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St Michael and All Angels 2019 for the 8.30
We don’t talk much about angels, unless we’re showing visitors around the
Abbey. Even devout Catholics today think of angels as part of Christian mythology
and don’t quite know what to make of them. That’s strange, considering that magic
and witchcraft are now such lucrative para-religious enterprises and that in the fast
changing world of cyberspace everything lives on clouds, even our archives and
photograph albums.
St Paul says that the angels are “all ministering spirits, sent out in the divine
service for the sake of those who are to inherit salvation.” The prayers and preface of
today’s Mass take up that theme. The angels, who worship before God’s throne, are
also his messengers and servants. Not only do they worship God, but they also help
us to praise him. In heaven they lead the laus perennis of which our Opus Dei is an
echo here on earth.
There’s hardly a page of Scripture where the angels of God are not present. If
anything, it’s the angels who give cohesion to the Bible, binding the History of
Salvation together. They are the ones who constantly reveal God’s will to Man. In the
Old Testament, they represent God before patriarchs, prophets and kings, whilst in
the New Testament they are the prime movers in the Gospels, Acts and Book of
Revelation.
Can you imagine the Annunciation without Gabriel or the Nativity without
angels? Indeed, it is they who teach us to pray, “Hail Mary, full of grace,” and to sing,
“Gloria in excelsis Deo.” Think of the forty days in the wilderness and the angels who
ministered to Jesus in his temptations. Think of Gethsemane and the Angel of the
Passion, or of the empty tomb and the message of the Easter Angel, “Why do you
seek the living among the dead?” What would we have made of the Ascension had
the Angel not told the disciples, “Men of Galilee, why stand there looking at the sky?
He will come again just as you have seen him go to heaven.” In the Acts of the
Apostles, Peter, Paul and the others are guided by angels in their mission, set free
from prison and protected as they fearlessly set about preaching the Gospel.
Finally, what would we make of our own lives and of this present uncertain
moment in world history without that powerful chapter in the Apocalypse where the
archangel Michael does battle with Satan? Nothing we do can change the past, but
what we do now can change the future. Today, more than ever, the world needs the
protection of St Michael and the Holy Angels. Today, we need to pray, “Holy Michael
Archangel, defend us in the day of battle.”
May Christ, the King of Angels, grant peace and unity to his Church, the world
in which we live and the whole of creation through the ministry of his Holy Angels.
Amen.
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