Michael ( ,
Micha'el or
Mîkhā'ēl; ,
Mikhaḗl; or
Míchaël; ,
Mikā'īl) is an
archangel in
Jewish, Christian and Islamic tradition. He is viewed as the field
commander of the Army of God. He is mentioned by name in the
Book of Daniel, the
Book of Jude and the
Book of Revelation.
In the book of Daniel,
Michael appears as "one of the chief princes" who in Daniel's vision comes to the angel Gabriel's aid in his contest with the
angel of Persia
(Dobiel), and is also described there as the advocate
of Israel and "great prince who
stands up for the children of your [Daniel's] people".
The
Talmudic tradition rendered Michael's
name as meaning "Who is like
El?"
("Who is like God?"), As a question, it is understood as being
rhetorical, implying the answer, "No one is like God."
Much of the late
Midrashic detail about
Michael was transmitted to Christianity through the
Book of Enoch, whence it was taken up and
further elaborated.
In late medieval Christianity, Michael,
together with Saint George, became the
patron saint of chivalry, and of the first chivalric order of France
, the
Order of Saint Michael of
1469. In the
British
honours system, a chivalric order founded in 1818 is also named
for these two saints, the
Order of St Michael and St
George. St Michael is also considered in many Christian circles
as the patron saint of the warrior.
Police officers and
soldiers, particularly
paratroopers and
fighter pilots, regard him as their patron.
He is also
a patron of Germany and of the City of Brussels
.
Roman Catholics refer to him as
Saint Michael the Archangel and also simply as
Saint Michael.
Orthodox Christian refer to him as
the
Taxiarch Archangel Michael or simply
Archangel Michael. The
New
Thought Movement refers to Michael as
Christ
Michael.
Old Testament
Book of Daniel
The prophet
Daniel experiences a vision after
having undergone a period of fasting.
In the vision, an
angel identifies Michael as the protector of Israel
(10:13,
21). Later in the vision (12:1), Daniel is informed that
Michael will stand for Israel during the time of the End . There is
no further mention of Michael in the Hebrew Bible.
Book of Joshua
Some believe the numinous "captain of the host of the Lord"
encountered by Joshua in the early days of his campaigns in the
Promised Land (
Joshua 5:13-15) is
Michael the Archangel. This unnamed heavenly messenger is of
supernatural and holy origin, likely sent by God:
There is some controversy about this passage, however.In other
places in the Bible, angels do not accept the worship of humans
(see Rev. 22:9 for an example); the willingness of this person to
accept Joshua's worship implies that he was divine (e.g., a
theophany of God). However, it is not clear whether the angel was
the subject of Joshua's worship or merely instigated worship of
God.
Hebrew apocrypha
War of the Sons of Light Against the Sons of Darkness
In the
War of the
Sons of Light Against the Sons of Darkness, Michael is
described as the prince of light, leading forces of God against the
darkness of evil, who is led by
Belial. He is
described as the "viceroy of heaven", a title that is said to have
formerly belonged to the Morning Star .
Book of Enoch
Michael is designated in the
Book of
Enoch, as "the prince of Israel" and the "archistratege"
of God. He is the angel of forbearance and mercy (
Enoch,
xl:3) who taught Enoch the mysteries of clemency and justice
(lxxi:2). Some speculate that the angel in the book of
Jubilees (i:27 and ii:1), who is said to have
instructed Moses on Mount Sinai and to have delivered to him the
tables of the Law, may be Michael.
Enoch 9:1 states that Michael, along with
Gabriel,
Raphael,
Uriel and
Suriel
heard the cries of men under the strain of the Watchers and their
giant offspring. It was Michael and his compatriots that beseeched
God on behalf of men, prompting Yahweh to call Enoch to
prophethood.
In Enoch 10:15 Yahweh says to Michael; "Go and announce his crime
to Samyaza, and to the others who are with him, who have been
associated with women, that they might be polluted with all their
impurity. And when all their sons shall be slain, when they shall
see the perdition of their beloved, bind them for seventy
generations underneath the earth, even to the day of Judgement, and
of consummation, until the judgement, the effect of which will last
forever and be completed."
Enoch 20:5 says that Michael presides over human virtue in order to
command nations.
