Homily for Oct. 2nd, 2020: Holy Guardian Angels.
Today’s
memorial of the Holy Guardian Angels reminds us of an important truth of our
Christian and Catholic faith. The world in which we live, which we entered at
birth and which we shall leave at death, is surrounded by another world which,
though we cannot see it, is every bit as real as the world which we see, touch,
hear, and feel. This other world is spiritual. It is the world God, the angels,
the saints, and our beloved dead. Though invisible, this spiritual world is not
only as real as the visible world all around us. It is in truth more real than that world. For the world
we see is passing away. The unseen, spiritual world is not passing away.
It is eternal. Moreover, this
spiritual world is our true homeland. St.
Paul tells us this when he writes in his letter to the
Philippians that, because of baptism, “we have our citizenship in heaven”
(3:20).
The Catechism
says: “The existence of the spiritual, non-corporeal [that is, not bodily]
beings that Sacred Scripture calls ‘angels’ is a truth of faith” (No. 328). And
the Catechism goes on to quote St.
Augustine , who says that “angel” is the name of their office: it tells us what they do.
Their nature is spirit; in
other words, they are not bodily but spiritual beings. “With their whole
beings,” Augustine writes, “the angels are servants
and messengers of God.” (No 329) They appear often in Scripture. The angel
Gabriel told Mary, for instance, that she was to be the mother of God’s son.
The Catechism quotes the 4th century Greek Father, St. Basil, who
writes: “Beside each believer stands an angel as protector and shepherd leading
him to life” (No. 336).
Whenever,
then, we are in danger; whenever we are strongly tempted, it is a joy to know
that we can pray with confidence: “Holy guardian angel, protect me and keep me
safe! Amen.”
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