Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
Feast of Guardian Angels
This feast, like many others, was local before it was placed in the Roman
calendar. It was not one of the feasts retained in the Pian breviary, published
in 1568; but among the earliest petitions from particular churches to be allowed,
as a supplement to this breviary, the canonical celebration of local feasts, was
a request from Cordova in 1579 for permission to have a feast in honour of the
guardian angels. (Bäumer, Histoire du Breviaire
, II, 233.) Bäumer, who makes
this statement on the authority of original documents published by Dr. Schmid
(in the Tübinger Quartalschrift
, 1884), adds on the same authority that
Toledo sent to Rome a rich proprium and received the desired authorization for
all the Offices contained in it, Valencia also obtained the approbation in
February, 1582, for special Offices of the Blood of Christ and the Guardian
Angels.
So far the feast of Guardian Angels remained local. Paul V placed it (27
September, 1608) among the feasts of the general calendar as a double ad
libitum
(Bäumer, op. cit., II, 277). Nilles gives us more details about this
step. Paul V
, he writes, gave an impetus to the veneration of Guardian Angels
(long known in the East and West) by the authorization of a feast and proper
office in their honour. At the request of Ferdinand of Austria, afterwards
emperor, he made them obligatory in all regions subject to the Imperial power;
to all other places he conceded them ad libitum, to be celebrated on the first
available day after the Feast of the Dedication of St. Michael the Archangel. It
is believed that the new feast was intended to be a kind of supplement to the
Feast of St. Michael, since the Church honoured on that day (29 September) the
memory of all the angels as well as the memory of St. Michael (Nilles,
Kalendarium
, II, 502). Among the numerous changes made in the calendar by
Clement X was the elevation of the Feast of Guardian Angels to the rank of an
obligatory double for the whole Church to be kept on 2 October, this being the
first unoccupied day after the feast of St. Michael (Nilles, op. cit., II, 503).
Finally Leo XIII (5 April, 1883) favoured this feast to the extent of raising it
to the rank of a double major.
Such in brief is the history of a feast which, though of comparatively recent
introduction, gives the sanction of the Church's authority to an ancient and
cherished belief. The multiplicity of feasts is in fact quite a modern
development, and that the guardian angels were not honoured with a special feast
in the early Church is no evidence that they were not prayed to and reverenced.
There is positive testimony to the contrary (see Bareille in Dict. de Theol.
Cath., s.v. Ange, col. 1220). It is to be noted that the Feast of the Dedication
of St. Michael is amongst the oldest feasts in the Calendar. There are five
proper collects and prefaces assigned to this feast in the Leonine Sacramentary
(seventh century) under the title Natalis Basilicae Angeli in Salaria
and a
glance at them will show that this feast included a commemoration of the angels
in general, and also recognition of their protective office and intercessory
power. In one collect God is asked to sustain those who are labouring in this
world by the protecting power of his heavenly ministers (supernorum …
praesidiis … ministrorum). In one of the prefaces, God is praised and thanked
for the favour of angelic patronage (patrociniis … angelorum). In the collect
of the third Mass the intercessory power of saints and angels is alike appealed
to (quae [oblatio] angelis tuis sanctisque precantibus et indulgentiam nobis
referat et remedia procuret aeterna (Sacramentarium Leonianum, ed. Feltoe,
107-8). These extracts make it plain that the substantial idea which underlies
the modern feast of Guardian Angels was officially expressed in the early
liturgies. In the Horologium magnum
of the Greeks there is a proper Office of
Guardian Angels (Roman edition, 329-334) entitled A supplicatory canon to man's
Guardian Angel composed by John the Monk
(Nilles, II, 503), which contains a
clear expression of belief in the doctrine that a guardian angel is assigned to
each individual. This angel is thus addressed Since thou the power (ischyn)
receivest my soul to guard, cease never to cover it with thy wings
(Nilles, II,
506).
For 2 October there is a proper Office in the Roman Breviary and a proper
Mass in the Roman Missal, which contains all the choice extracts from Sacred
Scripture bearing on the three-fold office of the angels, to praise God, to act
as His messengers, and to watch over mortal men. Let us praise the Lord whom
the Angels praise, whom the Cherubim and Seraphim proclaim Holy, Holy, Holy
(second antiphon of Lauds). Behold I will send my angel, who shall go before
thee, and keep thee in thy journey, and bring thee into the place that I have
prepared. Take notice of him, and hear his voice
(Exodus 23; capitulum ad
Laudes). The Gospel of the Mass includes that pointed text from St. Matthew
18:10: See that you despise not one of these little ones: for I say to you that
their angels in heaven always see the face of my Father who is in heaven.
Although 2 October has been fixed for this feast in the Roman calendar, it is
kept, by papal privilege, in Germany and many other places on the first Sunday
(computed ecclesiastically) of September, and is celebrated with special
solemnity and generally with an octave (Nilles, II, 503). (See ANGEL;
INTERCESSION.)
NILLES, Kalendarium Manuale utriusque Ecclesiae Orientalis et Occidentalis (Innsbruck, 1896); BAUMER, Geschichte des Breviers, Fr. tr. BIRON (Paris, 1905); Sacramentarium Leonianum, ed. FELTOE (Cambridge, 1896); Roman Missal and Breviary.
Heiligenlexikon als USB-Stick oder als DVD
Unterstützung für das Ökumenische Heiligenlexikon
Artikel kommentieren / Fehler melden
Suchen bei amazon: Bücher über Catholic Encyclopedia - Feast of Guardian Angels
Wikipedia: Artikel über Catholic Encyclopedia - Feast of Guardian Angels
Fragen? - unsere FAQs antworten!
Impressum - Datenschutzerklärung
korrekt zitieren: Artikel
Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet das Ökumenische Heiligenlexikon in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über https://d-nb.info/1175439177 und https://d-nb.info/969828497 abrufbar.