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MADAN-An angel mentioned in The Hierarchy of
the Blessed Angels, the 1635 treatise on angels by Thomas Heywood.
According to that quite imaginative account, Madan the patron or
guardian of the planet Mercury.
MAHANAIM-The Hebrew name, meaning "two
armies," used by the Old Testament figure Jacob (in Genesis 32) to
describe the vast double host of angels who met him during his
journeys. Upon seeing them, Jacob is said to have exclaimed, "This
is God's army!" naming the place occupied by the hosts Mahanaim.
In the legends of the Jews, the numbers of each grand angelic army
was placed at six hundred thousand.
MALACHY-Also Malachi, one of the many members
of the heavenly host who have earned the name angel of the Lord,
although in this angel's case it is especially apt: his name means
"angel of God" in the sense of being "my messenger." The last book
of the Old Testament is that of Malachi; although there is nothing
in the work or tradition to support any possibility that the
author was the angel.
MALA'IKAH-The Arabic word for angels and
hence the name used for them in the traditions, teaching, and lore
of Islam. Mala'ikah is often interpreted as meaning "messenger"
and is said to be derived from the word alk, meaning "to send."
Some say, however, that the name is actually taken from malaka, or
"he controlled," denoting the control or power exercised by the
angels over the elements and the physical world. Both possible
meanings are still consistent with the Muslim conception of angels
as spiritual beings sent by God to intervene or bring the message
of the Lord into the lives of humans.
MALAK-The Arabic word meaning "angel" (pl.
mala'ikah).
MALAKIM-One of the ancient (Hebrew) names for
the angelic order or choir known as the virtues. Also called the
tarshishim, the malakim (as virtues) are generally placed as the
fifth choir-of the nine-in the second triad of the angelic
hierarchy. Nicknamed the shining ones, although malakim means
"kings" or "rulers," the choir is traditionally said to be ruled
by the angelic princes Raphael, Gabriel, Uriel, Tarshish, Bariel,
and Michael; Satan before his mighty Fall from heaven, was also
counted as one of their chiefs.
MALIK-In Islamic lore, a righteous but
nevertheles truly frightful angel who has authority over all of
the damned souls in hell and who guards and watches over the
infernal land suffering (the name means "master" or "king"). Malik
and his able companions torment the damned souls and respond to
their pleas of mercy by observing.
MAMMON-See FALLEN ANGELS.
MAN CLOTHED
IN LINEN-An angel appearing in the Old testament, in
particular the Book of Ezekiel, which features the account of the
prophet of the exiles, who predicts the wrath of the Lord toward
the Jewish people. The identity of the "Man Clothed in Linen" has
been the subject of much speculation, although most agree that he
was most likely an angel.
MAN OF
MACEDONIA-A person, most often described as an angel, who
appeared to St. Paul in a dream and beseeched that famed
evangelist to cross into Europe to preach, as recorded in the Acts
of the Apostles.
MANNA-By tradition, the food of the angels
and the blessed in heaven; it is best known as the food sent to
the Israelites as they fled from Egypt and wandered in the desert
under the leadership of Moses. Meaning in Aramaic "What is this?"
manna was described in the Book of Exodus as "like coriander seed,
white, and the taste of it was like wafers made with honey." This
is generally accepted meal of the angelic hosts, although there is
naturally some question why angels, being entirely spiritual
creatures, might have need for substantial food.
MANY-EYED
ONES-The impressive title or nickname given to the angels
belonging to the choir or order of the thrones Called in Hebrew
the ophanim or the galgallim), also known as the "wheels." There
is, however, a tradition that the "many-eyed ones" may be said to
represent the cherubim, although this is probably the result of
the frequent jumbling over the years of angelic descriptions and
attributes. the name is derived from the number of writings, two
of the most interesting being the Second Book of Enoch, and the
Old Testament Book of Ezekiel.
MARIOKH-Also Mariuk, one of the two angels,
with Ariukh ( or Oriokh), supposedly named to serve as a guardian
over the family of the great patriarch Enoch to preserve them from
the impending flood (Noah) so that his line might endure and his
writings might last forever; these writings are said to be the
useful-if not somewhat unreliable-source on angelic lore known as
the Books of Enoch. In Jewish lore, as recorded in the famous
collection The Legends of the Jews by Louis Ginzberg, Mariokh was
the angel who protected Enoch while he wrote his works.
MASHIT-An angel appearing in Jewish lore, he
is counted as one of the dread beings who bring misery or inflict
punishment upon souls in hell. In some sources he is ranked as a
demon or dark spirit, serving with the angels (or demons) Af and
Hemah as a brutal torturer in Gehenna. (the Hebrew hell).
