What did most historical theologians feel about Demonology, Angel Heirarchies and the like? Was there a general trend? Did anyone discuss that in any detail?
Do you know much about that field?
If so, where exactly did they come up with that stuff?
Well, here’s a brief overview of the development of attitudes to angels and demons in early Christianity.
In the second century, Justin Martyr
tells us that Christians actually worship angels:
Justin Martyr said:
We are called atheists. And we confess that we are atheists, so far as gods of this sort are concerned, but not with respect to the most true God, the Father of righteousness and temperance and the other virtues, who is free from all impurity. But both him, and the Son (who came forth from him and taught us these things), and the host of the other good angels who follow and are made like to him, and the prophetic Spirit, we worship and adore.
This seems a bit confused. He also adds
this about angels:
Justin Martyr said:
God, when he made the whole world, and subjected things earthly to man… committed the care of men and of all things under heaven to angels whom he appointed over them. But the angels transgressed this appointment, and were captivated by love of women, and begat children who are those that are called demons; and besides, they afterwards subdued the human race to themselves, partly by magical writings, and partly by fears and the punishments they occasioned, and partly by teaching them to offer sacrifices, and incense, and libations, of which things they stood in need after they were enslaved by lustful passions; and among men they sowed murders, wars, adulteries, intemperate deeds, and all wickedness. Whence also the poets and mythologists, not knowing that it was the angels and those demons who had been begotten by them that did these things to men, and women, and cities, and nations, which they related, ascribed them to god himself, and to those who were accounted to be his very offspring, and to the offspring of those who were called his brothers, Neptune and Pluto, and to the children again of these their offspring.
So that should give you a fair sense of the rather vague views in second-century Christianity. There doesn’t seem to have been much of an attempt to rank or list angels. That contrasts sharply with gnostic groups, of course, who liked nothing better than to differentiate between large numbers of divine or semi-divine beings and group them into hierarchies (for example, the Valentinians grouped the divine Aeons of the Pleroma into male-female pairs). But mainstream Christianity seems not to have done this, and to have rejected the idea of levels of divinity in the first place.
Popular piety of this time did, however, regard both angels and demons as being very close to human individuals. At this time, the notion of personal angelic guardians, based on the book of Tobit and Psalm 90:11-12, was quite popular.
The Shepherd of Hermas expressed this idea like this:
Hermas said:
“Hear now,” said he, “in regard to faith. There are two angels with a man—one of righteousness, and the other of iniquity.” And I said to him, “How, sir, am I to know the powers of these, for both angels dwell with me?” “Hear,” said he, and “understand them. The angel of righteousness is gentle and modest, meek and peaceful. When, therefore, he ascends into your heart, forthwit hhe talks to you of righteousness, purity, chastity, contentment, and of every righteous deed and glorious virtue. When all these ascend into your heart, know that the angel of righteousness is with you. These are the deeds of the angel of righteousness. Trust him, then, and his works. Look now at the works of the angel of iniquity. First, he is wrathful, and bitter, and foolish, and his works are evil, and ruin the servants of God. When, then, he ascends into your heart, know him by his works.”
So this is the origin of the image of a little angel and a little devil sitting on your shoulders trying to influence your actions.
In the third century, Origen developed these ideas. He is far more interested in angels than any Christian theologian before him, saying that there are angels literally everywhere. All good things in the world are caused by angels. So whenever we eat or drink anything, we eat and drink with the angels. And he has much more to say about the origins of both angels and demons. He thinks that in the beginning, created minds were all united to God, but they fell away (all apart from one), and became angels, humans, and demons, depending on how far they fell (this is from
De principiis I.8):
Origen said:
…before the ages minds were all pure, both demons and souls and angels, offering service to God and keeping his commandments. But the devil, who was one of them, since he possessed free will, desired to resist God, and God drove him away. With him revolted all the other powers. Some sinned deeply and became demons, others less and became angels; others still less and became archangels; and thus each in turn received the reward for his individual sin. But there remained some souls who had not sinned so greatly as to become demons, nor on the other hand so very lightly as to become angels. God therefore made the present world and bound the soul to the body as a punishment. For God is no “respecter of persons”, that among all these beings who are of one nature (for all the immortal beings are rational) he should make some demons, some souls and some angels; rather it is clear that God mad one a demon, one a soul and one an angel as a means of punishing each in proportion to its sin.
He also developed the idea of different angels having different tasks.
He repeats the notion, from Hermas, of personal guardian angels and tempting demons. But guardian angels, for Origen, are not just ethical influences – they are also intermediaries between individuals and God.
