Fallen angel
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Fallen angels are angels who were expelled from Heaven. The literal term "fallen angel" does not appear in any Abrahamic religious texts, but is used to describe angels cast out of heaven.<ref name="Azaiez-Reynolds-Tesei-Zafer-nd">Template:Cite book</ref> Such angels are often described as corrupting humanity by teaching forbidden knowledge or by tempting them into sin. Common motifs for their expulsion are lust, pride, envy, or an attempt to usurp divinity.
The first idea of the concept of fallen angels may be found in Canaanite beliefs about the bənē hāʾĔlōhīm ("sons of God"), expelled from the divine court. Hêlêl ben Šāḥar is thrown down from heaven for claiming equality with ʻElyōn. Such stories are later collected in the Old Testament and appear in pseudepigraphic Jewish literature. Under the assumption that the "sons of God" (Template:Script/Hebrew) mentioned in Genesis 6:1–4 or the Book of Enoch, are angels, derives the concept of fallen angels. In the period immediately preceding the composition of the New Testament, some groups of Second Temple Judaism identified these "sons of God" as fallen angels. During the late Second Temple period the Nephilim were considered to be the monstrous offspring of fallen angels and human women. In such accounts, God sends the Great Deluge to purge the world of these creatures; their bodies are destroyed, yet their souls survive, thereafter roaming the earth as demons. Rabbinic Judaism and early Christian authorities after the third century rejected the Enochian writings and the notion of an illicit union between angels and women.
Christian theology teaches that the sins of fallen angels occur before the beginning of human history. Accordingly, fallen angels became identified with those led by Lucifer in rebellion against God, also equated with demons. The angelic origin of demons was important for Christianity insofar as Christian monotheism holds that evil is a corruption of goodness rather than an independent ontological principle. Conceptualizing fallen angels as purely spiritual beings, both good and evil angels were envisioned as rational beings without bodily limitations. Thus, Western Christian philosophy also implemented the fall of angels as a thought experiment about how evil will could occur from within the mind without external influences and explores questions regarding morality.
The Quran refers to motifs reminiscent of fallen angels in earlier Abrahamic writings. However, the interpretation of these beings is disputed. Some Muslim exegetes regard Satan (Iblīs) to be an angel, while others do not.<ref name="Erdağı">Template:Cite journal</ref> According to the viewpoint of Ibn Abbas (619–687), Iblis was an angel created from fire (nār as-samūm), while according to Hasan of Basra (642–728), he was the progenitor of the jinn.<ref>Akbari, Mahtab, and Reza Ashrafzadeh. "A comparative study of the image of the devil in the logic of Attar Attar and the commentary of Abolfotuh Razi." Propósitos y representaciones 9.2 (2021): 100.</ref><ref>Öztürk, Mustafa. "The Tragic Story of Iblis (Satan) in the Qur’an." Journal of Islamic Research 2.2 (2009): 128-144.</ref> Harut and Marut are a pair of angels mentioned in the Quran who are often said to have fallen to earth due to their negative remarks on humanity.
Fallen angels further appear throughout both Christian and Islamic popular culture, as in Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy (1308–1320), John Milton's Paradise Lost, and Hasan Karacadağ's Semum (2008).
Canaanite originEdit
The Elohist sources speak of bənē hāʾĔlōhīm ("sons of God"), manifestations of the Divine (ʾēl) and part of the heavenly court in the Canaanite pantheon.<ref>Russell, Jeffrey Burton. The devil: Perceptions of evil from antiquity to primitive Christianity. Cornell University Press, 1987. p.184</ref> According to Genesis 6:1–4 the bənē hāʾĔlōhīm descended to earth and mated with human women and beget the Nephilim, followed by God sending down a flood clean the world from humans.<ref name="Russell, Jeffrey Burton 1987. p. 185">Russell, Jeffrey Burton. The devil: Perceptions of evil from antiquity to primitive Christianity. Cornell University Press, 1987. p. 185</ref>
A passage from the Book of Psalms, although at least five hundred years apart from the passage in Genesis, speaks about a similar heavenly court.<ref name="Russell, Jeffrey Burton 1987. p. 185"/> According to the text, God delivers judgement upon the gods by turning them into mortals.<ref name="Russell, Jeffrey Burton 1987. p. 185"/> Although the text does not imply that the gods fell from heaven, it parallels their descend from immortality to mortality.<ref name="Russell, Jeffrey Burton 1987. p. 185"/> Unlike Genesis, the text is silent about the sins of the gods.<ref name="Russell, Jeffrey Burton 1987. p. 185"/>
As evident from the Old Testament, in later Hebrew tradition, angels became identified with stars. As such, the Book of Isaiah, narrating the fall of a deity in the form of a celestial object, serves as a template for the later belief in fallen angels.<ref>Russell, Jeffrey Burton. The devil: Perceptions of evil from antiquity to primitive Christianity. Cornell University Press, 1987. p. 196</ref> According to the Book of Isaiah, Hêlêl ben Šāḥar, son of Šāḥar, known from the Ugaritic poem of Shachar (dawn) and Shalim (dusk), claims equality with ʻElyōn and is then thrown down into the abyss as means of punishment.<ref>Russell, Jeffrey Burton. The devil: Perceptions of evil from antiquity to primitive Christianity. Cornell University Press, 1987. p. 197</ref><ref>Bamberger, Bernard J. (2006). Fallen angels : soldiers of Satan's realm (first paperback ed.). Philadelphia, Pa.: Jewish Publ. Soc. of America. Template:ISBN p. 9-10</ref>
Second Temple periodEdit
{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} Template:Further Fallen angels frequently appear in pseudepigraphic Jewish apocalyptic religious texts dated to the Second Temple period between 530 BC and 70 AD: in the Book of Enoch, the Book of Jubilees, and the Qumran Book of Giants. Genesis 6:1–4 serves as the template for the story, but it is unclear if the same myth has existed in the Canaanite period.<ref name=Grabbe>Lester L. Grabbe, An Introduction to First Century Judaism: Jewish Religion and History in the Second Temple Period (Continuum International Publishing Group 1996 Template:ISBN), p. 101</ref>
Some scholars consider it most likely that the Jewish tradition of fallen angels predates, even in written form, the composition of Gen 6:1–4.<ref>Lester L. Grabbe, A History of the Jews and Judaism in the Second Temple Period (Continuum 2004 Template:ISBN), p. 344</ref><ref>Matthew Black, The Book of Enoch or I Enoch: A New English Edition with Commentary and Textual Notes (Brill 1985 Template:ISBN), p. 14</ref>Template:Efn In the Book of Enoch, these Watchers "fell" after they became "enamored" with human women. The Second Book of Enoch (Slavonic Enoch) refers to the same beings of the (First) Book of Enoch, as Grigori in the Greek transcription.<ref>Andrei A. Orlov, Dark Mirrors: Azazel and Satanael in Early Jewish Demonology (SUNY Press 2011 Template:ISBN), p. 164</ref> Compared to the other Books of Enoch, fallen angels play a less significant role in 3 Enoch. 3 Enoch mentions only three fallen angels called Azazel, Azza and Uzza. Similar to The first Book of Enoch, they taught sorcery on earth, causing corruption.<ref>Annette Yoshiko Reed Fallen Angels and the History of Judaism and Christianity: The Reception of Enochic Literature Cambridge University Press 2005 Template:ISBN p. 256</ref> Unlike the first Book of Enoch, there is no mention of the reason for their fall and, according to 3 Enoch 4.6, they also later appear in heaven objecting to the presence of Enoch.
