THE GLORY OF GOD
From a commentary by Eric Peterson
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Angels are more than poetic extras from the repertoire of folk-lore. They
have to do with Christ and with the Holy Spirit; but they have to do with us well.
They represent for us a possibility in our own nature, an enhancement and
intensification of our being – but never the possibility of a new and different
faith. They teach us about dark depths in our being wherein is movement and
impulse, independent, it may be, of ourselves, and which we may not even
recognize for what they really are, nor attribute yet awhile to angelic influence.
An impulse might simply be felt as an urge towards purity of heart; or one might
become conscious of an overwhelming desire for mental clarity and a true
existence.
We hurry towards the angels along many paths, not as though we
expected to become an angel, but because our own being is only a preliminary
existence and it does not yet appear what we shall be. And if we do not hurry
towards those angels who stand in God’s presence, then we shall most certainly
hasten towards those who have turned away from God; we shall rush towards
the demons. For we always live so that we transcend ourselves and thus move
toward either the angels or the demons. And we who transcend ourselves – for
to do this is our being – are able to ascend higher and higher, not in the moral
but in the metaphysical sense, until we become an associate of the angels and
arrive at the frontier of that realm where stand the cherubim and seraphim.
This boundary line, marked out neither by ourselves nor by any
archangel, arrests our progress: here we begin to join in the music of the
spheres and in the singing of the angels. Our song is no mere imitation of the
angelic song, no modest joining in the cry of Holy, holy, holy which resounds
from their lips majestically and without ceasing; but it is also something which
erupts from our innermost being when we reach the bounds of all things – the
bounds of ourselves as creatures.
What do we learn on reaching the angelic world but the creation praises
God, praises him from the last star down to the least blade of grass? What
applies to the highest grade of creation applies equally to the lowest, to plant-
life, animals and things which stand much lower than we in the scale of being.
When in the psalms let us say, animals and mountains break froth in praise of
God, this is no mere hyperbole or excess of poetic fancy, an unwarrantable
human personifying of inanimate nature. It is something based ultimately in
the nature of the created thing, and which runs fight through the whole scale of
creation from the cherubim and seraphim down to the least thing in the world.
As the Gospel has told us, the whole creation is full of the glory of God.