He writes:
Origen said:
…we do speak of angels who are “ministering spirits sent forth to do service for the sake of those who will inherit salvation”. They ascend bringing the prayers of men into the purest heavenly region of the universe, or even to places purer than these beyond the heavens. And again they descend from there bringing to each individual according to his merits some benefit which God commands them to administer to those who are to receive his favours. Though we have learnt to call them angels from their activity, because they are divine we find that they are sometimes called “gods” in the sacred scriptures, but not in the sense that we are commanded to reverence and worship instead of God those who minister and bring to us his blessings. We have to send up every petition, prayer, intercession, and thanksgiving to the supreme God through the high priest of all angels, the living and divine Logos…
So there is a sort of hierarchy, with the Logos below the Father, the angels below the Logos, and us below the angels. And Origen specifies that each angel is assigned specific duties.
So he says:
Origen said:
We must not suppose that it is the result of chance that a particular duty is assigned to a particular angel; the work of curing and healing, for instance, to Raphael; the supervising of wars to Gabriel; the task of attending to the prayers and supplications of mortals to Michael. We must believe that they have obtained these duties for no other reason except their own individual merits and that they entered upon them as a reward for the zeal and virtue they displayed before the construction of this world; after which event this or that kind of duty was assigned to each member of the order of archangels, while others were counted worthy of being enrolled in the order of angels and to act under this or that archangel, or under this or that leader or chief of his order. All this, as we have said, was arranged not by chance or at random, but by the most appropriate and righteous judgment of God, being settled in accordance with merit, God himself deciding and approving. Thus to one angel would be entrusted the church of Ephesus, to another the church of Smyrna; this angel would be Peter’s, that Paul’s; and so on through the entire number of those “least ones” who are in the church it would be decided which of the angels, who daily “see the face of God”, must be attached to each…
This hints at a hierarchy
among angels, but Origen doesn’t really flesh this out. He says instead that the virtue of all angels is the same, although they are superior to human beings. But he stresses that human beings can become equal to angels, because their origins are the same – human beings and angels alike are fallen rational beings; it’s just that they haven’t all fallen as far.
Now this really sets the scene for what came next. First, demons were the subject of considerable scrutiny on the part of the desert fathers, many of whom were deeply influenced by Origen. One of the most Origenist of them was the leading theologian of the Egyptian desert, Evagrius Ponticus, who was extremely interested in demons. He wrote at length about “thoughts” which plague the monk – they come from within the mind, but arise against the monk’s volition, which indicates that they are actually caused by demons acting on the brain (demons cannot act directly on the soul). In fact these “thoughts” have a lot in common with the obsessions associated with OCD, and I’ve argued that Evagrius actually had OCD and was reporting its symptoms. In any case, Evagrius says that both angels and demons may do incite thoughts in the mind, but we can tell which thoughts come from which by their contents:
Evagrius Ponticus said:
After lengthy observation we have learned to recognize this difference between angelic and human thoughts, and those that come from the demons. Firstly, angelic thoughts are concerned with the investigation of the natures of things and search out their spiritual principles. For example, the reason why gold was made and why it is sand-like and scattered through the lower regions of the earth, and is discovered with much labour and toil… The demonic thought neither knows nor understands these things, but without shame it suggests only the acquisition of sensible gold and predicts the enjoyment and esteem that will come from this. The human thought neither seeks the acquisition of gold nor is concerned with investigating what gold symbolizes; rather, it merely introduced in the intellect the simple form of gold separate from any passion of greed.
Evagrius categorises the thoughts into eight types:
Evagrius Ponticus said:
All the generic types of thoughts fall into eight categories in which every sort of thought is included. First is that of gluttony, then fornication, third avarice, fourth sadness, fifth anger, sixth acedia, seventh vainglory, eighth pride. Whether or not all these thoughts trouble the soul is not within our power; but it is for us to decide if they are to linger within us or not and whether or not they stir up the passions.
These are the “eight sinful thoughts”. Evagrius’ (probable) disciple John Cassian repeated this idea in his
Conferences, which were hugely in influential on western monasticism; Gregory the Great would later develop it a little to produce the “seven deadly sins”. (Sadness and vainglory were both dropped from the list, acedia was transformed into sloth, and envy was added.) Evagrius thinks that each kind of thought is produced by a different kind of demon: the demons specialise. So by examining the thoughts carefully, you can tell which demon is attacking you, and tailor your response accordingly:
Evagrius Ponticus said:
It is necessary to recognize the differences among demons and to make note of their attendant circumstances. We shall know them on the basis of the thoughts, and the thoughts on the basis of the objects, that is, with regard to which of the demons are uncommon and more oppressive, what sort are persistent but easier to bear, and which ones burst upon us suddenly and carry the mind away into blasphemy. It is necessary to know these things, so that when the thoughts begin to set their proper matter in motion and before we are cast out of our own state we may pronounce some word against them and denounce the one at hand. In this way we may readily make progress with God’s help and set them to flight in amazement and consternation over us.