1 EnochEdit
According to 1 Enoch 7.2, the Watchers become "enamoured" with human women<ref name="Laurence">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web
}}</ref> and have intercourse with them. The offspring of these unions, and the knowledge they were giving, corrupt human beings and the earth (1 Enoch 10.11–12).<ref name="Laurence" /> Eminent among these angels are Samyaza and Azazel. Like many other fallen angels mentioned in 1 Enoch 8.1–9, Azazel introduces men to "forbidden arts", and it is Azazel who is rebuked by Enoch himself for illicit instruction, as stated in 1 Enoch 13.1.<ref>Ra'anan S. Boustan, Annette Yoshiko Reed Heavenly Realms and Earthly Realities in Late Antique Religions Cambridge University Press 2004 Template:ISBN p. 60</ref> According to 1 Enoch 10.6, God sends the archangel Raphael to chain Azazel in the desert Dudael as punishment. Further, Azazel is blamed for the corruption of earth:<templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
1 Enoch 10:12: "All the earth has been corrupted by the effects of the teaching of Azazyel. To him therefore ascribe the whole crime."{{#if:|{{#if:|}}
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An etiological interpretation of 1 Enoch deals with the origin of evil. By shifting the origin of mankind's sin and their misdeeds to illicit angel instruction, evil is attributed to something supernatural from without. This motif, in 1 Enoch, differs from that of later Jewish and Christian theology; in the latter evil is something from within.<ref>Annette Yoshiko Reed Fallen Angels and the History of Judaism and Christianity: The Reception of Enochic Literature Cambridge University Press 2005 Template:ISBN p. 6</ref> According to a paradigmatic interpretation, 1 Enoch might deal with illicit marriages between priests and women. As evident from Leviticus 21:1–15, priests were prohibited to marry impure women. Accordingly, the fallen angels in 1 Enoch are the priests counterpart, who defile themselves by marriage. Just like the angels are expelled from heaven, the priests are excluded from their service at the altar. Unlike most other apocalyptic writings, 1 Enoch reflects a growing dissatisfaction with the priestly establishments in Jerusalem in the 3rd century BC. The paradigmatic interpretation parallels the Adamic myth in regard of the origin of evil: In both cases, transcending one's own limitations inherent in their own nature causes their fall. This contrasts the etiological interpretation, which implies another power besides God, in heaven. The latter solution therefore poorly fits into monotheistic thought.<ref>SUTER, DAVID. Fallen Angel, Fallen Priest: The Problem of Family Purity in 1 Enoch 6—16. Hebrew Union College Annual, vol. 50, 1979, pp. 115–135. JSTOR,</ref> Otherwise, the introduction to illicit knowledge might reflect a rejection of foreign Hellenistic culture. Accordingly, the fallen angels represent creatures of Greek mythology, which introduced forbidden arts, used by Hellenistic kings and generals, resulting in oppression of Jews.<ref>George W. E. Nickelsburg. "Apocalyptic and Myth in 1 Enoch 6–11." Journal of Biblical Literature, vol. 96, no. 3, 1977, pp. 383–405</ref>
2 EnochEdit
The concept of fallen angels is also in the Second Book of Enoch. It tells about Enoch's ascent through the layers of heaven. During his journey, he encounters fallen angels imprisoned in the 2nd heaven. At first, he decides to pray for them, but refuses to do so, since he himself as merely human, would not be worthy to pray for angels. In the 5th heaven however, he meets other rebellious angels, here called Grigori, remaining in grief, not joining the heavenly hosts in song. Enoch tries to cheer them up by telling about his prayers for their fellow angels and thereupon they join the heavenly liturgy.<ref>Annette Yoshiko Reed Fallen Angels and the History of Judaism and Christianity: The Reception of Enochic Literature Cambridge University Press 2005 Template:ISBN pp. 103–104</ref>
Strikingly, the text refers to the leader of the Grigori as Satanail and not as Azael or Shemyaza, as in the other Books of Enoch.<ref name="Orlov 2012">Andrei Orlov, Gabriele Boccaccini New Perspectives on 2 Enoch: No Longer Slavonic Only Brill 2012 Template:ISBN pp. 150, 164</ref> But the Grigori are identified with the Watchers of 1 Enoch.<ref name="Orlov,164">Template:Harvnb</ref><ref>Template:Harvnb</ref>
The narration of the Grigori in 2 Enoch 18:1–7, who went down on to earth, married women and "befouled the earth with their deeds", resulting in their confinement under the earth, shows that the author of 2 Enoch knew about the stories in 1 Enoch.<ref name="Orlov 2012" /> The longer recension of 2 Enoch, chapter 29 refers to angels who were "thrown out from the height" when their leader tried to become equal in rank with the Lord's power (2 Enoch 29:1–4), an idea probably taken from Ancient Canaanite religion about Attar, trying to rule the throne of Baal.<ref>Howard Schwartz Tree of Souls: The Mythology of Judaism Oxford University Press 2006 Template:ISBN p. 108</ref>
JubileesEdit
The Book of Jubilees, an ancient Jewish religious work, accepted as canonical by the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and Beta Israel, refers to the Watchers, who are among the angels created on the first day.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web
}}</ref><ref>Todd R. Hanneken The Subversion of the Apocalypses in the Book of Jubilees Society of Biblical Lit Template:ISBN p. 57</ref> However, unlike the (first) Book of Enoch, the Watchers are commanded by God to descend to earth and to instruct humanity.<ref>Todd R. Hanneken The Subversion of the Apocalypses in the Book of Jubilees Society of Biblical Lit Template:ISBN p. 59</ref><ref>Annette Yoshiko Reed Fallen Angels and the History of Judaism and Christianity: The Reception of Enochic Literature Cambridge University Press 2005 Template:ISBN p. 90</ref> It is only after they copulate with human women that they transgress the laws of God.<ref name="ReferenceB">Chad T. Pierce Spirits and the Proclamation of Christ: 1 Peter 3:18–22 in Light of Sin and Punishment Traditions in Early Jewish and Christian Literature Mohr Siebeck 2011 Template:ISBN p. 112</ref> These illicit unions result in demonic offspring, who battle each other until they die, while the Watchers are bound in the depths of the earth as punishment.<ref>Jeffrey Burton Russell The Devil: Perceptions of Evil from Antiquity to Primitive Christianity Cornell University Press 1987 Template:ISBN p. 193</ref> In Jubilees 10:1, another angel called Mastema appears as the leader of the evil spirits.<ref name="ReferenceB" /> He asks God to spare some of the demons, so he might use their aid to lead humankind into sin. Afterwards, he becomes their leader:<ref name="ReferenceB" /> <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
Lord, Creator, let some of them remain before me, and let them harken to my voice, and do all that I shall say unto them; for if some of them are not left to me, I shall not be able to execute the power of my will on the sons of men; for these are for corruption and leading astray before my judgment, for great is the wickedness of the sons of men. (10:8){{#if:|{{#if:|}}
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Both the (first) Book of Enoch and the Book of Jubilees include the motif of angels introducing evil to humans. However, unlike the Book of Enoch, the Book of Jubilees does not hold that evil was caused by the fall of angels in the first place, although their introduction to sin is affirmed. Further, while the fallen angels in the Book of Enoch are acting against God's will, the fallen angels and demons in the Book of Jubilees seem to have no power independent from God but only act within his power.<ref>Todd R. Hanneken The Subversion of the Apocalypses in the Book of Jubilees Society of Biblical Lit Template:ISBN p. 60</ref>
Rabbinic JudaismEdit
Early Rabbinic literatureEdit
