Originally Posted by
Akoue
Something I should have said:
The angels are higher in the order of beings or natures, but this does not mean that they are favored above humans. Notice that the fallen angels did not lose their angelic natures: They are lower than us on the moral hierarchy, but still higher on the ontological hierarchy (the hierarchy of being). My take on this is that God's love is not determined by placement on the hierarchy--this is another reason that I do hold that animals can love and worship God in a manner appropriate to them, and that they can in turn experience God's love. St. Irenaeus acknowledges this at, e.g., Adversus haereses 4.38.4, when he says of animals that "each one, just as he has been created, gives thanks that he has been created". And St.Gregory Nazianzen and St.Augustine both believe that animals worship God, because God created them in such a way as to be capable of worship according to their nature.
Remember that all of creation is a vestigium of God. What makes humanity special is that we are not just a vestigium, but also the image, of God. Angels are similitudes or God, not images of God. We lost the similitude through sin and regain it by grace. So we get the following picture:
Human beings with grace: similitudo
Human beings as nature: imago
All beings: vestigium
It might also help to have scholastic anthropology in mind.
Human beings are rational animals. Our soul is our form, our body our matter. The spiritual faculties (through which we receive the gifts of the Holy Spirit) of intellect and will are both formal and material, because we are form (soul) and matter (body). And we have to distinguish the spiritual faculties from the inner senses of common sense (sensus communis), memory, cognition, imagination, and judgment.
Angels have spiritual faculties, and like us, they can use them well or badly. But these higher faculties give them a greater intimacy with God than we can, at this time, even begin to fathom.