Originally Posted by
Akoue
Oh, man, I'm getting it from all sides!
I think angels are greater by nature. Angels are rational, spiritual beings without the sorts of bodily desires that afflict us. And, of course, according to some traditions, Satan fell because he was appalled that despite the loftiness of the angelic nature God loved humans more.
In any case, angels aren't subject to contingency: they don't die, their bodies don't decay, and they enjoy an immediacy with God that would kill us (Moses only glimpsed God's backside and look what it did to him). They are messengers because they are faithful, they can be trusted to convey the Divine word. Their love is pristine, untainted by selfishness or self-interest. Our higher faculties (the ones Aquinas talks about so much), the spiritual and intellectual faculties, are a dim reflection of the spiritual and intellectual being of the angels, this because in us these faculties are married to appetive and sensuous faculties of which the angels are free.
I also think that Ps.-Dionysius is right, that the earthly liturgy is a recapitulation of the divine liturgy of the angels and that the ecclesiastical hierarchy of the Church is a recapitulation of the celestial hierarchy of the angels.
Okay, take your shots. I've got it coming!