MASKIM-The name used in the Babylonian
religion for the seven evil deities who reside in their hell.
According to later custop, the terrible being Mephistopheles, a
fallen angel, was one of their number.
MASTEMA-The so-called Accusing Angel, an evil
angel who nevertheless is the servant of God, acting as the great
tempter of humanity. He is ever working to tempt mortals as a
means of testing their faith in the Lord.
MASTINIM-The Hebrew name for the angels who
serve under the powerful angelic being (or devil) Samael.
MELKYAL-Also Melkejal, Malchidiel, and
Machidiel, an angel whose name means the "fullness of God" and who
is said to rise and rule at the beginning of the year for a total
of ninety-one days. According to the First Book of Enoch, Melkyal
gives the sign of his rule by the way the trees bear fruit, the
leaves grow on a tree, the harvest is good, and the winter trees
wither and die.
MEPHIStopHELES-See "Fallen Angels."
MERKABAH
ANGELS-The collective name for those angels appearing in
the lore and traditions of the mystical Jewish sect of the
Merkabah. The Merkabah ( or Merkava)-meaning "Chariot"-flourished
in Judaism from the time of the first century A.D. and continued
in various centers throughout the early Middle Ages. Adherents of
the sect believed in the necessity and desirability of using
esoteric and mystical means to ascend through the great seven
heavens or mansions, called hekhalot ( or hechaloth), to the
glorious throne of God, which rests upon an in comparable
chariot-the Merkabah. The seal-keeping angels are sometimes
equated with the seven merkaboth, a group of angelic beings who
stand as the corresponding figures of the seven heavens. They can
perhaps also be identified as the virtual embodiment of the
heavens themselves. Aside from these angels, the Merkabah accepted
that there were groups of angels always surrounding the throne of
God. These were said to include the seraphim, the galgallim, and
especially the hayyoth.
MESSENGERS-One of the most important of all
duties of angels, so much so that the very Hebrew word mal'akh and
greek word angelos, denoting these beings, both mean "messenger."
The angel stands as one of the central intermediaries or
representatives of the Lord to humanity. Existing entirely at the
will and in the service of God, the angel is frequently dispatched
to earth to deliver some important revelation or declaration,
usually having much impact upon the lives of the recipients. Aside
from the other tasks given to them in relating to earthly affairs,
angels are mentioned frequently in the Bible in the ministering
role of messengers. While angels have many other duties in
tradition, both in heaven and on earth, their role as messengers
is still one central to their existence, serving to remind an
often forgetful world that God loves all of his Creation and is
concerned for its well-being.
MESUKIEL-See under
Sefiroth
METATRON-One of the greatest of all angels,
honored as the angel of the face, the angel of the presence, chief
of the ministering angels, the chief recording angel, chancellor
of heaven, the angel by whom the world is maintained, and a being
so mighty that he possesses seventy-two other names. Few angels
have been the source of such a wide-ranging body of legends and
tales, but precious few of the celestial hierarchy are credited
with such majesty and power. Also called Metatetron, Merraton, and
Metaraon, he was supposedly once a humble mortal being, the
antsdiluvian patriarch Enoch. According to widely reported lore,
Enoch earned such merit in the eyes of the Lord for his goodness
and abilities as a scribe that he was taken to heaven, an event
noted in the Book of Genesis (5:24). One of Metatron most
dramatic, not to to mention unlikely, achievements involved two
evil Egyptian socerers who used their advanced knowledge of magic
to ascend to heaven. Such was their strength that neither Michael
nor Gabriel could expel them. Metatron, however, broke their
spells and cast out the impudent Egyptians. For this reason,
Metatron is considered by some to be superior to most of the
angels, including Michael, Gabriel, and
Uriel.
MICHAEL-Also St. Michael the Archangel and,
in Arabic, Mika'il, perhaps the greatest of all the angels, whose
name likely means "Who is like God?" He is captain of the hosts of
the Lord and the most beloved of all residents of the heavenly
host (with the possible exceptionof the archangel Gabriel). The
figure of Michael probably originated in Chaldaea as a protective
god or spirit. Accepted by the Jews, he emerged as so major an
angel in Jewish lore that he was honored as the patron angel of
the nations (out of seventy) who did not fall from grace, his bias
entirely understood since it favored God's Chosen People.
