theologie du judeo-christianisme" The nature of an angel then must be determined by its context. Abraham is approached by three angels (Genesis 18), and he speaks to them as Lord and to one as God, and that angel appears to make a decision that rightly only God can make. The angel who appears to Mary (Luke 1) is without question an envoy, the archangel Gabriel. In fact, Gabriel is linked with the Holy Spirit, whereas Michael is linked with the Word. The angel who enters the waters at the Pool of Siloam is not an envoy, but would appear a nature spirit. So it depends on what kind of angel as to what degree of free will. It's worth mentioning that the generalised idea of angel today bears little resemblance to theology, but is more the invention of the Romance Movement of the 18/19 centuries, based on the idealised anthropomorphism of Renaissance art. Thomas |
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#85 (permalink) |
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at peace
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,267
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Re: Do angels have free will?
Hi Thomas,
Thanks for responding regarding the name "Lucifer". I had looked into all the study material I have, including the Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, and had not found all of that. I did, however, come to an independent reasoning that the way it was being used might be as a kind of refutation for anyone attempting to set themselves up in a false authority. It really can be quite confusing for readers unfamiliar with these details. Appreciate it.... InPeace, InLove |
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#86 (permalink) | |
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Junior Moderator, Intro
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Posts: 932
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Re: Do angels have free will?
Quote:
bananabrain or dauer can expound more upon this topic since they're more familiar with the more traditional aspects of Judaism on more than one front. Sorry. ![]() Phyllis Sidhe_Uaine |
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#87 (permalink) | ||
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Will you also go away?
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 2,201
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Re: Do angels have free will?
Hi Phyllis –
Quote:
Quote:
Christianity shifts the understanding of the adversary towards the idea of resistance to the Divine Will – "And (Satan) saith unto him, All these things will I give thee, if thou wilt fall down and worship me" (Matthew 4:9). Now Satan might, as the prosecuting attorney, make such a case to show human fallibility, but the offer made is a lie, as soon as man succumbs Satan triumphs before God "See, I said I could break him," and none of the promises are forthcoming, that was never the object. So what Christianity brings out is that the lie only works if man is susceptible to its offer ... and this is the bit that Jesus concentrates on, He speaks of evil not as an abstract entity, nor as its experience as a test of faith, but as a reality of the fallen human psyche, and one that needs to be faced and overcome. Mark alludes to the temptation of Christ in just two verses – basically it happened, but without a full knowledge of Jesus' inner experience and consciousness one cannot say precisely what happened. Matthew and Luke's account (attributed to Q) goes into greater detail, as a means of pastoral exegesis, and Christ's forty days in the wilderness echoes the forty years in the desert – the parallels are there, notably that all Jesus' answers are quotations from Deuteronomy 6-8. The three temptations of Christ are basically to cause him to sin against the Deuteronomic commandment to love God 'with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your might' (6:5) as such Jesus moves the adversarial thinking on, from an Hebraic question as to why bad things happen to good people, to a more pointed and profound tendency of the will to self-determination. Thus the three temptations are those which all must face, and must overcome, by the Grace of God, if they are to enter into the Divine Life – a life in which sin and suffering has no place. Thomas |
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#88 (permalink) | |
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Executive Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Southern Maryland
Posts: 1,970
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Re: Do angels have free will?
Quote:
Some of the examples you gave implied that I had a malicious intent, in which case I would agree that the choice would have moral implications. But in the example of riding without a helmet, or riding in a busy street could cause consequences attributed to stupidity, not moral intent. |
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#89 (permalink) | |
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Near Boston
Posts: 1,907
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Re: Do angels have free will?
Thomas,
In one sense the metaphor of God as Electrical Tower works to approach the Jewish concept of angels. There are power lines that carry His electricity down to the village. I've presented this material before from Rambam's Guide for the Perplexed, but it seems worth presenting again: Quote:
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