20 Surprising Things We Know About
Angels
Angels have played a prominent part in the Lord’s plan of
salvation in all dispensations, and our own dispensation is no exception. Here
are 20 things we know about these heavenly beings and how they interact with us
in mortality.
What Are Angels?
Because numerous misconceptions exist regarding angels, let us
examine a few things we know from scripture and the teachings of latter-day
prophets and apostles.
1. Angels are messengers.
The English word angel is from a Greek word (angelos)
that means “messenger.” Likewise, the Hebrew word malakh, usually
translated “angel,” also signifies “messenger.” President Charles W. Penrose
explained, “Angels are God’s messengers, whether used in that capacity as
unembodied spirits, selected according to their capacities for the work
required, or as disembodied spirits, or as translated men, or as resurrected
beings.”1
As
heavenly messengers, angels deliver a variety of messages to mortals—messages
of love, comfort, warning, or admonition. Further, angels teach the gospel,
declare repentance, explain doctrine, and restore priesthood, keys, powers,
authority, and more. Angels’ messages may be spoken, unspoken, or felt, or they
may come by some other means.
2. Angels are the offspring of God.
Angels are children of our Heavenly Father. President Joseph F.
Smith explained, “When messengers are sent to minister to the inhabitants of
this earth, they are not strangers, but from the ranks of our kindred, friends,
and fellow-beings and fellow-servants.”2
And Elder Parley P. Pratt wrote that “Gods, angels, and men are all of one
species, one race, one great family, widely diffused among the planetary
systems, as colonies, kingdoms, nations, &c.”3
3. Angels who minister on this earth have belonged to it or may yet
belong to it.
Doctrine and Covenants 130:4–5 states:
In answer to the question—Is not the reckoning of God’s time,
angel’s time, prophet’s time, and man’s time, according to the planet on which
they reside? I answer, Yes. But there are no angels who minister to this earth
but those who do belong or have belonged to it.
Accordingly, the well-known angels Michael, Gabriel, John the
Baptist, Peter, James, John, Moroni, and many others are historical persons who
have lived upon this earth. Other angels who have ministered on this earth may
have done so before they were born in the flesh.
4. Angels operate among men, women, and children.
Angels do not restrict their appearances or communications to a
particular gender, age group, tribe, or nation; rather, angels operate among
all humankind—men, women, and children—according to the Lord’s divine. Alma 32:23 states that God “imparteth his word by angels
unto men, yea, not only men but women also. Now this is not all; little
children do have words given unto them many times, which confound the wise and
the learned.”
The Hierarchy of Angels
The following statements demonstrate that there is a hierarchy, or
ranking, of the Lord’s angels.
5. Some angels are Gods.
Elder Orson Pratt stated:
Some angels are Gods, and still possess the lower office called
angels. Adam is called an Archangel, yet he is a God. Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,
no doubt, have the right to officiate in the capacity of angels if they choose,
but still they have ascended to their exaltation, to a higher state than that
of angels—namely, to thrones, kingdoms, principalities and powers, to reign
over kingdoms and to hold the everlasting Priesthood.4
6. Of all the angels—resurrected beings, translated beings, or
spirits—Michael (Adam) is the head angel.
The scriptures call him the archangel (1 Thessalonians 4:16; Jude 1:9; D&C 29:26; 88:112; 107:54; 128:21). The term arch—part of such words as patriarch, archetype, archbishop, archenemy, archconservative,
and archscoundrel—means “chief,” “principal,” or “preeminent.”
Michael, then, is the chief of angels; Joseph Smith explained that Michael
stands next in authority to Jesus Christ himself “and presides over the spirits
of all men.”5
7. The angel Gabriel, who is Noah, is next in authority after
Michael.
Joseph Smith taught:
The Priesthood was first given to Adam; he obtained the First
Presidency. . . . He is Michael the Archangel, spoken of in the Scriptures.
Then to Noah, who is Gabriel: he stands next in authority to Adam in the
Priesthood.6
8. Angels who have bodies of flesh and bone, meaning those angels
who are either translated or resurrected, have greater power than beings who
are spirits.
Joseph Smith explained: “All beings who have bodies have power
over those who have not. The devil has no power over us only as we permit him.”7
The Prophet also taught:
There are three independent principles—the spirit of God, the
spirit of man, and the spirit of the devil. All men have power to resist the
devil. They who have tabernacles have power over those who have not.8
Superhuman Capabilities
The powers of angels enable them to fulfill their missions here
upon the earth and to assist mortals, who are, in comparison, delicate and
frail. As we discuss the extraordinary powers of angels, however, we must
remain cautious and open about those powers, because there is so much that we
do not know. We must also remember that many scriptural statements, especially
those from John the Revelator, contain symbolisms.