Michael appears twice in the Old Testament and is noted, with
Gabriel (and Raphael in the book Tobit), as one of the few angels
actually mentioned in the Bible: in Daniel (10:13), he is called
"Michael, one of the chief princes," and later (12:1) is a "great
prince." Besides from these specific references, he is declared
the ruling prince of the archangels, chief of the choir of
virtues, the prince of the presence, and an angel of mercy and
repentance. He is also credited with being the angel who spoke to
Moses in the burning bush (an honor often bestowed upon Zagzagel);
the messenger who stayed the hand of Abraham before he sacrificed
his sin; and the angel responsible for massacring the Assyrian
army of Sennacherib, a deed normally attributed to an otherwise
unnamed angel of destruction but perhaps accomplished by Uriel,
Gabriel, or others. He is accepted in lore as well as being the
special patron of Adam. Supposedly he was the first angel in all
of the heavens to bow down before humanity. Michael than kept an
eye on the first family, remaining vigilant even after the fall of
Adam and Eve and their expulsion from the Garden of Eden. In the
apocryphal Book of Adam and Eve, Michael taught Adam how to farm.
The archangel later brought Adam to heaven in a fiery chariot,
giving him a tour of the blessed realm. After Adam's death,
Michael helped convince the Lord to permit Adam's soul to be
brought to heaven and cleansed of its great sin. Jewish legend
also states Michael to be one of the three "men" who visited
Abraham and one of the five angels, with Uriel, Metatron, Raphael,
and Gabriel, who buried Moses. Apparently Michael had to fight
with Satan for the body of the Lawgiver, an event mentioned in the
New Testament Letter of Jude. Finally, in the Dead Sea Scrolls is
the story "The War of the Sons of Light and the Sons of Darkness,"
in which Michael is described as the prince of light, leading
forces of good against the darkness of evil.
Michael was embraced enthusiastically by Christianity and
honored as the leader of the angels whose very name was used as a
war chant by the holy angels during the war in heaven. As
commander of the heavenly host, he led the good angels in their
successful conflict against Satan and the fallen angels. He is
named in the book of Revelation, fighting against Satan, and at
the end of the world will command the hosts of the Lord in final
conflict.
The Catholic Church honors Michael with four main titles or
offices. He is the Christian angel of death, carrying the souls of
all the deceased to heaven, where they are weighed in his
perfectly balanced scales (hence Michael is often depicted holding
scales). At the hour of death, Michael descends and gives each
soul the chance to redeem itself before passing, thus
consternating the devil and his minions. Michael is the special
patron of the Chosen People in the Old Testament and is guardian
of the Church; it was thus not unusual for the angel to be revered
by the military orders of knights during the Middle Ages. Last, he
is the supreme enemy of Satan and the fallen angels.
Michael has been the object of considerable examination on the
part of theologians, especially regarding the apparent
inconsistency of having an archangel-a member of the eighth and
second-lowest choir of angels-lead the hosts of the Lord. Some,
such as St. Thomas Aquinas, declare him to be the chief of the
order of archangels. His high post is presumably explained by the
fact that archangels are in the forefront of the fight in the
world against evil, so Michael, as their chief, assumes the
command of the angels by virtue of his experience. Others, most
notably the Greek fathers such as St. Basil the Great, wrote that
Michael was superior to all the angels; others appointed him the
ruling prince of the seraphim, which would place him in the
highest position in heaven.
Michael has been venerated by the Church from early time. His
elevated position is made clear by his title of saint, by the
number of churches dedicated to him, and by his many appearances
in history. He supposedly visited Emperor Constantine the Great
(d.337) at Constantinople, intervened in assorted battles, and
appeared, sword in hand, over the mausoleum of Hadrian, in
apparent answer to the prayers of Pope St. Gregory I the Great
(r.590-604) that a plague in Rome should cease. In honor of the
occasion, the pope took to calling the mausoleum the Castel
Sant'Angelo (Castle of the Holy angel), the name by which it is
still known.
The last visit certified one major aspect involving Michael,
namely his role as an angel of healing. This title was bestowed at
Phrygia, in Asia Minor, which also propagated the cult of angels
and became a leading center for their veneration. Michael is
reputed to have caused a healing spring to flow in the first
century at Colossae, and his churches were frequently visited by
the sick and lame. The angel is invoked additionally as the patron
of sailors in Normandy (the famous monastery of Mont-Saint-Michel
on the north coast of France is named after him) and is especially
remembered in France as the spirit who gave Joan of Arc the
courage to save her country from the English during the Hundred
Years' War) 1337-1455). Perhaps his most singular honor was given
to him in 1950 when Pope Pius XIII (r. 1939-1958) named him patron
of policemen. Michael is also said to have announced to the Virgin
Mary her impending death, declaring himself to be "Great and
Wonderful."
