samedi 28 mai 2016

Craig Crawford is back in the fray on angelic movers!


1) Debate on Angelic Movers - and 1054, Photius · 2) Craig Crawford is back in the fray on angelic movers! · 3) Debate with Craig Crawford Continues · 4) Update with Craig Crawford

Craig Crawford
The responses are too long. Not interested in a lengthy scholastic debate over the schism of the Latin West, which is off-topic here.

The Scriptures explicitly say that God is the mover of the celestial objects, and nowhere mentions the necessity of the angels in this task. The notion that angels are charged with the task of providing motion to the heavenly bodies is patently absurd. The fathers did not need to spend much time focusing on or refuting something that was such a ridiculous notion.

St. Augustine - On the Trinity, Book VIII

"Neither as we think of the pure angels as spirits animating celestial bodies, and changing and dealing with them after the will by which they serve God; not even if all, and there are "thousands of thousands," were brought together into one, and became one; neither is any such thing God."


Since you attempted to enlist St. John of Damascus to your cause (ineffectively):

St. John of Damascus - Exact Exposition of the Orthodox Faith:

"The course which the Creator appointed for them to run is unceasing and remaineth fixed as He established them. For the divine David says, The moon and the stars which Thou establishedst, and by the word 'establishedst,' he referred to the fixity and unchangeableness of the order and series granted to them by God."


St. John, following the sayings of Scripture, says the Creator appoints the movement of the celestial bodies. Nowhere is any mention of the necessity of the intervening action of angels spoken of.

Thomas Aquinas is in error. Even your fellow Roman Catholic, Robert Sungenis rejects these absurd notions of angels giving movement to celestial bodies.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
Craig Crawford taking it bit by bit:

"The Scriptures explicitly say that God is the mover of the celestial objects,"

At least for their common movement westward each day.

"and nowhere mentions the necessity of the angels in this task."

But does mention stars (i e celestial bodies, not just fixed stars, since difference between planets and fixed stars is beyond Hebrew culture) actually having some conscience - either we must assume that means stars are beings intermediate between angels and us, corporeal, but bodies of celestial matter (Ramandu/Coriakin hypothesis, if you get allusion), which was condemned by St John of Damascus and by Bishop Stephen Tempier of Paris, and explicitly rejected by St Thomas Aquinas, OR stars beyond attached to a conscience about as a bike is attached to that of a biker - in which case angels are moving them.

"The notion that angels are charged with the task of providing motion to the heavenly bodies is patently absurd. The fathers did not need to spend much time focusing on or refuting something that was such a ridiculous notion."

I see no "patent" absurdity and feel free to differ. Unless you prefer to start giving scholastic proofs why this would be absurd.

St Augustine:

"Neither as we think of the pure angels as spirits animating celestial bodies, and changing and dealing with them after the will by which they serve God; not even if all, and there are "thousands of thousands," were brought together into one, and became one; neither is any such thing God."


He just said clearly, angels who deal with stars are not God, but they are there.

It is funny to deal with someone citing what he has not learned to read.

Like St Francis of Assisi called "Mr Sun" brother, not Father. Like St Thomas Aquinas in a popular seermon on the Creed compared a man worshipping the sun as God to a poor man approaching the palace of a king and taking a simple palace guard in fine livery for the King.

So, apart from Sts Francis and Thomas, you just provided me with another authority, a patristic one, from St Augustine. Nice! Keep it up!

As to your quote from St John:

"The course which the Creator appointed for them to run is unceasing and remaineth fixed as He established them. For the divine David says, The moon and the stars which Thou establishedst, and by the word 'establishedst,' he referred to the fixity and unchangeableness of the order and series granted to them by God."


This clearly teaches that God provides the form of the orbit, but does not teach that there be no angel providing its propulsion, according to that order given by God. Indeed, the word "run" reminds of a psalm where the sun is considered comparable to a hero running forth. In other words, though St John of Damascus clearly rejected stars having souls, he did NOT clearly reject stars being moved by angels.

"St. John, following the sayings of Scripture, says the Creator appoints the movement of the celestial bodies."

Yes, APPOINTS. Meaning someone is executing that APPOINTMENT. That someone being for each star an angel.