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Although the concept of fallen angels developed from Jewish texts written during the Second Temple period, rabbis from the second century onward turned against the Enochian writings, probably in order to prevent fellow Jews from worship and veneration of angels. Thus, while many angels were individualized and sometimes venerated during the Second Temple period, the status of angels was degraded to a class of creatures on the same level of humans, thereby emphasizing the omnipresence of God. The 2nd-century rabbi Shimon bar Yochai cursed everyone who explained the term "sons of God" as angels. He stated sons of God were actually sons of judges or sons of nobles. Evil was no longer attributed to heavenly forces, now it was dealt as an "evil inclination" (yetzer hara) within humans.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In some Midrashic works, the "evil inclination" is attributed to Samael, who is in charge of several satans in order to test humanity.<ref>Geoffrey W. Dennis The Encyclopedia of Jewish Myth, Magic and Mysticism: Second Edition Llewellyn Worldwide 2016 Template:ISBN</ref><ref>Yuri Stoyanov The Other God: Dualist Religions from Antiquity to the Cathar Heresy Yale University Press 2000 Template:ISBN</ref> Nevertheless, these angels are still subordinate to God; the reacceptance of rebel angels in Midrashic discourse was posterior and probably influenced by the role of fallen angels in Islamic and Christian lore.<ref>Annette Yoshiko Reed, Fallen Angels and the History of Judaism and Christianity: The Reception of Enochic Literature Cambridge University Press 2005 Template:ISBN p. 266</ref>
Post-Talmudic worksEdit
The idea of rebel angels in Judaism reappears in the Aggadic-Midrashic work Pirke De-Rabbi Eliezer, which shows not one, but two falls of angels. The first one is attributed to Samael, who refuses to worship Adam and objects to God favoring Adam over the angels, ultimately descending onto Adam and Eve to tempt them into sin. This seems rooted in the motif of the fall of Iblis in the Quran and the fall of Satan in the Cave of Treasures.<ref name="Ret">Rachel Adelman The Return of the Repressed: Pirqe de-Rabbi Eliezer and the Pseudepigrapha Brill 2009 Template:ISBN pp. 77–80</ref> The second fall echoes the Enochian narratives. Again, the "sons of God" mentioned in Gen 6:1–4 are depicted as angels. During their fall, their "strength and stature became like the sons of man" and again, they give existence to the giants by intercourse with human women.<ref name="Ret" />
KabbalahEdit
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Although not strictly speaking fallen, evil angels reappear in Kabbalah. Some of them are named after angels taken from the Enochian writings, such as Samael.<ref>Adele Berlin; Maxine Grossman, eds. (2011). The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion. Oxford University Press. p. 651. Template:ISBN. Retrieved 2012-07-03</ref> According to the Zohar, just as angels can be created by virtue, evil angels are an incarnation of human vices, which derive from the qlippoth, the representation of impure forces.<ref>Christian D Ginsburg The Kabbalah (Routledge Revivals): Its Doctrines, Development, and Literature Routledge 2015 Template:ISBN p. 109</ref>
However, the Zohar also recalls a narration of two angels in a fallen state, called Aza and Azael. These angels are cast down from the heaven after mistrusting Adam for his inclination towards sin.<ref name=Lait>Michael Laitman, The Zohar</ref> Once on Earth, they complete the Enochian narrative by teaching magic to humans and producing offspring with them, as well as consorting with Lilith (hailed as "the sinner"). In the narrative, the Zohar affirms but simultaneously prohibits magical practices.<ref>Aryeh Wineman, Mystic Tales from the Zohar Princeton University Press Template:ISBN p. 48</ref> As a punishment, God puts the angels in chains, but they still copulate with the demoness Naamah, who gives birth to demons, evil spirits and witches.<ref name=Lait/>
ChristianityEdit
- William de Brailes - The Fall of the Rebel Angels (Apocryphal) - Walters W10624R - Full Page.jpg
The Fall of the Rebel Angels (Apocryphal) (Template:Circa), by William de Brailes. God sits on a throne within a mandorla. The rebelling angels are depicted as falling out of heaven and into a hell, in the shape of a mouth. As they fall, the angels become demons.
- Paradise Lost 1.jpg
Michael casts out rebel angels. Illustration by Gustave Doré for John Milton's Paradise Lost (1866)
- Paradise Lost 24.jpg
Angels fighting against fallen angels during the War in Heaven. Illustration by Gustave Doré for John Milton's Paradise Lost (1866)
BibleEdit
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Luke 10:18 refers to "Satan falling from heaven" and Matthew 25:41 mentions "the Devil and his angels", who will be thrown into Hell. All Synoptic Gospels identify Satan as the leader of demons.<ref name=Martin2010>Template:Cite journal</ref> Paul the Apostle (Template:Circa or 67) states in 1 Corinthians 6:3 that there are angels who will be judged, implying the existence of wicked angels.<ref name=Martin2010/> 2 Peter 2:4 and Jude 1:6 refer paraenetically to angels who have sinned against God and await punishment on Judgement Day.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The Book of Revelation, chapter 12, speaks of Satan as the "Great Red Dragon" whose "tail swept a third part of the stars of heaven and cast them to the earth".<ref>Revelation 12:4</ref> In verses 7–9, Satan is defeated in the War in Heaven against Michael and his angels: "the great dragon was thrown down, that ancient serpent who is called the Devil and Satan, the deceiver of the whole world—he was thrown down to the earth and his angels were thrown down with him".<ref>Revelation 12:9</ref> Nowhere within the New Testament are fallen angels identified with demons,<ref name=Martin2010/> but by combining the references to Satan, demons, and angels, early Christian exegetes equated fallen angels with demons, for which Satan was regarded as the leader.<ref name=Martin2010/><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
The First Epistle to the Corinthians in 11:10, according to the early Church Father Tertullian, references fallen angels; Tertullian taught that protection from the lust of the fallen angels was the reason for the Apostle Paul's directive to Christian women to wear a headcovering (veil).<ref name="Stewart2022">Template:Cite book</ref> Tertullian referenced a woman who was touched on the neck by a fallen angel "who found her to be a temptation".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Origen and other early Christian writers linked the fallen morning star of Isaiah 14:12 of the Old Testament to Jesus' statement in Luke 10:18 that he "saw Satan fall like lightning from heaven", as well as a passage about the fall of Satan in Revelation 12:8–9.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The Latin word lucifer, as introduced in the late 4th-century AD Vulgate, gave rise to the name for a fallen angel.<ref>Kaufmann Kohler Heaven and Hell in Comparative Religion: With Special Reference to Dante's Divine Comedy Macmillan original: Princeton University 1923 digitized: 2008 p. 5</ref>
Christian tradition has associated Satan not only with the image of the fallen "morning star" in Isaiah 14:12, but also with the denouncing in Ezekiel 28:11–19 of the King of Tyre, who is spoken of as having been a "cherub". The Church Fathers saw these two passages as in some ways parallel, an interpretation also testified in apocryphal and pseudepigraphic works.<ref>Hector M. Patmore, Adam, Satan, and the King of Tyre (Brill 2012), Template:ISBN, pp. 76–78</ref> However, "no modern evangelical commentary on Isaiah or Ezekiel sees Isaiah 14 or Ezekiel 28 as providing information about the fall of Satan".<ref>Paul Peterson, Ross Cole (editors), Hermeneutics, Intertextuality and the Contemporary Meaning of Scripture (Avondale Academic Press 2013 Template:ISBN), p. 246.</ref>
Early ChristianityEdit