9. Angels have power over gravity.
Heavenly beings have no need to stand on the ground or the floor.
They may stand above the ground or floor, perhaps to remain elevated above
telestial creatures or perhaps because the place where humans stand is
considered profane space. In several instances, the Lord, while visiting His
prophets, stood on a paved work of precious materials, such as gold (D&C 110:2) or sapphire stone (Exodus 24:10).
Moroni’s feet did not touch the floor during his visits to Joseph
Smith on September 21, 1823. While the young prophet was praying, Moroni
“appeared at [his] bedside, standing in the air, for his feet did not touch the
floor” (Joseph Smith–History 1:30). In addition to his ability to
stand in the air, note Moroni’s power to ascend to heaven: “After [Moroni’s]
communication, I [Joseph Smith] . . . saw, as it were, a conduit open right up
into heaven, and he ascended till he entirely disappeared” (Joseph Smith–History 1:43).
10. Angels have power over the elements.
With regard to angels’ knowledge of the elements and the “laws of
nature,” Elder John A. Widtsoe explained that angels are “vivid personages,
intelligent beings vastly superior to man, knowing well the laws of nature and
therefore able to control them.”9
While president of the Church, Brigham Young made statements regarding the
power that angels have over the elements. Other Church leaders, too, have
taught about angels’ power over the elements.
Using symbolic language, John the Revelator writes of angels who
have many great powers: One angel has “power over fire” (Revelation 14:18), four angels have power over “the four winds
of the earth” (Revelation 7:1), and one or more angels have power over the
fate of the waters; note that John refers specifically to “the angel of the
waters” (Revelation 16:5; see v. 3–5, 12). Furthermore, there are four
angels in Revelation, “to whom is given power over the four parts of the earth,
to save life and to destroy; . . . having power to shut up the heavens, to seal
up unto life, or to cast down to the regions of darkness” (D&C 77:8; see also Revelation 7:1).
Angels have demonstrated power over fire on several other
occasions:
For it came to pass, when the flame went up toward heaven from off
the altar, that the angel of the Lord ascended in the flame of the altar. And
Manoah and his wife looked on it, and fell on their faces to the ground (Judges 13:20).
Also, the Book of Mormon records that a multitude “saw angels
descending out of heaven as it were in the midst of fire” (3 Nephi 17:24).
Sometimes the astounding power of angels causes the earth to
quake. For instance, on the day of Jesus Christ’s resurrection, the descent of
an angel caused the earth to shake: “And, behold, there was a great earthquake:
for the angel of the Lord descended from heaven” (Matthew 28:2). Also, “the angel of the Lord appeared . . . and
he descended as it were in a cloud; and he spake as it were with a voice of
thunder, which caused the earth to shake upon which they stood” (Mosiah 27:11).
11. Angels can appear to mortals and hide their angelic nature,
and they have the ability to appear as mortals.
The angel who saved Peter the night before he was to be executed
possessed great powers. This angel miraculously entered the prison and caused
Peter’s chains to fall “from his hands” (Acts 12:17; compare Abraham 1:15, which records that an angel unloosed
Abraham’s bands). Then the angel and Peter walked unseen “past the first and
the second ward,” presumably where guards were stationed: another miracle by
the angel (Acts 12:10). When Peter and the angel approached the “iron
gate that leadeth unto the city,” it opened by itself; or, rather, it opened
because of the angel’s powers. The angel demonstrated four powers: (1) He was
able to miraculously enter into a prison although it had locked gates or doors
and several guards; (2) he caused the chains that bound Peter’s hands to fall
off; (3) he and Peter walked undetected past two sets of guards (“the first and
the second ward”); and (4) the angel caused the outer iron gate, which
presumably was locked, to open.
Music and Singing
The
most well-known instance of angels singing on earth is when they sang at the
Savior’s birth. But we know of many other instances of angelic music and
singing.
12. Other
angels, besides those who sang at Jesus’s birth, sing praises to God.
In the opening chapter of the Book of Mormon, for example, Lehi “saw God
sitting upon his throne, surrounded with numberless concourses of angels in the
attitude of singing and praising their God” (1 Nephi 1:8).
13. In our
dispensation, angels have joined mortals in singing hymns of praise and
worship.
Prescindia
Huntington, a contemporary of the Prophet Joseph Smith, bore record that angels
sang a hymn while mortal Saints were praying in the temple. She recorded:
At another fast meeting I was in the temple
with my sister Zina. The whole of the congregation were on their knees, praying
vocally, for such was the custom at the close of the meetings when Father Smith
presided; yet there was no confusion; the voices of the congregation mingled
softly together. While the congregation was thus praying, we both heard, from
one corner of the room above our heads, a choir of angels singing most
beautifully. They were invisible to us, but myriads of angelic voices seemed to
be united in singing some song of Zion, and their sweet harmony filled the
temple of God.10
The
following occurrence, recorded in the Church’s Millennial
Star, took place at the dedication of the Manti Temple:
On the 21st of May, before the opening exercises commenced, Brother A. C.