Enoch 24:4-10 has Enoch before the Tree of Life/Mercy, and Michael
explains to him that he should not touch it, for it is for those
who are 'elect' after the day of Judgement.
Enoch 40:8 says that Michael is patient and merciful.
Enoch 53:6 states that Michael, along with Gabriel, Raphael and
Phanuel shall be strengthened during the Battle of
Armageddon.
Enoch 58 shows Enoch overcome with terror over a vision he has, and
Michael is quick to interpret. The terror is only for those who
turn on Yahweh, that the Day of Judgement is for the elect, a day
of covenant, while for sinners it is a day of inquisition.
Enoch 66:14-15 has Michael explaining to Enoch that the evil
spirits [demons] shall bear witness against those of the flesh who
supported them. Yet Enoch is told that Michael holds a secret oath
so that the elect shall not perish by their knowledge like the
sinners, Enoch 68:20-22.
Enoch 70:11-16 shows that Michael, Gabriel, Raphael and
Phanuel always 'escort' Yahweh [God the
Father], whenever he leaves his throne.
Rabbinic traditions
According to rabbinic Jewish tradition, Michael acted as the
advocate of Israel, and sometimes had to fight with the princes of
the other nations (cf. Daniel 10:13) and particularly with the
angel
Samael, Israel's accuser. Michael's
enmity with Samael dates from the time when the latter was thrown
down from heaven. Samael took hold of the wings of Michael, whom he
wished to bring down with him in his fall; but Michael was saved by
God (Midrash Pirke R. El. xxvi.).
The
rabbis declare that Michael entered upon
his role of defender at the time of the biblical patriarchs. Thus,
according to Rabbi Eliezer ben Jacob, it was Michael who rescued
Abraham from the furnace into which he had been thrown by Nimrod
(Midrash Genesis Rabbah xliv. 16). It was Michael, the "one that
had escaped" (Genesis 14:13), who told Abraham that Lot had been
taken captive (Midrash Pirke R. El.), and who protected Sarah from
being defiled by Abimelech. He announced to Sarah that she would
bear a son and he rescued Lot at the destruction of Sodom (Talmud
B. M. 86b).
It is said that Michael prevented
Isaac from
being sacrificed by his father by substituting a ram in his place,
and saved Jacob, while yet in his mother's womb, from being killed
by Samael (Midr. Abkir, in Yalḳ., Gen. 110). Later Michael
prevented Laban from harming Jacob (Pirke R. El. xxxvi.). According
to one source, it was Michael who wrestled with Jacob and who
afterward blessed him (Targum pseudo-Jonathan to Genesis xxxii. 25;
Pirke R. El. xxxvii.).
The
midrash Exodus Rabbah holds
that Michael exercised his function of advocate of Israel at the
time of the Exodus also, when Satan (as an adversary) accused the
Israelites of idolatry and declared that they were consequently
deserving of death by
drowning in the Red
Sea (Ex. R. xviii. 5). But according to Midr. Abkir, when Uzza, the
tutelar angel of Egypt, summoned Michael to plead before God,
Michael remained silent, and it was God himself who defended
Israel.
Legend makes Michael the teacher of Moses; so that the Israelites
are indebted to their advocate for the supreme good of the
Torah. This idea is alluded to in Midrash Deuteronomy
Rabbah xi. 6 in the statement that Michael declined to bring Moses'
soul to God on the ground that he had been Moses' teacher.
Michael is said to have destroyed the army of
Sennacherib (Midrash Exodus Rabbah xviii. 5), a
deed normally attributed to an otherwise unnamed angel of
destruction but perhaps accomplished by
Uriel,
Gabriel, or others.
Michael is also credited with being the angel who spoke to Moses in
the burning bush (an honor often bestowed upon Zagzagel).
He is accepted in lore as well as being the special patron of
Adam. Supposedly he was the first angel
in all of the heavens to bow down before humanity. Michael then
kept an eye on the first family, remaining vigilant even after the
fall of Adam and Eve and their expulsion from the
Garden of Eden.
In the apocryphal
Conflict of Adam and Eve
with Satan, Michael taught Adam how to farm. The archangel
later brought Adam to heaven in a fiery chariot, giving him a tour
of the blessed realm. After Adam's death, Michael helped convince
the Lord to permit Adam's soul to be brought to heaven and cleansed
of its great sin.Jewish legend also states Michael to be one of the
three "men" who visited Abraham.