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Christianity originated in 1st-century Judea from a sect of apocalyptic Jewish Christians within the realm of Second Temple Judaism.<ref name="Wilken 2013"/><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The basic tenets of the Jewish religion during this era were ethical monotheism and the Torah, or the Mosaic Law.<ref name="González 1987">Template:Cite book</ref> In this period, the Second Temple of Jerusalem was still central to Judaism, but synagogues were also established as institutions for prayer and the reading of Jewish sacred texts.<ref name="MacCulloch 2010"/> The Hebrew Bible developed during the Second Temple Period, as the Jews decided which religious texts were of divine origin; the Masoretic Text, compiled by the Jewish scribes and scholars of the Early Middle Ages, comprises the Hebrew and Aramaic 24 books that they considered authoritative.<ref name="Tov 2014">Template:Cite book</ref> Jewish messianism, and the Jewish Messiah concept, has its roots in the apocalyptic literature produced between the 2nd and 1st centuries BC,<ref name="Davies-Finkelstein">Template:Cite book</ref> promising a future "anointed" leader (messiah or king) from the Davidic line to resurrect the Israelite Kingdom of God, in place of the foreign rulers of the time.<ref name="Wilken 2013">Template:Cite book</ref>
The Hellenized Greek-speaking Jews of Alexandria produced a Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible called "the Septuagint", that included books later identified as the Apocrypha, while the Samaritans produced their own edition of the Torah, the Samaritan Pentateuch; according to the Dutch–Israeli biblical scholar and linguist Emanuel Tov, professor of Bible Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, both of these ancient editions of the Hebrew Bible differ significantly from the medieval Masoretic Text.<ref name="Tov 2014"/> Currently, all the main non-Protestant (Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and Oriental Orthodox) Christian denominations accept as canonical the Deuterocanonical books, which were excluded from the modern Hebrew Bible and the Protestant Bible.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The Septuagint was influential on early Christianity as it was the Hellenistic Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible primarily used by the 1st-century Christian authors.<ref name="MacCulloch 2010">Template:Cite book</ref>
During the period immediately before the rise of Christianity, the intercourse between the Watchers and human women was often seen as the first fall of the angels.<ref>Gregory A. Boyd, God at War: The Bible & Spiritual Conflict, InterVarsity Press 1997 Template:ISBN, p. 138</ref> Christianity stuck to the Enochian writings at least until the third century.<ref name="Patricia Crone p. 4" /> Many Church Fathers such as Irenaeus, Justin Martyr, Clement of Alexandria, and Lactantius<ref name="Reed 2005 14, 15">Template:Harvnb</ref><ref>Annette Yoshiko Reed Fallen Angels and the History of Judaism and Christianity: The Reception of Enochic Literature Cambridge University Press 2005 Template:ISBN p. 149</ref> accepted the association of the angelic descent to the sons of God passage in Genesis 6:1–4.<ref name="Reed 2005 14, 15" /> However, some Christian ascetics, such as Origen (Template:Circa AD),<ref>David L. Bradnick Evil, Spirits, and Possession: An Emergentist Theology of the Demonic Brill 2017 Template:ISBN p. 30</ref> rejected this interpretation. According to the Church Fathers who rejected the doctrine by Origen, these angels were guilty of having transgressed the limits of their nature and of desiring to leave their heavenly abode to experience sensual experiences.<ref>Annette Yoshiko Reed Fallen Angels and the History of Judaism and Christianity: The Reception of Enochic Literature Cambridge University Press 2005 Template:ISBN p. 163</ref> Irenaeus referred to fallen angels as apostates, who will be punished by an everlasting fire. Justin Martyr (Template:Circa) identified pagan deities as fallen angels or their demonic offspring in disguise. Justin also held them responsible for Christian persecution during the first centuries.<ref>Annette Yoshiko Reed Fallen Angels and the History of Judaism and Christianity: The Reception of Enochic Literature Cambridge University Press 2005 Template:ISBN p. 162</ref> Tertullian and Origen also referred to fallen angels as teachers of astrology.<ref>Tim Hegedus Early Christianity and Ancient Astrology Peter Lang 2007 Template:ISBN p. 127</ref>
The Babylonian king, who is described as a fallen "morning star" in Isaiah 14:1–17, was probably the first time identified with a fallen angel by Origen.<ref>Jeffrey Burton Russell Satan: The Early Christian Tradition Cornell University Press 1987 Template:ISBN p. 130</ref><ref>Philip C. Almond The Devil: A New Biography I.B.Tauris 2014 Template:ISBN p. 42</ref> This description was interpreted typologically both as an angel and a human king. The image of the fallen morning star or angel was thereby applied to Satan by early Christian writers,<ref>Template:Harvnb</ref><ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> following the equation of Lucifer to Satan in the pre-Christian century.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Roman CatholicismEdit
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The subject of fallen angels is covered in a number of catechisms of the Roman Catholic Church, including Rev. George Hay's in which he answers the question What was the sin by which they fell?: "It was pride, arising from the great beauty and sublime graces which God had bestowed upon them. For, seeing themselves such glorious beings, they fell in love with themselves, and, forgetting the God that made them, wished to be on an equality with their Creator." The consequence of this fall being that, "they were immediately deprived of all their supernatural graces and heavenly beauty: they were changed from glorious angels into hideous devils; they were banished out of heaven, and condemned to the torments of hell, which was prepared to receive them."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
In terms of the history of fallen angel theology it is thought to be rooted in Enochian literature, which Christians began to reject by the 3rd century. The sons of God came to be identified merely with righteous men, more precisely with descendants of Seth who had been seduced by women descended from Cain. The cause of evil was shifted from the superior powers of angels, to humans themselves, and to the very beginning of history; the expulsion of Satan and his angels on the one hand and the original sin of humans on the other hand.<ref name="Patricia Crone p. 4">Patricia Crone. The Book of Watchers in the Qurān, p. 4</ref><ref>Template:Harvnb</ref> However, the Book of Watchers, which identified the sons of God with fallen angels, was not rejected by Syriac Christians or the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church.<ref name="Patricia Crone p. 5">Patricia Crone. The Book of Watchers in the Qurān, p. 5</ref> Augustine of Hippo's work Civitas Dei (5th century) became the major opinion of Western demonology and for the Catholic Church.<ref name="ReferenceC">David L Bradnick Evil, Spirits, and Possession: An Emergentist Theology of the Demonic Brill 2017 Template:ISBN p. 39</ref> He rejected the Enochian writings and stated that the sole origin of fallen angels was the rebellion of Satan.<ref name="Heinz Schreckenberg 1992">Heinz Schreckenberg, Kurt Schubert, Jewish Historiography and Iconography in Early and Medieval Christianity (Van Gorcum, 1992, Template:ISBN), p. 253</ref><ref name="ReferenceD">David L Bradnick Evil, Spirits, and Possession: An Emergentist Theology of the Demonic Brill 2017 Template:ISBN p. 42</ref> As a result, fallen angels came to be equated with demons and depicted as non-sexual spiritual entities.<ref name="ReferenceE">Joad Raymond Milton's Angels: The Early-Modern Imagination OUP Oxford 2010 Template:ISBN p. 77</ref> The exact nature of their spiritual bodies became another topic of dispute during the Middle Ages.<ref name="ReferenceC" /> Augustine based his descriptions of demons on his perception of the Greek daimon.<ref name="ReferenceC" /> The Daimon was thought to be a spiritual being, composed of ethereal matter, a notion also used for fallen angels by Augustine.<ref name="ReferenceF">David L Bradnick Evil, Spirits, and Possession: An Emergentist Theology of the Demonic Brill 2017 Template:ISBN p. 40</ref> However, these angels received their ethereal body only after their fall.<ref name="ReferenceF" /> Later scholars tried to explain the details of their spiritual nature, asserting that the ethereal body is a mixture of fire and air, but that they are still composed of material elements. Others denied any physical relation to material elements, depicting the fallen angels as purely spiritual entities.<ref>David L Bradnick Evil, Spirits, and Possession: An Emergentist Theology of the Demonic Brill 2017 Template:ISBN p. 49</ref> But even those who believed the fallen angels had ethereal bodies did not believe that they could produce any offspring.<ref>Jeffrey Burton Russell Satan: The Early Christian Tradition Cornell University Press 1987 Template:ISBN p. 210</ref><ref>David L Bradnick Evil, Spirits, and Possession: An Emergentist Theology of the Demonic Brill 2017 Template:ISBN p. 45</ref>
