Patristic angelology, the Fathers of the Church, and the doctrine of angels
# The Etymology of “Angel” in Latin Tradition
## The Portuguese Term and its Western Counterparts
The Portuguese term *anjo*, along with corresponding words in other Western languages, traces back to the Latin *angelus*, which from the late 2nd century onwards, in both *Vetus Latina* and Tertullian (d. 220), is used as a transliteration of the Greek word *ángelos*. Initially, these two terms primarily expressed a function: serving as God’s messenger. Patristic angelology builds upon this linguistic and semantic foundation to develop a more elaborate doctrine about the nature, hierarchy, and mission of spiritual beings in contrast with philosophical and Gnostic currents of the period.
## The Early Apostolic Fathers and Their Challenges
Angelology among the Apostolic Fathers is still nascent and functional. Works like *Didache*, *Pastor Hermas*, and Letters of Ignatius of Antioch mention angels primarily in a liturgical and eschatological context, without attempting to establish a systematic doctrine. The true theological challenge arises with Gnosticism and Manichaeism: both proposals a cosmic mediation by spiritual entities (æons, arcontes) between the Supreme God and matter, corrupting the Christian doctrines of creation and redemption. Apologist Fathers such as Justin Martyr (d. 165), Athanasius, Theodore of Antioch respond by affirming the goodness of creation and the subordination of angels to the sole Creator God.
## Origen and the Systematization of Angelology
Origen of Alexandria (d. 254) represents the first significant effort at systematizing Christian angelology. In his *De Principiis*, he proposes a hierarchy of freely created spiritual beings, equal in their original creation but differentiated by merit or primordial fall. This thesis—pre-existence of souls and the fall of intelligences—was condemned at the Fifth Ecumenical Council (553), yet Origen’s contribution to systematic angelology is undeniable: for the first time, he raises fundamental questions about the freedom, nature, and hierarchy of angelic beings.
## Augustine: Angels Between Ontology and Mission
The clearest synthesis of Western patristic angelology is attributed to Augustine of Hippo (d. 430). In his *Enarratio* on Psalm 135, Augustine articulates with precision the distinction between an angel’s *esse* (being) and its *officium* (mission): “Angel is the name of their office, not of their nature. If you ask about their being, they are spirits. If you ask about what they do, they are angels.” This distinction, marking the ontological dignity of spiritual beings in their mediating role, becomes the starting point for all medieval and scholastic angelology. Augustine also argues that angels are temporal creatures, created by God at the beginning of time, and that their happiness consists in contemplating God, which they never lose.
## Pseudo-Dionysius and Celestial Hierarchies
The Dionysian corpus, attributed to the 5th or 6th century, represents another major pillar of patristic angelology. In *Hierarchy Celestial*, Pseudo-Dionysius organizes angels into three triads: Seraphim, Cherubim, and Thrones (first hierarchy), Dominations, Virtues, and Powers (second), and Principates, Archangels, and Angels (third). This scheme, combining biblical sources with Neo-Platonic philosophy from Proclus, deeply influenced Thomas Aquinas and all scholasticism, forming the *celestial architecture* of Christian angelology up to modernity.
Consult the full text of the *Catechism of the Catholic Church* on angels at Vatican.va, CCC: The Angels.
For further study, explore Angelology, Hebrew Angelology, Mariology, and the Master’s in Mariology.
See our comprehensive guide to Catholic Angelology.
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