The New Testament names two angels: Gabriel and Michael. Michael has had greater historical devotion, thus today’s feast “Michaelmas” or “The Feast of St. Michael and All Angels.” Even with Michael’s popularity, I wonder if the modern church isn’t more comfortable with Gabriel. The difference might be obvious: Gabriel, who appears in the birth narratives, is the one who carries the message. Though terrifying in appearance (“Fear not”), Gabriel’s holy task is a comfortable one: proclaim the good news. Michael’s holy task is less comfortable: Warrior, Supreme Commander of the Heavenly Hosts, Five-Star General of God’s Army.
The New Testament names two angels: Gabriel and Michael. Michael has had greater historical devotion, thus today’s feast “Michaelmas” or “The Feast of St. Michael and All Angels.” Even with Michael’s popularity, I wonder if the modern church isn’t more comfortable with Gabriel. The difference might be obvious: Gabriel, who appears in the birth narratives, is the one who carries the message. Though terrifying in appearance (“Fear not”), Gabriel’s holy task is a comfortable one: proclaim the good news. Michael’s holy task is less comfortable: Warrior, Supreme Commander of the Heavenly Hosts, Five-Star General of God’s Army.