He is said to have tried to prevent Israel
from being led into captivity by Nebuchadnezzar II and to save the Temple
from destruction; but the sins of the people were
so great that he was powerless to carry his purposes into
effect.There is a legend which seems to be of Jewish origin,
and which was adopted by the
Copts, to the
effect that Michael was first sent by God to bring Nebuchadnezzar
against Jerusalem, and that Michael was afterward very active in
freeing his nation from Babylonian captivity (Amélineau, "Contes et
Romans de l'Egypte Chrétienne," ii. 142 et seq.).According to a
midrash, Michael saved Hananiah and his companions from the
Fiery furnace (Midrash Genesis Rabbah
xliv. 16). Michael was active in the time of
Esther: "The more Haman accused Israel on earth, the
more Michael defended Israel in heaven" (Midrash Esther Rabbah iii.
8). It was Michael who reminded Ahasuerus that he was Mordecai's
debtor (Targum to Esther vi. 1); and there is a legend that Michael
appeared to the high priest Hyrcanus, promising him assistance
(comp. Josephus, "Ant." xiii. 10, § 3).
The
motif of Michael and the
dragon appears in Michael's fight with Samael in Assumptio Mosis,
x.). This legend is not found in Jewish sources except insofar as
Samael or Satan is called in the
Kabbalah
"the primitive serpent".
The idea that Michael was the advocate of the Jews became so
prevalent that in spite of the rabbinical prohibition against
appealing to angels as intermediaries between God and his people,
Michael came to occupy a certain place in the Jewish liturgy. There
were two prayers written beseeching him as the prince of mercy to
intercede in favor of Israel: one composed by Eliezer ha-Kalir, and
the other by Judah b. Samuel he-Hasid. But appeal to Michael seems
to have been more common in ancient times. Thus Jeremiah is said
(Baruch Apoc. Ethiopic, ix. 5) to have addressed a prayer to him.
"When a man is in need he must pray directly to God, and neither to
Michael nor to Gabriel" (Yer. Ber. ix. 13a).
With regard to the nature of the offerings which Michael brings to
the altar, one opinion is that they are the souls of the just,
while according to another they are fiery sheep. The former
opinion, which has become prevalent in Jewish mystical writings,
explains the important position occupied by Michael in
Jewish eschatology. The idea that Michael
is the
Charon of individual
souls, which is common among Christians, is not found in Jewish
sources, but that he is in charge of the souls of the just appears
in many Jewish writings.
Michael is said to have had a dispute with Samael over the soul of
Moses (Midrash Deut. Rabbah xi. 6.) According to the
Zohar, Michael accompanies the souls of the pious and
helps them to enter the gates of the heavenly Jerusalem. It is said
that Michael and his host are stationed at the gates of the
heavenly Jerusalem and give admittance to the souls of the just.
Michael's function is to open the gates also of justice to the
just. It is also said that at the resurrection, Gabriel will sound
the trumpet, at which the graves will open and the dead will
rise.
Kabbalistic traditions
In later Jewish writings, particularly in
Kabbalistic works, he is viewed as "the advocate of
the Jews."
Christian tradition
Canonical New Testament
In the
Epistle of Jude of the
New Testament in verse 9, St Michael
disputes with the Devil over the body of
Moses. In
Revelation
12:7-9, "And there was a great battle in heaven, Michael and his
angels fought with the dragon, and the dragon and his angels fought
back. But he was not strong enough, and they lost their place in
heaven.The great dragon as hurled down--that ancient serpent called
the devil, or satan, who leads the whole world astray. He was
hurled to the earth, and his angels with him." Saint John describes
Satan being thrown out of heaven three and a half years from the
end of the age, "a
time,
times and half a time" (Revelation 12:14). Satan being thrown
from heaven coincides with the "abomination that causes desolation"
as spoken of by the prophet ( ). In Catholic teachings, Saint
Michael will also triumph at the end times when
Antichrist will be defeated by him.
The Book of Daniel (12:1) states: "At
that time Michael, the great prince who protects your people, will
arise."
