Angels from the realms of glory

Following on from the previous reflection that we are never ultimately alone, I would like to repeat a story I am sure I have told in the past.  Some thirty years ago I was diagnosed with cancer of the thyroid. The surgeon warned me that the operation could reduce my voice to a whisper, which, as a public speaker, felt very threatening; I was filled with fear.  Then one night I awoke to hear a voice saying, ‘You are not alone. You have an angel working alongside you.’  And from that moment all fear vanished and I went calmly into the operation, waking to find I still had my voice.

Such angelic experiences are not uncommon. The biologist Rupert Sheldrake, and the theologian Mathew Fox have co-written a book entitled The Physics of Angels, in which they suggest that there are a vast number of what they describe as ‘intelligences’ in the universe which constantly inform us. The traditional portrayal of angels in dazzling white clothes and enormous wings is simply an attempt to describe the speed with which such intimations  descend, with a dazzling clarity.

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Presence

My view is that God does not intervene directly in human affairs: to do so would make us like robots.  We are surely meant to meet the many set-backs that we inevitably encounter and learn from them. The Church’s teaching that God sent Jesus into the world to die an appalling death in order to redeem mankind, is entirely an invention of theologians! Jesus would have foreseen that the moment he began to challenge the way the Pharisees taught the Jewish faith he would be arrested as a trouble maker and executed, for Pontius Pilate loathed the Jews and had thousands crucified during his rule. Jesus, as a man, had to endure the terror of knowing what would happen once he was arrested, leading to an excruciating death.

The words of Jesus on the cross – ‘My God, why have you forsaken me?’ – have such a ring of truth. But, significantly, they were not his final words, which were, ‘It is finished.’ In other words, as he says elsewhere, ‘Abba, I have done the work which you gave me to do’. This should be our prayer too. God may not intervene directly, but  God’s presence, nonetheless, surrounds and holds us: we are never ultimately alone. As in the words of the mantra I use: God is present; God is here; God is now.

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