Angel

Angel comes from the Greek ἄγγελος (ángelos), meaning “messenger.”

Importantly, the word originally had no supernatural meaning — it simply referred to someone who is sent with a message.

Linguistic Lineage

  • Greek: ángelos — messenger, envoy
  • Hebrew parallel: malʾākh (מַלְאָךְ) — messenger (human or divine)
  • Latin: angelus
  • Old English: engel
  • Modern English: angel

Key Insight

An angel is defined by function, not form.

An angel is not “a being with wings” by origin —

an angel is one who carries a message across a boundary.

Spiritual & Symbolic Meaning

Because messengers often carried divine communication:

  • ángelos became associated with God’s messengers
  • Over time, this role gained symbolic imagery (light, wings, radiance)

But the core meaning never changed:

Angel = messenger between realms

Why Angels Have Wings (Symbolically)

Wings are not literal in the etymology.

They symbolize:

  • Speed (swift delivery of truth)
  • Transcendence (movement between worlds)
  • Elevation (from higher to lower, unseen to seen)

Plain-English Definition

An angel is one who brings news from beyond your current horizon.

That “beyond” can be:

  • Divine → human
  • Inner → conscious
  • Eternal → temporal
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