Christian View
According to some Christian theologians, Saint Michael may appear
in Scripture where his name is not mentioned. Examples of this
include the
cherub who stood at the gate of
paradise, "to keep the way of the tree of life" (
Genesis 3:24), the angel through whom God
published the Decalogue to his chosen people, the angel who stood
in the way against
Balaam (
Numbers 22:22 sqq.), the angel who routed
the army of
Sennacherib (
2 Kings 19:35).
It may have been natural to St Michael, the champion of the Jewish
people, to be the champion also of Christians, giving victory in
war to his clients. The early Christians, however, regarded some of
the martyrs as their military patrons:
Saint George,
Saint Theodore,
Saint Demetrius,
Saints Sergius and Bacchus,
Saint Procopius,
Saint Mercurius, etc.; but to St Michael
they gave the care of their sick.
At the place where he was first venerated,
in Phrygia (modern-day Turkey
), his
prestige as an angelic healer obscured his interposition in
military affairs. It was from early times the centre of the
true cult of the holy angels, particularly of St Michael.
Church
tradition relates that Saint Michael in the earliest ages caused a
medicinal spring to spout at Chairotopa, near Colossae
, where all
the sick who bathed there, invoking the Blessed Trinity and St Michael, were
cured.
Still more
famous are the legends of the springs which St. Michael is said to
have drawn from the rock at Colossae
(Chonae
, on the
Lycus). Church tradition tells that the
pagans directed a stream against the sanctuary of St. Michael to
destroy it, but the custodian of the shrine, named Archippus,
prayed to St. Michael, and the archangel appeared and split the
rock, opening up a new bed to divert the stream, and forever
sanctified the waters which came from the gorge. The
Orthodox Church believes that this
apparition took place about the middle of the first century and
celebrates a feast in commemoration of it on
September 6 as the
"Miracle of the Archangel
Michael at Chonae." The Monastery of the Miracle
in the Moscow Kremlin
, where the Russian
Tsars were baptized, was dedicated to
the Feast of the Miracle at Chonae (Kona). Hot springs at
Pythia in Bithynia
and elsewhere in Asia
Minor
were also dedicated to St Michael.
At
Constantinople
likewise, Saint Michael was the great heavenly
physician. His principal sanctuary, the
"Michaelion", was at Sosthenion, some fifty miles south of
Constantinople. He supposedly visited Emperor
Constantine the Great at
Constantinople, intervened in assorted battles, and appeared, sword
in hand, over the mausoleum of
Hadrian, in
apparent answer to the prayers of Pope St.
Gregory I the Great (r. 590-604) that a
plague in Rome should cease.
In honor of the occasion, the pope took to
calling the mausoleum the "Castel
Sant'Angelo
" (Castle of the Holy Angel), the name by which
it is still known. The sick slept in this church at night to
wait for a manifestation of St Michael; his feast was kept there
June 9.
Another famous church was within the walls of the city, at the
thermal baths of the Emperor
Arcadius;
there the synaxis of the archangel was celebrated
November 8.
This feast spread over the entire Greek
Church, and the Syrian
, Armenian
, and Coptic Churches
also adopted it. It is currently the principal feast of St
Michael amongst the
Eastern
Christians. Although originating in Phrygia, its station at
Constantinople was known as the
"Thermae of Arcadius"
(Martinow, "Annus Graeco-slavicus",
November
8). Other feasts of St Michael at Constantinople were:
October 27, in the "Promotu" Church;
June 18, in the Church of St Julian at the Forum;
and
December 10, at Athaea.
The early Christians of Egypt placed their life-giving river, the
Nile, under the protection of Saint Michael;
they adopted the above Greek feast and keep it on
November 12. On the twelfth of every month they
celebrate a special
Commemoration of
the Archangel Michael. In addition, on
June
12, when the Nile river commences to rise, they keep as a day
of obligation the feast of
"St Michael for the rising of the
Nile."
At Rome, the Leonine Sacramentary (sixth century) has the
"Natale Basilicae Angeli via Salaria",
September 30; of the five Masses for the feast,
three mention St Michael. The Gelasian Sacramentary (seventh
century) gives the feast
"S. Michaelis
Archangeli", and the Gregorian Sacramentary (eighth century),
"Dedicatio Basilionis S. Angeli Michaelis",
September 29. A manuscript also here adds "via Salaria" (Ebner,
"Miss. Rom. Iter Italicum", 127). This Church of the Via Salaria
was six miles to the north of the city; in the ninth century it was
called Basilica Archangeli in Septimo (Armellini, "Chiese di Roma",
p. 85). It disappeared a thousand years ago. At Rome also the
part of heavenly physician was given to St Michael. According to a
legend of the tenth century, he appeared over the Moles Hadriani
(Castel di S. Angelo), in 950, during the procession which St.