Augustine, in his Civitas Dei describes two cities (Civitates) distinct from each other and opposed to each other like light and darkness.<ref name="ReferenceG">Christoph Horn Augustinus, De civitate dei Oldenbourg Verlag 2010 Template:ISBN p. 158</ref> The earthly city is caused by the act of rebellion of the fallen angels and is inhabited by wicked men and demons (fallen angels) led by Satan. On the other hand, the heavenly city is inhabited by righteous men and the angels led by God.<ref name="ReferenceG" /> Although, his ontological division into two different kingdoms shows resemblance of Manichean dualism, Augustine differs in regard of the origin and power of evil. In Augustine works, evil originates from free will. Augustine always emphasized the sovereignty of God over the fallen angels.<ref>Neil Forsyth The Old Enemy: Satan and the Combat Myth Princeton University Press 1989 Template:ISBN p. 405</ref> Accordingly, the inhabitants of the earthly city can only operate within their God-given framework.<ref name="ReferenceD" /> The rebellion of angels is also a result of the God-given freedom of choice. The obedient angels are endowed with grace, giving them a deeper understanding of God's nature and the order of the cosmos. Illuminated by God-given grace, they became incapable of feeling any desire for sin. The other angels, however, are not blessed with grace, thus they remain capable of sin. After these angels decide to sin, they fall from heaven and become demons.<ref>Jeffrey Burton Russell Satan: The Early Christian Tradition Cornell University Press 1987 Template:ISBN p. 211</ref> In Augustine's view of angels, they cannot be guilty of carnal desires since they lack flesh, but they can be guilty of sins that are rooted in spirit and intellect such as pride and envy.<ref>David L Bradnick Evil, Spirits, and Possession: An Emergentist Theology of the Demonic Brill 2017 Template:ISBN p. 47</ref> However, after they have made their decision to rebel against God, they cannot turn back.<ref>Joad Raymond Milton's Angels: The Early-Modern Imagination OUP Oxford 2010 Template:ISBN p. 72</ref><ref>David L Bradnick Evil, Spirits, and Possession: An Emergentist Theology of the Demonic Brill 2017 Template:ISBN p. 44</ref> The Catechism of the Catholic Church understands the fall of angels as radical and irrevocable rejection of God and his reign by some angels who, though created as good beings, freely chose evil, their sin being unforgivable because of the irrevocable character of their choice, not because of any defect in infinite divine mercy.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Present-day Catholicism rejects Apocatastasis, the reconciliation with God suggested by the Church Father Origen.<ref>Frank K. Flinn Encyclopedia of Catholicism Infobase Publishing 2007 Template:ISBN p. 226</ref>
Orthodox ChristianityEdit
Eastern Orthodox ChristianityEdit
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Like Roman Catholicism, Eastern Orthodox Christianity shares the basic belief in fallen angels as spiritual beings who rebel against God. Unlike Roman Catholicism, however, there is no established doctrine about the exact nature of fallen angels, but Eastern Orthodox Christianity unanimously agrees that the power of fallen angels is always inferior to God. Therefore, belief in fallen angels can always be assimilated with local lore, as long it does not break basic principles and is in line with the Bible.<ref>Charles Stewart Demons and the Devil: Moral Imagination in Modern Greek Culture Princeton University Press 2016 Template:ISBN p. 141</ref> Historically, some Eastern Orthodox theologians even tend to suggest that fallen angels could be rehabilitated in the world to come.<ref>Ernst Benz The Eastern Orthodox Church: Its Thought and Life Routledge 2017 Template:ISBN p. 52</ref> Fallen angels, just like angels, play a significant role in the spiritual life of believers. As in Roman Catholicism, fallen angels are believed to tempt and incite people into sin, but mental illness is also linked to the influence of fallen angels.<ref name="ReferenceJ">Sergiĭ Bulgakov The Orthodox Church St Vladimir's Seminary Press 1988 Template:ISBN p. 128</ref> Those who have reached an advanced degree of spirituality are even thought to be able to envision them.<ref name="ReferenceJ" /> Rituals and sacraments performed by Eastern Orthodox priests are thought to weaken such demonic influences.<ref>Charles Stewart Demons and the Devil: Moral Imagination in Modern Greek Culture Princeton University Press 2016 Template:ISBN p. 147</ref>
Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo ChurchEdit
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Unlike most other Christian churches, the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church accepts 1 Enoch and the Book of Jubilees as canonical.<ref>Loren T. Stuckenbruck, Gabriele Boccaccini Enoch and the Synoptic Gospels: Reminiscences, Allusions, Intertextuality SBL Press 2016 Template:ISBN p. 133</ref> As a result, the Church believes that human sin does not originate in Adam's transgression alone, but also from Satan and other fallen angels. Together with demons, they continue to cause sin and corruption on earth.<ref>James H. Charlesworth The Old Testament Pseudepigrapha Hendrickson Publishers 2010 Template:ISBN p. 10</ref>
ProtestantismEdit
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Like Roman Catholicism, Protestantism continues with the concept of fallen angels as spiritual entities unrelated to flesh,<ref name="ReferenceE" /> but it rejects the angelology and demonology established by the Roman Catholic Church. Martin Luther's (1483–1546) Sermons of the Angels merely recount the exploits of the fallen angels, and does not deal with an angelic hierarchy.<ref>Peter Marshall, Alexandra Walsham Angels in the Early Modern World Cambridge University Press 2006 Template:ISBN p. 74</ref> Satan and his fallen angels are believed to be responsible for some misfortune in the world, but Luther always believed that the power of the good angels exceeds those of the fallen ones.<ref>Peter Marshall, Alexandra Walsham Angels in the Early Modern World Cambridge University Press 2006 Template:ISBN p. 76</ref> The Italian Protestant theologian Girolamo Zanchi (1516Template:En dash1590) offered further explanations for the reason behind the fall of the angels. According to Zanchi, the angels rebelled when the incarnation of Jesus Christ as the Son of God was revealed to them in incomplete form.<ref name="ReferenceE" /> While Mainline Protestants are much less concerned with the cause of angelic fall, arguing that it is neither useful nor necessary to know, other Protestant churches do have fallen angels as more of a focus.<ref name="ReferenceE" />
PhilosophyEdit
Monotheism parted from cosmological dualism by insisting on the good origin of all things.<ref>Fox-Horton, J. (2021). Free Will and the Rebel Angels in Medieval Philosophy by Tobias Hoffmann. Magic, Ritual, and Witchcraft, 16(3), p. 223</ref> This contrasts with alternative views, such as Manichaeism, proposing absolute evil as an entirely separate ontological principle.<ref>Felber, A., Hutter, M., Achenbach, R., Aune, D. E., Lang, B., Sparn, W., Reeg, G., Dan, J., Radtke, B., & Apostolos-Cappadona, D. (2011). Devil. In Religion Past and Present Online. Brill. https://doi.org/10.1163/1877-5888_rpp_COM_025084</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref> With the proposition that there is only one ultimate principle, Christian philosophy threatened the hypothesis that God can only cause good and needed to explain the origins of moral evil.
