Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
St. Raphael
The name of this archangel (Raphael = God has healed
) does not appear in
the Hebrew Scriptures, and in the Septuagint only in the Book of Tobias. Here he
first appears disguised in human form as the travelling companion of the younger
Tobias, calling himself Azarias the son of the great Ananias
. The story of the
adventurous journey during which the protective influence of the angel is shown
in many ways including the binding in the desert of upper Egypt
of the demon
who had previously slain seven husbands of Sara, daughter of Raguel, is
picturesquely related in Tobit 5-11, to which the reader is referred. After the
return and the healing of the blindness of the elder Tobias, Azarias makes
himself known as the angel Raphael, one of the seven, who stand before the Lord
(Tob., xii, 15. Cf. Apoc., viii, 2). Of these seven archangels
which appear in
the angelology of post-Exilic Judaism, only three, Gabriel, Michael and Raphael,
are mentioned in the canonical Scriptures. The others, according to the Book of
Enoch (cf. xxi) are Uriel, Raguel, Sariel, and Jerahmeel, while from other
apocryphal sources we get the variant names Izidkiel, Hanael, and Kepharel
instead of the last three in the other list.
Regarding the functions attributed to Raphael we have little more than his
declaration to Tobias (Tobit 12) that when the latter was occupied in his works
of mercy and charity, he (Raphael) offered his prayer to the Lord, that he was
sent by the Lord to heal him of his blindness and to deliver Sara, his son's
wife, from the devil. The Jewish category of the archangels is recognized in the
New Testament (I Thess., iv, 15; Jude, 9), but only Gabriel and Michael are
mentioned by name. Many commentators, however, identify Raphael with the angel
of the Lord
mentioned in John 5. This conjecture is base both on the
significance of the name and on the healing role attributed to Raphael in the
Book of Tobias. The Church assigns the feast of St. Raphael to 24 October. The
hymns of the Office recall the healing power of the archangel and his victory
over the demon. The lessons of the first Nocturn and the Antiphons of the entire
Office are taken from the Book of Tobias, and the lessons of the second and
third Nocturns from the works of St. Augustine, viz. for the second Nocturn a
sermon on Tobias (sermon I on the fifteenth Sunday), and for the third, a homily
on the opening verse of John, v. The Epistle of the Mass is taken from the
twelfth chapter of Tobias, and the Gospel from John 5:1-4, referring to the pool
called Probatica, where the multitude of the infirm lay awaiting the moving of
the water, for an angel of the Lord descended at certain times into the pond;
and the water was moved.And he that went down first into the pond after the
motion of the water was made whole of whatsoever infirmity he lay under
. Thus
the conjecture of the commentators referred to above is confirmed by the
official Liturgy of the Church.
Vigouroux, Dict. de la Bible, s. v. Raphael.
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