Gregory held against the pestilence, putting an end to the plague.
Pope Boniface IV (608-15) built on
the Moles Hadriani in honour of him, a church, which was styled St.
Michaelis inter nubes (in summitate circi).
In
Normandy, Saint Michael is the patron of mariners in his famous sanctuary at Mont-Saint-Michel
in the Diocese of
Coutances. He is said to have appeared there, in 708, to
St. Aubert,
Bishop of Avranches. In Normandy, his
feast,
"S. Michaelis in periculo maris", or "in
Monte Tumba", was universally celebrated on
October 18, the anniversary of the dedication of
the first church,
October 16,
710; the feast is now confined to the Diocese of
Coutances.

Saint Aubert's dream

The Mont-Saint-Michel in Normandy,
France
In Germany, after its evangelization, Saint Michael replaced for
the Christians the pagan god
Wotan, to whom
many mountains were sacred, hence the numerous mountain chapels of
St. Michael all over Germany. He is also known as the patron saint
of the German Nation. His picture bedecked the war standard of the
old German Empire (the
Holy Roman
Empire).
The hymns
of the Roman Office are said to have been composed by Saint Rabanus Maurus of Fulda
(d.
856). The hymn "
Te Splendor" to Saint
Michael (which derives its name from the fact that in Latin it
begins with Te splendor et virtus Patris) is published in the
Raccolta collection of prayers with indulgences, and, in 1817, Pope
Pius VII granted an indulgence for saying the hymn.
In art, St Michael is represented as an angelic warrior, fully
armed with helmet, sword, and shield (often the shield bears the
Latin inscription:
"Quis ut
Deus?"), standing over the dragon, whom he sometimes
pierces with a lance. He also holds a pair of scales in which he
weighs the souls of the departed (cf. Rock, "The Church of Our
Fathers", III, 160), or the
Book of
Life, to show that he takes part in the judgment.
Michaelangelo depicted this scene on the
ceiling of the Sistine
Chapel
.
His feast (
September 29) in the Middle
Ages was celebrated as a holy day of obligation, as he was the
patron of knights, but along with several other feasts it was
gradually abolished since the eighteenth century. Michaelmas Day,
in England and other countries, is one of the regular quarter-days
for settling rents and accounts; but it is no longer remarkable for
the hospitality with which it was formerly celebrated.
Stubble-geese being esteemed in perfection about this time, most
families had one dressed on Michaelmas Day. In some parishes, (such
as the Isle of Skye,) they had a procession on this day and baked a
cake, called St Michael's bannock.
Roman Catholic and Orthodox Christians often refer to the angel
Michael as
"Saint Michael", an honorific title that does
not indicate
canonisation. He is
generally referred to in Christian
litanies
as
"Saint Michael the Archangel." Orthodoxy accords him
the title
"Archistrategos", or
"Supreme Commander of
the Heavenly Hosts."
Saint Michael was usually honored on mountain tops and high places,
and many famous shrines to him survive on those places, often
replacing shrines of pre-Christian gods concerned with weather,
like Wotan.
In Greek folklore, St Michael also assumed the god
Hermes' role as the
psychopomp who leads souls to
Hades, and in the role of weigher of souls on
Judgment Day. A related folk
belief is that St Michael's face can only be seen by the dead and
by those about to die. It is for this reason that some folk
icons depict him without a face.
In the
Roman Catholic Church,
Saint Michael has four main roles or offices. He is the Christian
angel of death, carrying the souls of all the deceased to heaven,
where they are weighed in his perfectly balanced scales (hence
Michael is often depicted holding scales). At the hour of death,
Michael descends and gives each soul the chance to redeem itself
before passing, thus consternating the devil and his minions. St
Michael is the special patron of the Chosen People in the Old
Testament and is guardian of the Church; it was thus not unusual
for the angel to be revered by the military orders of knights
during the Middle Ages. Last, he is the supreme enemy of Satan and
the
fallen angels.