Smyth, the chorister, seated himself at the organ, and rendered a piece of
sacred music, a selection from Mendelssohn, at the conclusion of which, persons
sitting near the centre of the hall, and also on the stand at the west end,
heard most heavenly voices and singing—it sounded to them most angelic, and
appeared to be behind and above them, and they turned their heads in the
direction of the sound, wondering if there was another choir in some other part
of the Temple.11
14. When
he was a young boy, President John Taylor heard angelic voices sing lovely
music.
According
to his biographer, Elder B. H. Roberts:
Young Taylor possessed a portion of the spirit
of God and was very happy. Manifestations of its presence were frequent, not
only in the expansion of his mind to understand doctrines and principles, but
also in dreams and visions. “Often when alone,” he writes, “and sometimes in
company, I heard sweet, soft, melodious music, as if performed by angelic or
supernatural beings.”12
Comforters to the Dying
There
are documented reports of angels who came to receive individuals near or at the
time of their death, including reports by the Prophet Joseph Smith, President
Heber C. Kimball, President Wilford Woodruff, and President Rudger Clawson.
15. One who has passed from mortality may visit a person to inform them that
they will soon depart from this life.
President
Ezra Taft Benson tells the story of his deceased father-in-law, Carl Christian
Amussen, who appeared to his wife, Barbara Smith Amussen, to tell her of her
approaching death:
This choice woman knew the exact time she was
to depart mortal life. Her husband, a Danish convert and Utah’s first pioneer
jeweler and watchmaker, Carl Christian Amussen, appeared to her in either a
dream or a vision. She admitted, “I’m not sure which, but it was so real it
seemed that he was right in the room. He said he had come to tell me that my
time in mortal life was ending and that on the following Thursday [it was then
Friday], I would be expected to leave mortal life.”13
Sister
Amussen was convinced that her husband had appeared to her and that she would
pass away the following Thursday. As a result, she made concrete plans: On
Sunday at church, she bore her testimony and bade the ward members good-bye.
During the following days, she withdrew her savings from the bank, ordered her
casket from a local mortuary, paid her bills, and even had the power and water
turned off at her home. Then she went to the home of her daughter Mabel to
await her passing. Sister Amussen did die that Thursday, just as her deceased
husband had told her. President Benson recounted:
On the day of her passing, Mabel came into the
room where her mother was reclining on the bed. Her mother said, “Mabel, I feel
a little bit drowsy. I feel I will go to sleep. Do not disturb me if I sleep
until the eventide.”14
Those were her last words, and she peacefully passed away.
16. Angels
may greet a mortal at the time of their death.
On
August 10, 1840, Seymour Brunson, a resident of Nauvoo who served as a member
of the high council, passed away. About a month later, on September 6, 1840,
Vilate Kimball wrote a letter to her husband, Heber C. Kimball, regarding
Brother Brunson’s death:
Seymour Brunson is . . . dead, everything was
done to save him that could be done, but the Lord had need of him. A short time
before he died he told Joseph not to hold him any longer “for” said he, “I have
seen David Patten and he wants me, and the Lord wants me, and I want to go.”
They then gave him up; at one time as Joseph entered the room, he told him that
there was a light encircled him above the brightness of the sun—he exclaimed,
“The room is full of angels they have come to waft my spirit home.” He then
bade his family and friends farewell and sweetly fell asleep in Jesus.15
Ministering
Angels
may minister to us for a myriad of purposes, according to our temporal and
spiritual needs, always in keeping with the Lord’s divine will. The following
examples are representative of how angels may minister to us.
17. Angels may help individuals overcome addictions.
In
2010, two members of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles directed counsel to
individuals who wrestle with addictions of various kinds. Both of those
conference addresses indicate that angels are available to render divine
assistance to individuals with addictions who desire to forsake them. First, in
the April general conference, Elder Jeffrey R. Holland provided these inspired
instructions:
Acknowledge that people bound by the chains of
true addictions often need more help than self-help, and that may include you.
Seek that help and welcome it. Talk to your bishop. Follow his counsel. Ask for
a priesthood blessing. Use the Church’s Family Services offerings or seek other
suitable professional help. Pray without ceasing. Ask for angels to help you. .
. .