Evagrius’ advice about how to counter the demonic attacks is generally extremely subtle and sensible. He has general advice intended for all kinds of thoughts: for example, he recommends examining the thought itself and trying to analyse it, which takes your mind off the thing that the demon is trying to make you think about (e.g. if the demon is bringing lustful thoughts to mind, focus on the thoughts themselves and examine how they arise in your mind, what they are like, how they operate, and so on, and that will distract you from the lust). He also has advice for the particular kinds of thought. So here, for example, is Evagrius’ famous description of what happens when the demon of acedia attacks:
Evagrius Ponticus said:
The demon of acedia, also called the noonday demon, is the most oppressive of all the demons. He attacks the monk about 10:00 am and besieges his soul until 2:00 pm. First of all, he makes it appear that the sun moves slowly or not at all, and that the day seems to be fifty hours long. Then he compels the monk to look constantly towards the windows, to jump out of the cell, to watch the sun to see how far it is from 3:00 pm, to look this way and that lest one of the brothers is coming to visit him. And further, he instils in him a dislike for the place and for his state of life itself, for manual labour, and also the idea that love has disappeared from among the brothers and there is no-one to console him. And should there be someone during those days who has offended the monk, this too the demon uses to add further to his dislike of the place. He leads him on to a desire for other places where he can easily find the wherewithal to meet his needs and pursue a trade that is easier and more productive.
And this is some of his advice on how to tackle this demon:
Evagrius Ponticus said:
When we come up against the demon of acedia, then with tears let us divide the soul and have one part offer consolation and the other receive consolation. And sowing within ourselves goodly hopes, let us chant with holy David this incantation: “Why are you saddened, O my soul, and why do you trouble me? Hope in God; for I shall confess him, the salvation of my face and my God.”
You must not abandon the cell in the time of temptations, fashioning excuses seemingly reasonable. Rather, you must remain seated inside, exercise perseverance, and valiantly welcome all attackers, especially the demon of acedia, who is the most oppressive of all but leaves the soul proven to the highest degree. Fleeing and circumventing such struggles teaches the mind to be unskilled, cowardly, and evasive.
Our saintly teacher with his great experience in the practical life used to say: The monk must ever hold himself ready as though he were to die tomorrow, and in turn must treat the body as though he would have to live with it for many years. The first practice, he would say, cuts off the thoughts of acedia and makes the monk more zealous; the latter keeps the body healthy and always maintains its abstinence in balance.
Here’s his advice for the “vagabond demon”, a sort of demonic ringleader that assaults you with all kinds of different thoughts:
Evagrius Ponticus said:
There is a demon called the “vagabond” who presents himself to the brothers especially about the time of dawn; he leads the mind around from city to city, from village to village, and from house to house. The mind arranges so-called simple encounters, then meets with acquaintances, holds longer conversations, and corrupts its own state with these associations, distancing itself little by little from the knowledge of God and from virtue while it forgets even its profession. The anchorite must therefore observe this demon, where he starts from and where he ends up, for he does not make this long circuit by chance or at random, but rather it is with the intention of destroying the anchorite’s state that he does this, so that the mind, inflamed by these things and intoxicated by these many encounters, immediately falls prey to the demon of fornication or anger or sadness – these demons especially spoil the radiance of its state. But if we make it our goal to know clearly the cunning of this demon, let us not be quick to speak to him or make known what is happening – how he produces these encounters in the intellect and the way in which he drives the mind little by little towards death – since he will flee from us, for he cannot allow himself to be seen doing these things; and then we will know nothing about what we have endeavoured to learn. Rather, let us allow him, for another day or two, to bring his game to completion, so that having learned about his deceitfulness in detail, we may put him to flight by exposing him with a word. But since in time of temptation the mind may happen to be muddled and not see accurately what is happening, one should do the following after the withdrawal of the demon. Sit down and recall for yourself the things that happened to you – where you started from, where you went, and the place in which you were caught by the spirit of fornication or anger or sadness, and how in turn these things took place. Examine these events carefully and commit them to memory that you may be able to expose him when he approaches; and uncover the place hidden by him, and how you will not follow him again. If you want to get him really mad, expose him immediately when he presents himself; and with a word show him the first place he entered, then the second and third, for he gets extremely vexed and cannot bear the shame.