Thus, in Western Christian philosophy the fall of angels served as a thought experiment on how moral evil originates. Angels, as purely spiritual beings, were an example on how someone chooses evil despite optimal psychological and cognitive conditions.<ref>Fox-Horton, J. (2021). Free Will and the Rebel Angels in Medieval Philosophy by Tobias Hoffmann. Magic, Ritual, and Witchcraft, 16(3), 199.</ref> While according to many theories of Ancient Greek philosophy hold an intellectualist account of morality (i.e. that evil derives from a impeded intellectual cognition) the sin of angels, who are purely spiritual beings, needed an alterantive explanation.<ref>Fox-Horton, J. (2021). Free Will and the Rebel Angels in Medieval Philosophy by Tobias Hoffmann. Magic, Ritual, and Witchcraft, 16(3), p. 3</ref>
The voluntarist account asserts that angels sinned by their own volution.<ref>Fox-Horton, J. (2021). Free Will and the Rebel Angels in Medieval Philosophy by Tobias Hoffmann. Magic, Ritual, and Witchcraft, 16(3), p. 5</ref> While the intellectualists need to explain how a spiritual being can suffer from cognitive deficiencies, voluntarists need to explain how beings under the same psychological conditions make different moral choices.
Thomas Aquinas (c. 1225 – 7 March 1274), following an intellectualist approach, argued that the mind cannot comprehend all thoughts at once.<ref>Fox-Horton, J. (2021). Free Will and the Rebel Angels in Medieval Philosophy by Tobias Hoffmann. Magic, Ritual, and Witchcraft, 16(3), p. 205</ref> As such, angels only consider on whatever they focus on, but if they do not focus on the highest good, they commit evil actions. Henry of Ghent (c. 1217 – 29 June 1293) asserts that evil volition must precede mistaken consideration. Defective reasoning is described as the result of evil will.<ref>Fox-Horton, J. (2021). Free Will and the Rebel Angels in Medieval Philosophy by Tobias Hoffmann. Magic, Ritual, and Witchcraft, 16(3), p. 70</ref>
In the discussion concerning theodicy, the question of how evil can exist simultaneously with the existence of an all-powerful and all-good God, fallen angels are also proposed as an explanation for natural evil. The theory proposes that fallen angels can influence nature and cause suffering through natural disasters. Combined with the free-will of angels, natural disasters too may result from evil volition.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
FolkloreEdit
In Christian folklore tales about encounters between men and spirits, the spirits were often explained as fallen angels. They would have been cast out of heaven, damned to roam the world as demons, but were not so evil that they were sentenced to hell, like Lucifer and his devils. Yet they were still not as good to remain in heaven.<ref>Mack, C. K., Mack, D. (1998). A Field Guide to Demons, Fairies, Fallen Angels, and Other Subversive Spirits. USA: Arcade Pub. p. xxiii</ref> Therefore, they would live between heaven and hell among humans in liminal spaces.
Caesarius of Heisterbach's (Template:Circa) asserted that not all fallen angels are equally bad. Some fallen angels would be banished for not actively defending God against Lucifer, but since they did not side with the devils, would not be sentenced to hell. They remain loyal to God on earth, do good deeds, and bearing some resemblances to saints, as seen in the Dialogus Miraculorum, in which a knight is guided by a fallen angel to lead him back on the path of piety.<ref name="Newman, Coree 2018">Newman, Coree. "The Good, the Bad and the Unholy: Ambivalent Angels in the Middle Ages." Fairies, Demons, and Nature Spirits: 'Small Gods' at the Margins of Christendom (2018): 103-122.</ref> In another tale, a neutral fallen angel became an assistant of a noble knight. However, when the knight learned that his best assistant was actually a demon, he dismissed him. When the knight wants to pay the demon for his service, the demon asserted that the knight should spend the money on a new bell for the church, instead.<ref name="Newman, Coree 2018"/>
According to The Brendan Voyage, during the Medieval Age, Brendan meets a group of angels referred to as "wandering spirits". On holy days, they were embodied as white birds, symbols usually used for purity and the holy spirit. In later versions, such as the 15th Century Dutch and German variant, the fallen angels are much more depicted as akin to grotesque demons. Although they would not have supported Lucifer in his evil schemes, they would have been passive and not fighting for good, thus turned into animal-like creatures cast out of heaven.
Such earthly fallen angels were used as a possible origin of fairies in Irish and Scandinavian folk-tales. Depending on the place they fell, they will remain as spirits of the specific element, but are usually benevolent and harmless.<ref>Wilde, J. F. E. (1888). Ancient Legends, mystic Charms, and Superstitions of Ireland: With Sketches of the Irish Past. To which is Appended a Chaper on "The Ancient Race of Ireland". USA: Ticknor and Company. p. 89</ref> If such fairies were identified with the Biblical fallen angels, their salvation after Judgement Day was usually denied, since the fallen angels could not return to heaven.<ref>Christiansen, R. Th. (1971). Some Notes on the Fairies and the Fairy Faith. Béaloideas, 39/41, 95–111. {{#invoke:doi|main}}</ref> Later Protestant thinkers increasingly dismissed belief in fairies and neutral angels as part of either fairy-tales or a delusion cast by Satan.<ref>Oldridge, Darren. "Fairies and the Devil in early modern England." The Seventeenth Century 31.1 (2016): 1-15.</ref>
IslamEdit
Although sometimes denied, fallen angels were widely accepted in Classical Islam.Template:EfnTemplate:Efn The three most famous in Islam being mentioned in the Quran: Iblis, Harut and Marut.<ref>Iqbal, Muzaffar. "Integrated Encyclopedia of the Qur'ān." The center of Islamic Sciences (2013). p. 180</ref> Objection towards the concept of fallen angels, however, is attested as early as to the influential Islamic ascetic Hasan of Basra (642–728) denied the possibility of angels sinning.Template:Efn Interpretations deriving from the companions of Muhammad, such as Ibn Abbas (619–687) and Abd Allah ibn Mas'ud (594–653) on the other hand legitimized the concept of fallible angels.<ref>Mahmoud Ayoub The Qur'an and Its Interpreters, Volume 1 SUNY Press 1984 Template:ISBN p. 74</ref> Most Sunni scholars adhere to the latter opinion.<ref>Street, Tony. "Medieval Islamic doctrine on the angels: the writings of Fakhr al-Dīh al-Rāzī." Parergon 9.2 (1991): 111-127.</ref>
Opposition to the concept of the fallen angel is mostly found among the Qadariyah and most Mu'tazilites.<ref>Basharin, Pavel V. (April 1, 2018). "The Problem of Free Will and Predestination in the Light of Satan's Justification in Early Sufism". English Language Notes. 56 (1). Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press: 119–138. doi:10.1215/00138282-4337480. S2CID 165366613.</ref> Many Salafis also agree with this view.<ref>Gauvain, Richard (2013). Salafi Ritual Purity: In the Presence of God. Abingdon, England: Routledge. ISBN 978-0710313560 p. 73</ref> Those who oppose angelic fallibility refer to Surah at-Tahrim (66:6)<ref>Hoffman, Valerie J. The Essentials of Ibadi Islam. Syracuse University Press, 2012. p. 188</ref> in favor of their position:
O believers! Protect yourselves and your families from a Fire whose fuel is people and stones, overseen by formidable and severe angels, who never disobey whatever Allah orders—always doing as commanded.