Among the Muslims, Michael is one of the four archangels (with
Azrael, Isfrafel, and Gabriel), and one of the two angels, with
Gabriel, named in Qur'an. He resides in the seventh heaven and is
popularly believed to have wings of emerald green.
A favorite angelic subject in art, matched only by Gabriel,
Michael is most often depicted as a proud, handsome angel in white
or magnificent armor and wielding a sword, shield, or lance. In
some paintings he is shown with a banner or holding scales. Quite
often he is seen, like St. George or some Madonnas, in conflict
with a dragon or standing upon a vanquished devil. Of him was
declared in Milton's Paradise Lost (Book VI).
MIDAEL-An angel mentioned in the occult works
The Magus by Francis Barret (1801). Midael is described as a
member-even an officer-in the army of heaven, He is also supposed
"angel of the Lord." noted in two of the Psalms (34 and 35).
MIK'AIL-The Arabic name for the great
archangel Michael.
MINISTERING
ANGELS-The name given to a special group or body of
angels, called in the Hebrew malache hashareth, who appear
frequently in Jewish lore and legend. It is unclear exactly how
many ministering angels exist, although one tradition declares
them to be the most numerous of all the species or orders of
angels and hence the least important in the celestial hierarchy.
In the legends surrounding the Talmud, ministering angels are
created every day, born once a day with the task of singing a
great hymn of praise to God before being absorbed back into the
divine essence. It is possible to equate the ministering angels
with the guardian angels.
MITHRA-See Yazatas.
MOAKIBAT-Properly al-Moakibat, another name
used in Islamic lore for the set of angels-known also as the
hafaza-who accompany and protect each living person. These angels
also perform the extremely important task of recording each and
every act performed by the person, whether good or evil. These
recording angels, as they are known, then read their books at the
time of Judgment, an event mentioned in the Qur'an (surah
82:10-14).
MOON, ANGEL
OF THE-The title borne by several angels, each of whom is
credited with possessing authority and guardianship over that
celestial body. The angel most consistently declared angel of the
moon is Ofaniel (Ophaniel), who was described as such by
Longfellow in a later edition of his The Golden Legend, although
in the work Ofaniel is spelled Onafiel. In an earlier version
Longfellow had named instead the archangel Gabriel, one of a host
of offices, titles, and powers attributed to that angel of the
Annunciation. Qafsiel is also honored as an angel with some
dominion over the moon. Another commonly named angel is Yahriel.
(See also Planets, Angels of the.)
MORONI-The angel who, according to the
teachings of the Mormon Church, appeared on September 22, 1827, to
Joseph Smith (d. 1844), founder of Mormonism. The angel-or perhaps
the resurrected spirit-is said to have claimed to Smith that he
(the angel) had once been the last of the prophets, the final
leader of the nephites. He is also believed by the Mormons to have
given to Smith on Hill Cumorah, near Palmyra, New York, a set of
gold plates containing details on the prophets in ancient America.
From these Smith was able to compose the Book of Mormon. Once this
had been completed, Moroni retrieved the gold plates. The plates
were supposedly covered with arcane hieroglyphics, similar to
ancient Egyptian. Smith was apparently able to translate the
words.
MUHAMMAD,
ANGEL OF-The angel reportedly beheld by the prophet
Muhammad when he was taken to heaven. He described this angel as
the most enormous of all beings, possessing 70,000 heads, each
possessing 70,000 faces; each face had 70,000 mouths, each mouth
70,000 tongues, and each tongue spoke 70,000 languages. Every word
spoken was devoted to singing the endless praises of God. Another
angel eligible for the title is the beloved archangel Gabriel, who
is honored in Islamic lore as the angel who brought to the Prophet
the Qur'an.
MUNKAR AND
NAKIR-Two angels appearing in Islamic lore. Described in
some traditions as demons, Munkar (also Monker) and Nakir are sent
throughout the world to visit the souls of the recently deceased
while they are still in the freshly buried corpses. The two will
seize the body and examine the soul as to its worthiness to be
admitted into paradise. The believers will naturally respond to
their queries concerning Muhammad by declaring that Muhammad is
the prophet and the messenger of God. Deemed worthy, they will be
permitted to enjoy a peaceful rest in anticipation of their entry
into paradise following the Day of Judgment. The unbelievers-the
infidels-will not respond properly and will be tortured in their
graves by the two angels until their final damnation at the end of
the world. Munkar and Nakir are described in tradition as being
black in color with piercing blue eyes. (See also
Ruman.)
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