In the
Roman Catholic
calendar of saints and the
Lutheran Calendar of Saints,
his feast day, once widely known as
Michaelmas, is celebrated
September 29 and was one of the four
quarter days on which accounts were settled
and, in England, when terms began in universities. In the
Eastern Orthodox Church, his
principal feast day is
November 8, where
he is honored along with the rest of the
"Bodiless Powers of
Heaven" as their Supreme Commander, and
his miraculous appearance at Colossae (see below) is commemorated
on
September 6.
The last visit, that of his appearance over the mausoleum of
Hadrian, certified one major aspect
involving Michael, namely his role as an angel of healing.
This
title was bestowed at Phrygia, in Asia Minor
, which also propagated the cult of angels and
became a leading center for their veneration. St Michael is reputed
to have caused a healing spring to flow in the first century at
Colossae
, and his churches were frequently visited by the
sick and lame. The angel is invoked additionally as the
patron of sailors in Normandy (the famous
monastery of Mont
Saint Michel
on the north coast of France is named after
him). He is especially remembered in France as the angel
who, along with
Saint
Catherine and
Saint
Margaret, gave
Saint Joan of Arc the
courage to save her country from the English during the
Hundred Years' War (1337-1455). Perhaps
his most singular honor was given to him in 1950 when
Pope Pius XII (r. 1939-1958) named him patron
of
policemen. St Michael is also said to
have announced to the
Virgin Mary her
impending death, declaring himself to be "Great and
Wonderful."
According
to legend, Michael instructed St. Aubert,
bishop of Avranches
to build a church on the rocky islet now known as
Mont Saint
Michel
in 708. Also dedicated to Michael was the
French
Order of St Michel founded
in 1469. Today, however, he is more usually associated with police
officers, paramedics, EMTs and other emergency workers. He is also
claimed as the patron saint of the American airborne units.
He is the
patron of Ukraine
and its capital Kiev
and of the
archdiocese of Seattle
.
In Australia, National Police Remembrance day is commemorated on
September 29 each year, being the feast
day of St Michael.
Under the influence of the widely read angelology of the
Pseudo-Dionysius the
Areopagite, among Church fathers much time was spent allotting
Michael a rank in the celestial hierarchy:
Alfonso Salmeron,
Cardinal Bellarmine,
Saint Basil the Great's homily (
De
Angelis) and other Greek fathers place Saint Michael over all
the angels; they say he is called
"Archangel" because he
is the prince of the other angels. Others (cf. P. Bonaventura,
op. cit.) believe that he is the prince of the
Seraphim, the first of the nine angelic orders.
According to
Saint Thomas Aquinas
(
Summa Ia. 113.3), he is the Prince of the last and lowest
choir, the angels.
The hymn of the
Mozarabic Breviary
places St Michael even above the Twenty-four Elders.
A favorite angelic subject in art, matched only by
Saint Gabriel, Saint Michael is often depicted as
winged and with unsheathed sword. As with all angels'
iconography, his wings represent swiftness, his
sword means authority or power, and his white
raiment stands for his
enlightenment. In the
Renaissance period, he is shown as young,
strong, and handsome, and is most often depicted as a proud,
handsome angel in white or magnificent armor or a splendid coat of
mail and equipped with sword, shield and spear. His wings are
generally conspicuous and very grand. He is usually shown holding
in his hand a banner or the scales of justice. Quite often he is
seen, like Saint George and in some representations of the
Madonna, in conflict with a dragon or standing
upon a vanquished devil, who most of the time is
Satan.
Apparition of Saint Michael
The Roman
Breviary for May 8 relates the story of the
apparition of Saint Michael (494 or 530-40) at his sanctuary on
Monte
Gargano
, where his original glory as patron in war was
restored to him. This is further alluded to in a paragraph
listed for the feast day of St Michael on this date found in the
"Saint Andrew Daily Missal."
To his intercession, the Lombards of Sipontum
(modern-day Manfredonia
) attributed their victory over the Greek Neapolitans
May 8, 663. To commemorate this victory, the Church of
Sipontum instituted a special feast on
May 8
in honour of the archangel, which spread throughout the Latin
Church under the name "Apparition of St Michael", although it
originally commemorated the victory, not the apparition. The
Tridentine Calendar gave this
feast the rank of "Double", which was raised in 1602 to the newly
invented rank of "Greater Double". In 1960,
Pope John XXIII removed it from the General
Roman Calendar, along with other cases of second feasts of a single
saint.