Those who are in support of the concept of fallen angels (including Tabari, Suyuti, al-Nasafi, and al-Māturīdī) refer to al-Anbiya (21:29) stating that angels would be punished for sins and arguing that, if angels could not sin, they would not be warned to refrain from committing them:<ref>T.C. t.c Istanbul Bilimler Enstitütüsü Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Temel Islam bilimeri Anabilim dali yüksek Lisans Tezi Imam Maturidi'nin Te'vilatu'l-Kur'an'da gaybi Konulara Yaklasimi Elif Erdogan 2501171277 Danisman Prof. Dr. Yaşar Düzenli İstanbul 202</ref><ref>Yüksek Lisans Tezi Imam Maturidi'nin Te'vilatu'l-kur'an'da gaybi konulara İstanbul-2020 2501171277</ref>
Whoever of them were to say, "I am a god besides Him", they would be rewarded with Hell by Us [...]
It has been argued, even if fallen angels are considered, they are conceptually different from the fallen angels in Christianity, since they remain at the service of God and do not become God's enemies.<ref>Serdar, Murat. "Hıristiyanlık ve İslâm’da Meleklerin Varlık ve Kısımları." Bilimname 2009.2 (2009). </ref> It has been stated that "(...) according to Christianity, the devils are fallen angels who renounced their loyalty to God, in Islam it is God who dismissed the fallen angels".<ref name="Erdağı"/> Unlike Christian tradition, fallen angels may return to their former state in the angelic hierarchy, if forgiven.<ref>Schimmel, Annemarie. Mystische Dimensionen des Islam: Die Geschichte des Sufismus. Diederichs, 1992. p. 230 (German)</ref>
Besides the Quran, other Islamic works allude to fallen angels. According to the Isma'ilism work Umm al-Kitāb, ʿAzāzīl, is the first creation of God. Because God gifted him the ability of creation, he claims divinity and is thrown into lower celestial spheres until he ends up on earth.<ref name="ReferenceA">Christoph Auffarth, Loren T. Stuckenbruck The Fall of the Angels Brill 2004 Template:ISBN p. 161</ref> In a Shia narrative attrbitued to Ja'far al-Sadiq (700 or 702–765), Idris (Enoch) meets an angel, which the wrath of God falls upon, and his wings and hair are cut off; after Idris prays for him to God, his wings and hair are restored.<ref>Muham Sakura Dragon The Great Tale of Prophet Enoch (Idris) In Islam Sakura Dragon SPC Template:ISBN</ref> In a similar story, a cherub called Fuṭrus (فطرس) was cast out from heaven and fell to the earth, but is restored after he touches al-Husayn's cradle.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Some recent non-Islamic scholars suggest Uzair, who is according to Surah 9:30 called a son of God by Jews, originally referred to a fallen angel.<ref>Steven M. Wasserstrom Between Muslim and Jew: The Problem of Symbiosis under Early Islam Princeton University Press 2014 Template:ISBN p. 183</ref> While exegetes almost unanimously identified Uzair as Ezra,Template:Efn there is no historical evidence that the Jews called him son of God. Thus, the Quran may refer not to the earthly Ezra, but to the heavenly Ezra, identifying him with the heavenly Enoch, who in turn became identified with the angel Metatron (also called lesser YHWH) in Merkabah mysticism.<ref>Patricia Crone. The Book of Watchers in the Qurān, p. 16</ref>
IblisEdit
The Quran repeatedly tells about the fall of Iblīs, whose story is referred to throughout the Quran. Iblīs refuses to bow before Adam, whereupon he is banished from heaven.<ref>Awn, Peter J. (1983). Satan's Tragedy and Redemption: Iblīs in Sufi Psychology. Numen Book Series. Vol. 44. Leiden and Boston: Brill Publishers. doi:10.1163/9789004378636_003. ISBN 978-90-04-37863-6. p. 18</ref> In Surah 15:36, Iblīs requests God to tempt humans into sin to prove their unworthiness, and God complies. Surah 38:82 reiterates that Iblīs' intrigues to lead humans astray are permitted by God's power.<ref name="ReferenceI">Alberdina Houtman, Tamar Kadari, Marcel Poorthuis, Vered Tohar Religious Stories in Transformation: Conflict, Revision and Reception Brill 2016 Template:ISBN p. 71</ref> However, as mentioned in Surah 17:65, Iblīs' attempts to mislead God's servants are destined to fail.<ref name="ReferenceI" />
The Quranic episode of Iblīs parallels the wicked angel in the earlier Books of Jubilees: Like Iblīs, Mastema requests God's permission to tempt humanity, and both are limited in their power, that is, not able to deceive God's servants.<ref>Alberdina Houtman, Tamar Kadari, Marcel Poorthuis, Vered Tohar Religious Stories in Transformation: Conflict, Revision and Reception Brill 2016 Template:ISBN p. 72</ref> However, the motif of Iblīs' disobedience derives not from the Watcher mythology, but can be traced back to the Cave of Treasures, a work that probably holds the standard explanation in Proto-orthodox Christianity for the angelic fall of Satan:<ref name="ReferenceH" /> Satan refuses to prostrate himself before Adam, because he is "fire and spirit" and thereupon Satan is banished from heaven.<ref>Paul van Geest, Marcel Poorthuis, Els Rose Sanctifying Texts, Transforming Rituals: Encounters in Liturgical Studies Brill 2017 Template:ISBN p. 83</ref><ref name="ReferenceH" /> Unlike the majority opinion in later Christianity, the idea that Iblīs attempts to usurp the throne of God is alien to Islam and due to its strict monotheism unthinkable.<ref>Amira El-Zein Islam, Arabs, and Intelligent World of the Jinn Syracuse University Press 2009 Template:ISBN p. 45</ref>
According to a narration (Qaṣaṣ) by Ibn Abbas (619–687), before the creation of Adam, angels (malāʾikah) battled with the jinn. After the jinn were defeated and God (Allah) announces to create humans as a successor, the angels protest, arguing they cause corruptions as the jinn did before. Iblīs, their leader, views humans as inferior beings, which leads to his refusal mentioned in the Quran.<ref name="Erdağı"/> Those angels who joined Iblīs became the opponents of mankind.<ref>Fahd, T. (2012). Siḥr. In P. Bearman (ed.), Encyclopaedia of Islam New Edition Online (EI-2 English). Brill. https://doi.org/10.1163/1573-3912_islam_SIM_7023</ref> The story is used to complement the events in Surah 2:30-34.<ref name="ReferenceH">Alberdina Houtman, Tamar Kadari, Marcel Poorthuis, Vered Tohar Religious Stories in Transformation: Conflict, Revision and Reception Brill 2016 Template:ISBN p. 66</ref>
Harut and MarutEdit