For Evagrius, as for most early Christians, demons are physical beings. They have bodies as we do, but their bodies are much more ethereal. Ancient Christians typically thought that demons required food, and that pagan sacrifices literally nourished them with smoke (since they thought that the pagan gods were actually demons). Evagrius thinks that some thoughts have a physical effect on us because of the proximity of the demonic bodies themselves:
Evagrius Ponticus said:
There are certain impure demons who always sit in front of those engaged in reading and try to seize their mind, often taking pretexts from the divine scriptures themselves and ending in evil thoughts. It sometimes happens that they force them to yawn more than they are accustomed and they instil a very deep sleep quite different from usual sleep. Whereas some of the brothers have imagined that it is in accordance with an unintelligible natural reaction, I for my part have learned this by frequent observation: they touch the eyelids and the entire head, cooling it with their own body, for the bodies of the demons are very cold and like ice; and the head feels as if it is being sucked by a cupping glass with a rasping sound. They do this in order to draw to themselves the heat that lies within the cranium, and then the eyelids, relaxed by the moisture and the cold, slip over the pupils of the eyes. Often in touching myself I have found my eyelids fixed like ice and my entire face numb and shivering. Natural sleep however normally warms bodies and renders the faces of healthy people rosy, as one can learn from experience itself. But the demons provoke unnatural and prolonged yawning, and they make themselves small enough to touch the interior of the mouth. This phenomenon I have not understood to this day, though I have often experienced it, but I heard the holy Makarios speak to me about it and offer as proof the fact that those who yawn make the sign of the cross over the mouth according to an old and mysterious tradition.
The desert monks took these things very seriously. Athanasius of Alexandria described more lurid demonic attacks in his
Life of Antony, one of the most influential books ever written, since it was the prototype of all saints’ lives that followed. He describes the following incident in the life of Antony the Great, one of the first Christian monks:
Athanasius said:
Antony went out to the tombs that were situated some distance from the village. He changed one of his friends to supply him periodically with bread, and he entered one of the tombs and remained alone within, his friend having closed the door on him. When the enemy could stand it no longer – for he was apprehensive that Antony might before long fill the desert with the discipline – approaching one night with a multitude of demons he whipped him with such force that he lay on the earth, speechless from the tortures. He contended that the pains were so severe as to lead one to say that the blows could not have been delivered by humans, since they caused such agony. But by God’s providence (for the Lord does not overlook those who place their hope in him), the friend came the next day bringing him the loaves. Opening the door and seeing him lying, as if dead, on the ground, he picked him up and carried him to the Lord’s house in the village, and laid him on the earth. And many of his relatives and the people of the village stationed themselves by Antony as beside a corpse. But around midnight, coming to his senses and wakening, Antony, as he saw everyone sleeping, and only his friend keeping the watch, beckoned to him and asked him to lift him again and carry him to the tombs, waking no-one.
So he was taken back there by the man and, as before, the door was closed. Again he was alone inside. Because of the blows he was not strong enough to stand, but he prayed while lying down. And after the prayer he yelled out: “Here I am – Antony! I do not run from your blows, for even if you give me more, nothing shall separate me from the love of Christ.” Then he also sang, Though an army should set itself in array against me, my heart shall not be afraid. These things, then, the ascetic thought and spoke, but the enemy who despises good, astonished that even after the blows he had received he dared to return, summoned his dogs and said, exploding with rage, “You see that we failed to stop this man with a spirit of fornication or with lashes. Far from it – he is even insolent to us. Let us approach him in another way.” Now schemes for working evil come easily to the devil, so when it was night-time they made such a crashing noise that that whole place seemed to be shaken by a quake. The demons, as if breaking through the building’s four walls, and seeming to enter through them, were changed into the forms of beasts and reptiles. The place immediately was filled with the appearances of lions, bears, leopards, bulls, and serpents, asps, scorpions and wolves, and each of these moved in accordance with its form. The lion roared, wanting to spring at him; the bull seemed intent on goring; the creeping snake did not quite reach him; the onrushing wolf made straight for him – and altogether the sounds of all the creatures that appeared were terrible, and their ragings were fierce. Struck and wounded by them, Antony’s body was subject to yet more pain. But unmoved and even more watchful in his soul he lay there, and he groaned because of the pain he felt in his body, but being in control of his thoughts and as if mocking them, he said: “If there were some power among you, it would have been enough for only one of you to come. But since the Lord has broken your strength, you attempt to terrify me by any means with the mob; it is a mark of your weakness that you mimic the shapes of irrational beasts.”…
In this circumstance also the Lord did not forget the wrestling of Antony, but came to his aid. For when he looked up he saw the roof being opened, as it seemed, and a certain beam of light descending toward him. Suddenly the demons vanished from view, the pain of his body ceased instantly, and the building was once more intact.
