Angels are you near me
To catch me when I slip
Does your embrace break my fall;
Do you stand guard at the entrance of my heart
On God’s errand and sentinel’s call;
Do you pave the way
And steady my feet
And ensure my enemy’s defeat;
You are unsung heroes
Of every journey’s flight
You are phantoms of love
Concealed from mortal sight
In the ancient world there were men who held an important job. They were required to go ahead of a travelling party to clear the path of fallen trees, rocks, undesirable persons or any obstacles that would prevent the travelling party from finishing their journey. They prepared the way. They were called 'forerunners'.
The most famous 'forerunner' to whom this title was applied symbolically was John the Baptist. Not much is known of John's personal life besides the role he played in the accomplishment of Christ's mission. What we do know is that he was born to two elderly people according to God's promise to be 'the voice crying in the wilderness' to herald the arrival of one greater than he, as prophesied by Isaiah (40:3) and Malachi (3:1).; that he was saved from Herod's death decree by his parents and was raised in the wilderness. So apart from his miraculous birth and a rough upbringing what we know most from the scriptures is that John's life was solely focused on being the 'forerunner' of the long awaited Messiah. One might ask why the Son of God would need anyone to prepare the way before Him?
We know that first and foremost there needed to be a person with proper priesthood authority that could baptise Jesus, even though He needed no baptism. John had this priesthood power and authority. His father Zacharias would have been the high priest had that office not been corrupted earlier in Jews' history by making it a political appointment reserved primarily for those of wealth and prominence. Upon his death, John would have been the next reigning high priest. The leadership in Jerusalem, including the Pharisees, scribes, Sadducees and the Sanhedrin knew who John was and what his lineage was. Therefore, his teaching of the Saviour's coming, the gospel, the performing of miracles and baptising would have created a fertile environment for Jesus as He began his ministry. It also provided a nucleus of faithful baptised believers from whom he could call His apostles. These were men already converted and ready to serve, hence their ability to walk away from their professions and families the instant the Saviour called them. Such was the power of John the Baptist, a martyr, who valiantly testified, taught and prepared the way for the greatest man who ever lived and whom Jesus characterized as "a burning and a shining light" (John 5:35).
Here is the crux of this story. In my patriarchal blessing there is an interesting sentence that goes like this: "As you remain faithful to your trust, your guardian angels will never forsake you. They will go before you to 'prepare the way' and will be close to you and give you strength to resist evil." As I studied about John the Baptist my thoughts were cast upon this sentence and I realised I had 'forerunners' in my life. I wondered how much harder I would have struggled in my life had not an obstacle been removed from my path here and there, a temptation repressed , a hurtful incident prevented. I realised that I could very well have come this far more on the merits of my forerunners than on my own strength.
Angels come in all forms. Sometimes the Lord prepares us humans to be an angel to someone in need. It is easy to recognise angels in human form but not so easy to acknowledge and appreciate those who are our guardians behind the veil. These guardian angels perform miracles. If we are sincerely striving to accomplish our life's mission, they will ensure that obstacles of any kind will not keep us from accomplishing the purposes of our second estate. And one day when we look back on our lives we will plainly see just how much these guardian angels have helped us and we will be compelled to say as Elisha of old said to his servant who trembled at the sight of the approaching Syrians:
Fear not: for they that be with us are more than they
that be with them
And Elisha prayed, and said, Lord, I pray thee,
open his eyes, that he may see.
And the Lord opened the eyes of the young man;
and he saw:
and behold, the mountain was full of horses and
chariots of fire....."
2 Kings 6:16,17
- Cathryne Allen
(art by Annie Henrie Nader)
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