Harut and Marut are a pair of angels mentioned in Surah 2:102 teaching magic. The names Harut and Marut are of Zoroastrian origin and derived from two Amesha Spentas called Haurvatat and Ameretat.<ref>Patricia Crone. The Book of Watchers in the Qurān, p. 10</ref> Although the Quran gave these fallen angels Iranian names, Template:Transliteration recognized them as from the Book of Watchers. In accordance with 3 Enoch, al-Kalbi (737 AD – 819 AD) named three angels descending to earth, and he even gave them their Enochian names. He explained that one of them returned to heaven and the other two changed their names to Harut and Marut.<ref>Patricia Crone. The Book of Watchers in the Qurān, pp. 10–11</ref>
Although the Quran does not call this pair of angels fallen explicitly, the context assumes this to be true.<ref name="Dye, Guillaume 2023"/> The story bears resemblance to the Watchers,<ref name="Dye, Guillaume 2023"/> mentioned in Second Temple traditions and reflects an early Christian belief.<ref name="Dye, Guillaume 2023"/> Unlike in the Book of Watchers and Christian tradition, the story is not about angelic revolt or original sin, but the struggle of human beings.<ref name="Dye, Guillaume 2023">Dye, Guillaume. Early Islam: the sectarian milieu of late Antiquity?. Éditions de l'Université de Bruxelles, 2023.</ref> Unlike the Watchers, Harut and Marut instruct humans to witchcraft by God's command,<ref>Annette Yoshiko Reed Fallen Angels and the Afterlives of Enochic Traditions in Early Islam University of Pennsylvania 2015 p. 6</ref> just as Iblīs tempts humans only by God's permission.<ref>Alberdina Houtman, Tamar Kadari, Marcel Poorthuis, Vered Tohar Religious Stories in Transformation: Conflict, Revision and Reception Brill 2016 Template:ISBN p. 78</ref>
Those who deny fallen angels argue that Harut and Marut were merely two men, but credited with an angelic status due to their righteousness.<ref>Iqbal, Muzaffar. "Integrated Encyclopedia of the Qur'ān." The center of Islamic Sciences (2013). p. 180</ref> This position is found influential support among modern scholars, including al-Nibrawi (d. 1842), Taqi al-Din al-Hilal (1407–1987), and Muhammad Nasib al-Rifa (1915–1992) in his abridment of Ibn Kathir.<ref>Iqbal, Muzaffar. "Integrated Encyclopedia of the Qur'ān." The center of Islamic Sciences (2013). p. 180</ref>
Literature and popular cultureEdit
In the Divine Comedy (1308–1320) by Dante Alighieri, fallen angels guard the City of Dis surrounding the lower circles of hell. They mark a transition: while in previous circles, the sinners are condemned for sins they just could not resist, later on, the circles of hell are filled with sinners who deliberately rebel against God, such as fallen angels or Christian heretics.<ref>Wallace Fowlie A Reading of Dante's Inferno University of Chicago Press Template:ISBN p. 70</ref>
In John Milton's 17th-century epic poem Paradise Lost, both obedient and fallen angels play an important role. They appear as rational individuals:<ref>Andrew Milner Literature, Culture and Society Routledge 2017 Template:ISBN chapter 5</ref> their personality is similar to that of humans.<ref name="Biljana Ježik p. 4">Biljana Ježik The Fallen Angels in Milton's Paradise Lost Osijek, 2014 p. 4</ref> The fallen angels are named after entities from both Christian and Pagan mythology, such as Moloch, Chemosh, Dagon, Belial, Beelzebub and Satan himself.<ref>Biljana Ježik The Fallen Angels in Milton's Paradise Lost Osijek, 2014 p. 2</ref> Following the canonical Christian narrative, Satan convinces other angels to live free from the laws of God, thereupon they are cast out of heaven.<ref name="Biljana Ježik p. 4" /> The epic poem starts with the fallen angels in hell. The first portrayal of God in the book is given by fallen angels, who describe him as a questionable tyrant and blame him for their fall.<ref>Benjamin Myers Milton's Theology of Freedom Walter de Gruyter 2012 Template:ISBN pp. 54, 59</ref> Outcast from heaven, the fallen angels establish their own kingdom in the depths of hell, with a capital called Pandæmonium. Unlike most earlier Christian representations of hell, it is not the primary place for God to torture the sinners, but the fallen angels' own kingdom. The fallen angels even build a palace, play music and freely debate. Nevertheless, without divine guidance, the fallen angels themselves turn hell into a place of suffering.<ref>Benjamin Myers Milton's Theology of Freedom Walter de Gruyter 2012 Template:ISBN p. 60</ref>
The idea of fallen angels plays a significant role in the various poems of Alfred de Vigny. In Le Déluge (1823),<ref>Henry F. Majewski Paradigm & Parody: Images of Creativity in French Romanticism--Vigny, Hugo, Balzac, Gautier, Musset University of Virginia Press 1989 Template:ISBN p. 157</ref> the son of an angel and a mortal woman learns from the stars about the great deluge. He seeks refuge with his beloved on Mount Ararat, hoping that his angelic father will save them. But since he does not appear, they are caught by the flood. Éloa (1824) is about a female angel created by the tears of Jesus. She hears about a male angel, expelled from heaven, whereupon she seeks to comfort him, but goes to perdition as a consequence.<ref>Bamberger, Bernard J. (2006). Fallen angels : soldiers of Satan's realm (first paperback ed.). Philadelphia, Pa.: Jewish Publ. Soc. of America. Template:ISBN p. 4</ref>
The Turkish horror film Semum (2008), produced and directed by Hasan Karacadağ, is about a shayṭān who has been summoned from hell to torment a woman named Canan. The movie is based on the Ibn Abbas interpretation of the Quran and depicts the devil as a fallen angel who seeks revenge on humans for being abandoned by God (Allah). The devil accepts ʿAzāzīl as his new deity, who is praised as the ruler of hell and supporting his minions against God's new creation (humans). However, at the end, the movie affirms in accordance with Islamic teachings, that ʿAzāzīl has no real power but only to seduce people to follow him. When the shayṭān battles a human priest (Hoca) in hell, it is God who intervenes on behalf of humanity while ʿAzāzīl has forsaken his servant. By that, the movie further rejects dualism in favor of Islamic tawḥīd, emphazising that even hell is under God's control.<ref name="Erdağı"/>
See alsoEdit
NotesEdit
CitationsEdit
ReferencesEdit
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Further readingEdit
External linksEdit
- Catholic Encyclopedia: Angels, see section "The Evil Angels"
- Jewish Encyclopedia: Fall of Angels
Template:Christian theology Template:Angels in Abrahamic religions