Shrines
- For a larger gallery (and hence a structured list) of
church images, please see:
Saint Michael church gallery.


- St. Michael's Cathedral
, Ontario
, Canada
- St. Michael
and St. Gudula Cathedral
, in Brussels
, Belgium
- Mont Saint Michel
, Normandy, France
- a World Heritage Site
- Skellig Michael
, off the Irish
west coast
- a World Heritage Site
- Archangel Cathedral
in the Moscow Kremlin
- a World Heritage Site
- Chudov Monastery
in the Moscow Kremlin, where the future Russian
tsars were baptized
- St. Michael
Chapel in Košice
, Slovakia
- Monte Sant'Angelo sul Gargano,
Gargano
, Italy
- St Michael's Mount
, Cornwall
, UK
- Michaelhouse Chapel
, Balgowan, KZN
, South
Africa
- St.
Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery
, Kiev
, Ukraine
- St
Michael's Church in Vienna
, Austria
- St.
Michael and All Angels' Anglican Church, Weltevreden Park,
Johannesburg, South Africa
- Parroquia de San Miguel Arcangel, San Miguel de Allende,
Guanajuato, Mexico
- Basilica of St
Michael the Archangel, Tayabas, Quezon, Philippines
- St.
Michael's Cathedral, Wagga Wagga, Australia
- Parroquia San Miguel Arcángel (Order of Friars Minor
Capuchin), Utuado
, Puerto Rico
- Archangel Michael’s
Church, Znojmo
, Czech
Republic
- Basilica of
St. Michael the Archangel, Loretto, Pennsylvania, USA
Latter-Day Saints belief
According to
Latter-day Saint
theology, Michael lived his mortal life as the patriarch
Adam. Michael and Adam are regarded as
the same individual; Adam being his mortal name and Michael being
his pre-mortal/post-mortal name. Thus, all of the descendents of
Adam are the earthly descendents of Michael. Adam's angelic name,
Michael ("Who is like God?"), would be descriptive of the man's
appearance, being as he was created in the image of the Father.
Brigham Young preached on April 9,
1852 that Adam/Michael came to earth with a spiritual purpose, had
helped to create the world, and is now an exalted being.
See also:
Adam,
Noah ~
Gabriel
Jehovah's Witness belief
Jehovah's Witnesses believe that
Jesus and the Archangel Michael are the same
created being. In this pre-human existence he was known as
the
Word of God and Created all things. He later took
human form as Jesus and led a life without sin. After his death on
a
torture
stake, Jesus was resurrected.
See also: Jehovah's
witnesses beliefs about Jesus.
Seventh-day Adventist belief
Seventh-day Adventists
believe that
Michael (meaning "Who is like God?") was
another name for the
Word-of-God (John 1) before He became
incarnate as
Jesus.
Archangel (meaning "Chief of
the Angels") was the leadership position held by the Word-of-God as
Michael while among the angels. Michael was the Word-of-God, not a
created being, by whom all things were created. The Word-of-God was
then born incarnate as Jesus [becoming the
Son-of-God] for
one purpose, to save mankind by dying a substitutionary death,
being resurrected and returning to heaven incarnate.
See also:
Seventh-day Adventist beliefs about Michael
Islam
In
Arabic literature, Michael is
called
Mikha'il. In the Qur'an, Michael is mentioned once
only, in
Sura 2:98. In his commentary on
verse 98 of that sura, Baiḍawi relates that on one occasion
Umar ibn al-Khattab went into a
Jewish school and inquired concerning Gabriel. The pupils said he
was their enemy, but that Michael was a good angel, bringing peace
and plenty. In answer to Umar's question as to the respective
positions of Michael and Gabriel in God's presence, they said that
Gabriel was on his right hand and Michael on his left. Umar
exclaimed at their untruthfulness, and declared that whoever was an
enemy to God's angels, to him God would be an enemy. Upon returning
to
Muhammad, Umar found that Gabriel had
forestalled him by revealing the same message, which is contained
in verse 98. Muslim commentators state with reference to
Sura 11:69 that Michael was one of the three angels
who visited Abraham.