So that’s demons within the Origenist tradition. As for angels, the man to consult on this subject is Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite, a theologian writing in around AD 500. He wrote his books under the name of Dionysius the Areopagite, a character mentioned in Acts as one of Paul’s converts in Athens, and it seems that everyone was taken in by this pseudonymity for nearly a thousand years, even though he relies on technical Neoplatonist jargon and even quotes Ignatius of Antioch (who lived a generation or two after the historical Dionysius) at one point.
Later Neoplatonic philosophy, specifically that deriving from Proclus, revolved around triads. The whole of reality was conceived in terms of these triads, and what’s more, there was a typically triadic movement within reality, of procession, remaining, and return. Pseudo-Dionysius takes these ideas and Christianises them to create his “symbolic theology”, which proved incredibly influential. Dionysius describes the world as divided into hierarchies, each consisting of three elements, descending from God down to man. There are two main parts to the hierarchies – angelic and ecclesiastical. The former, described in
De coelesti hierarchiae, consists of, first, seraphim, cherubim, and thrones; then dominions, virtues, and powers; and finally principalities, angels, and archangels. Each of these categories, or choirs, of beings manifests and distributes the activity and virtues of God to the world. The lowest choir of each of the three hierarchies purifies, the middle one illuminates, and the highest perfects those upon whom they act. Moreover, the higher up the hierarchy one goes, the closer to God the choirs are, and the more perfectly they are devoted to him.
And the system continues in the visible world, with three more hierarchies in the church, described in
De ecclesiasticae hierarchiae. First are the sacraments – baptism, the Eucharist, and unction; then the clergy – bishops, priests, and deacons; and finally those who are instructed – monks, lay people, and catechumens. Here again, the functions of each of the three hierarchies, and of the three categories within each hierarchy, can be understood in terms of purification, illumination, and perfection.
Dionysius does not think of these hierarchies as a kind of ladder by which one climbs to God, beginning as a catechumen and finishing as a seraph. Rather, the hierarchies are the means by which God’s love and goodness are manifested and distributed. Every element on the hierarchies has its role to play, and by doing so and embracing its place it can know God directly, not simply as mediated by those higher up the hierarchy.
This is partly due to the fact that the hierarchies are themselves a reflection of God, who is also a hierarchy – the Thearchy of Father, Son, and Spirit. Thus, there are three sets of hierarchies altogether, each containing three hierarchies of three categories each.
He says that God has always manifested himself via angels, because no-one can see God. It was angels that gave the Law and spoke to the prophets.
It’s hard to give representative passages from Pseudo-Dionysius because of the style of his writing; he doesn’t tend to give summaries. The whole of
De coelesti hierarchiae is really a summary of his views. But here’s a typical passage, describing the Seraphim, which are at the top of the celestial hierarchy and therefore the highest members of the hierarchies other than the Trinity:
Pseudo-Dionysius said:
The name Seraphim clearly indicates their ceaseless and eternal revolution about Divine Principles, their heat and keenness, the exuberance of their intense, perpetual, tireless activity, and their elevative and energetic assimilation of those below, kindling them and firing them to their own heat, and wholly purifying them by a burning and all- consuming flame; and by the unhidden, unquenchable, changeless, radiant and enlightening power, dispelling and destroying the shadows of darkness.
This, so far as I know, is the first Order of Celestial Beings which are established about God, immediately encircling Him: and in perpetual purity they encompass His eternal Knowledge in that most high and eternal angelic dance, rapt in the bliss of manifold blessed contemplations, and irradiated with pure and primal splendours.
This was incredibly influential on medieval thought – the whole thing, from the concept of hierarchy itself all the way to the details of the angelic and ecclesiastical hierarchies. You can see how easily it would fit in with feudal society. Some of the details did change. Isidore of Seville, who was the source for most medieval writers for this kind of thing, and who took his ideas from Pseudo-Dionysius, gave a slightly different version of the angelic hierarchies, which became standard in the medieval west. But the basic substance of it was unchanged.