Cultivate and be where the Spirit of the Lord
is. Make sure that includes your own home or apartment, dictating the kind of
art, music, and literature you keep there. If you are endowed, go to the temple
as often as your circumstances allow. Remember that the temple arms you “with
[God’s] power, . . . [puts His] glory . . . round about [you], and [gives His]
angels . . . charge over [you].”16
Later
that same year, in the October general conference, President Boyd K. Packer
taught:
The twin principles of repentance and forgiveness exceed in strength the
awesome power of the tempter. If you are bound by a habit or an addiction that
is unworthy, you must stop conduct that is harmful. Angels will coach you, and
priesthood leaders will guide you through those difficult times.17
18. Angels
may help during trials and severe hardships.
Many
individuals in mortality have experienced extreme hardships, such as those
experienced by Latter-day Saint pioneers who suffered severe privation as they
crossed oceans and plains to journey to Zion. Angels, at times, bore up such
individuals. The following story recounted by President David O. McKay serves
as a case in point of angels who assisted mortals in times of great need.
President McKay cited the testimony of Francis Webster, a member of the Martin
handcart company:
I was in that company and my wife was in it. .
. . We suffered beyond anything you can imagine and many died of exposure and
starvation. . . .
I have pulled my handcart when I was so weak and
weary from illness and lack of food that I could hardly put one foot ahead of
the other. I have looked ahead and seen a patch of sand or a hill slope and I
have said, I can go only that far and there I must give up, for I cannot pull
the load through it. . . . I have gone on to that sand and when I reached it,
the cart began pushing me. I have looked back many times to see who was pushing
my cart, but my eyes saw no one. I knew then that the angels of God were there.18
President Harold B. Lee explained that even Jesus Christ in His extremity had
need of ministering angels:
Sometimes when you are going through the most
severe tests, you will be nearer to God than you have any idea, for like the
experience of the Master Himself in the temptation on the mount, in the Garden
of Gethsemane, and on the cross at Calvary, the scriptures record, “And,
behold, angels came and ministered unto him” (Matthew 4:11).
Sometimes that may happen to you in the midst of your trials.19
19. Angels
may provide other kinds of temporal assistance.
Angels
have provided other kinds of temporal assistance to mortals. For example, in
scripture we read that an angel provided food and water to the prophet Elijah
when he fled for his life from Jezebel (1 Kings 19:1–7).
In our own dispensation, President Heber C. Kimball spoke of a time when he and
Brigham Young traveled together in doing the Lord’s work. They had only $13.50
between them, but along the way they paid for travel, lodgings, and meals. In
fact, they paid out more than $87. President Kimball observed:
Brother Brigham often suspected that I put the
money in his trunk or clothes, thinking I had . . . money which I had not
acquainted him with, but this was not so. The money could only have been put in
his trunk by some heavenly messenger who administered to our necessities daily,
as he knew we needed.20
President Wilford Woodruff and President Young were conversing about various
topics when “the subject of miracles came up.” President Young told Wilford, “I
have had a $5 gold piece put into my pocket now two days in succession. I do
not know from what source it came from. Brother Kimball said it was an angel.”21
20. Angels
may assist in healing the sick.
President
Harold B. Lee’s experience on an airplane illustrates the truth that angels may
participate in healing a mortal who has an illness. President Lee
recalled:
I was suffering from an ulcer condition that
was becoming worse and worse. We had been touring a mission; my wife, Joan, and
I were impressed the next morning that we should get home as quickly as
possible, although we had planned to stay for some other meetings.
On the way across the country, we were sitting
in the forward section of the airplane. Some of our Church members were in the
next section. As we approached a certain point en route, someone laid his hand
upon my head. I looked up; I could see no one. That happened again before we
arrived home, again with the same experience. Who it was, by what means or what
medium, I may never know, except I knew that I was receiving a blessing that I
came a few hours later to know I needed most desperately. . . . Shortly [after
we reached home], there came massive hemorrhages which, had they occurred while
we were in flight, I wouldn’t be here today talking about it.22
I know that there are powers divine that reach out when all other help is not
available. . . . Yes, I know that there are such powers.
President
Brigham Young testified:
Supposing we were traveling in the mountains,
and all we had or could get, in the shape of nourishment, was a little venison,
and one or two were taken sick, without anything in the world in the shape of
healing medicine within our reach, what should we do? According to my faith,
ask the Lord Almighty to send an angel to heal the sick. This is our privilege
when so situated that we cannot get anything to help ourselves.23
Lead image: Looking for Something. ©
Brian Kershisnik, 2016. Used with permission.
Learn more
about God’s heavenly messengers in Angels: Agents of Light, Love, and Power by
Donald W. Parry, available at Deseret Book stores and deseretbook.com.
Notes
1. “Who and
What Are the Angels,”Improvement Era 15
(Aug. 1912): 950.
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