Bahá'í
In
Thief in the Night, the
Bahá'í writer,
William Sears, interpreted references to
Michael as referring to
Bahá'u'lláh. He quotes Daniel (10:13):
"But the prince of the kingdom of Persia withstood me one and
twenty days: but, lo, Michael, one of the chief princes, came to
help me...'.Daniel was told that this vision concerned "...what
shall befall thy people (Israel) in the latter days."Sears
interprets this as a prophecy about Bahá'u'lláh, who was a Persian
nobleman of Sassanian royal lineage. He also quotes from the Book
of Enoch (69:14): "He (God) spoke to holy Michael to discover to
them the sacred name, that they might understand that secret
name".
Anthroposophy and the occult
The French occultist,
Eliphas Levi, the
German philosopher
Franz von
Baader, and the Theosophist Louis Claude de St. Martin spoke of
1879 as the year in which Michael overcame the dragon. This is
confirmed by the esoteric writer
Rudolf
Steiner in a lecture in Zurich on November 13, 1917, where he
states: "in 1879, in November, a momentous event took place, a
battle of the Powers of Darkness against the Powers of Light,
ending in the image of Michael overcoming the Dragon".
Anthroposophists consider Michael to be the administrator of cosmic
intelligence, who 'dwells on the Sun'.
Waldorf schools celebrate the
Michaelmas Festival (the festival of 'strong
will') during the Autumnal Equinox (September 29).
Literature
In the
English epic poem Paradise
Lost by
John Milton, Michael
commands the army of angels loyal to God against the rebel forces
of
Satan. Armed with a sword from God's
armory, he bests Satan in personal combat, wounding his side.
According
to a diary authored by Father Raymond
Bishop, a Jesuit priest at Saint Louis
University
, the mere mention of the name of St. Michael caused
scratches on a 13-year old boy during an exorcism. Near the end of the
exorcism, the boy saw a vision of the
Devil and ten of his helpers engaged in a fiery battle
with St. Michael. At one point during the dream, the angel smiled
at the boy and said "Dominus." Shortly thereafter, the boy shouted
out: "Satan! Satan! I am St. Michael, and I command you, Satan, and
the other evil spirits, to leave the body in the name of Dominus,
immediately." Father Bishop's diary was used by
William Peter Blatty as the basis for
his book,
The Exorcist, and later, by
Thomas B. Allen, in his 1993 book
Possessed: The
True Story of an Exorcism.
See also
Bibliography
- Bamberger, Bernard Jacob, (March 15, 2006). Fallen Angels:
Soldiers of Satan's Realm. Jewish Publication Society of
America. ISBN 0-8276-0797-0
- Briggs, Constance Victoria, 1997. The Encyclopedia of
Angels : An A-to-Z Guide with Nearly 4,000 Entries. Plume.
ISBN 0-452-27921-6.
- Bunson, Matthew, (1996). Angels A to Z : A Who's Who of the
Heavenly Host. Three Rivers Press. ISBN 0-517-88537-9.
- Cruz, Joan C. 1999. Angels and Devils. Tan Books &
Publishers. ISBN 0-89555-638-3.
- Davidson, Gustav. A Dictionary of Angels: Including the
Fallen Angels. Free Press. ISBN 0-02-907052-X
- Graham, Billy, 1994. Angels: God's Secret Agents. W
Pub Group; Minibook edition. ISBN 0-8499-5074-0
- Guiley, Rosemary, 1996. Encyclopedia of Angels. ISBN
0-8160-2988-1
- Kreeft, Peter J. 1995. Angels and Demons: What Do We Really
Know About Them? Ignatius Press. ISBN 0-89870-550-9
- Lewis, James R. (1995). Angels A to Z. Visible Ink
Press. ISBN 0-7876-0652-9
- Melville, Francis, 2001. The Book of Angels: Turn to Your
Angels for Guidance, Comfort, and Inspiration. Barron's
Educational Series; 1st edition. ISBN 0-7641-5403-6
- Ronner, John, 1993. Know Your Angels: The Angel Almanac
With Biographies of 100 Prominent Angels in Legend &
Folklore-And Much More! Mamre Press. ISBN 0-932945-40-6.
References
External links
.