"Thomas Aquinas is in error."

You have given neither Patristic nor Biblical proof thereof.

"Even your fellow Roman Catholic, Robert Sungenis rejects these absurd notions of angels giving movement to celestial bodies."

Because he prefers the "appointment" of God being some kind of clockwork mechanism of inertia and gravitational pulls. Sts Augustine and John, Francis and Thomas give him no support therein.

I wonder if, considering Bergoglio as pope or perhaps rather Ratzinger as still pope he can fully count as Catholic.

Especially since he adds error to the mix.

4 commentaires:

  1. The chapter from which St Augustine was thought to have rejected the notion of angelic movers of stars is in fact rejecting real things as not being God.

    3. But in respect to bodies, it may be the case that this gold and that gold may be equally true [real], but this may be greater than that, since magnitude is not the same thing in this case as truth; and it is one thing for it to be gold, another to be great. So also in the nature of the soul; a soul is not called great in the same respect in which it is called true. For he, too, has a true [real] soul who has not a great soul; since the essence of body and soul is not the essence of the truth [reality] itself; as is the Trinity, one God, alone, great, true, truthful, the truth. Of whom if we endeavor to think, so far as He Himself permits and grants, let us not think of any touch or embrace in local space, as if of three bodies, or of any compactness of conjunction, as fables tell of three-bodied Geryon; but let whatsoever may occur to the mind, that is of such sort as to be greater in three than in each singly, and less in one than in two, be rejected without any doubt; for so everything corporeal is rejected. But also in spiritual things let nothing changeable that may have occurred to the mind be thought of God. For when we aspire from this depth to that height, it is a step towards no small knowledge, if, before we can know what God is, we can already know what He is not. For certainly He is neither earth nor heaven; nor, as it were, earth and heaven; nor any such thing as we see in the heaven; nor any such thing as we do not see, but which perhaps is in heaven. Neither if you were to magnify in the imagination of your thought the light of the sun as much as you are able, either that it may be greater, or that it may be brighter, a thousand times as much, or times without number; neither is this God. Neither as we think of the pure angels as spirits animating celestial bodies, and changing and dealing with them after the will by which they serve God; not even if all, and there are "thousands of thousands," were brought together into one, and became one; neither is any such thing God. Neither if you were to think of the same spirits as without bodies— a thing indeed most difficult for carnal thought to do. Behold and see, if you can, O soul pressed down by the corruptible body, and weighed down by earthly thoughts, many and various; behold and see, if you can, that God is truth. For it is written that "God is light;" not in such way as these eyes see, but in such way as the heart sees, when it is said, He is truth [reality]. Ask not what is truth [reality] for immediately the darkness of corporeal images and the clouds of phantasms will put themselves in the way, and will disturb that calm which at the first twinkling shone forth to you, when I said truth [reality]. See that you remain, if you can, in that first twinkling with which you are dazzled, as it were, by a flash, when it is said to you, Truth [Reality]. But you can not; you will glide back into those usual and earthly things. And what weight, pray, is it that will cause you so to glide back, unless it be the bird-lime of the stains of appetite you have contracted, and the errors of your wandering from the right path?

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  2. So, though "as we think of the pure angels as spirits animating celestial bodies, and changing and dealing with them after the will by which they serve God;" is about sth which exists, it is put in a context "Neither" this real thing any more than previous mention; "not even if all, and there are "thousands of thousands," were brought together into one, and became one; neither is any such thing God."

    A fine example of via negativa, understanding what God is by what He is not, but not a negation of angels moving stars.

    Now, the angels moving stars, St Augustine used "we THINK of them as" doing so, in indicative. The other, greater but unreal parallel has subjunctive in "WERE brought together into one, and BECAME one;" because it is not a reality.

    So, far from St Augustine saying angels moving stars are not real, he is rather saying that luming them together into one is not real - but if it were, it would still not be God.

    And some think they honour God by lumping all angelic movers together into Him?

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  3. Quote is from here:

    On the Trinity (Book VIII)
    http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/130108.htm


    Thank God I only had to scroll down to chapter 2 (and chapters are as short as shown) to find it!

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