Archangels Gabriel and Michael
Photo by Dennis G. Jarvis / archer10 (2013). Wikimedia Commons. Released under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic (CC BY-SA 2.0). The underlying 9th-century mosaics are in the public domain.

Archangels Gabriel and Michael

Bema Arch Mosaics, Hagia Sophia (9th century)

Date
c. 867 (with the apse Theotokos program)
Era
Middle
Medium
Mosaic
Region
Constantinople
Site / Museum
Hagia Sophia
Period
Middle Byzantine, post-iconoclasm

Doctrinal reflection

They are servants of the throne.

The two archangels in the bema arch of Hagia Sophia — Gabriel (south side, viewer's right) and Michael (north side, partly destroyed) — flank the great apse Theotokos (corpus #25) in a coordinated 9th-century post-iconoclasm program. The archangels are full-length, dressed in court garments rather than warrior armor, holding orbs and staffs. They are not fighting. They are attending. They face inward toward the Theotokos and the Christ-child she holds, taking the iconographic position of imperial courtiers — the celestial cubicularii on either side of the throne.

This is the right way to picture archangels biblically. Hebrews 1:14 names angels precisely: "Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be inherit salvation?" Ministering — Greek leitourgika, the same root as liturgy. Sent forth — they are dispatched, not enthroned. The archangels in the bema arch are doing what scripture says angels do: standing at the throne, attending the King, dispatched by him to minister to humans.

Gabriel and Michael are the only archangels named in canonical scripture. Gabriel appears in Daniel 8:16 and 9:21 (interpreting Daniel's visions) and Luke 1:19, 26 (announcing the births of John the Baptist and Christ). Michael appears in Daniel 10:13, 21 and 12:1 (warring against the prince of Persia and standing for the people of Israel), Jude 9 (disputing with the devil over the body of Moses), and Revelation 12:7 (warring against the dragon). Two named archangels. That is the canonical inventory.

The Eastern tradition names seven — adding Raphael (from Tobit, deuterocanonical), Uriel (from 2 Esdras, deuterocanonical), and three others (Sealtiel, Jegudiel, Barachiel) from extra-canonical sources. We affirm only Michael and Gabriel by name. The deuterocanonical archangel-naming tradition is not biblically warranted; we decline to expand the canonical list.

What the Hagia Sophia program teaches is the right relation. The Theotokos with the Christ-child sits in the apse; the archangels stand on either side; the worshipper looks up. The eye is drawn to the apex (Christ in his mother's arms). The archangels are not the destination of the gaze; they are the frame. They direct attention by their posture toward the One they serve.

We do not pray to Michael. We do not pray to Gabriel. Colossians 2:18 forbids angel-worship explicitly, naming it as disqualifying false humility. Revelation 22:8–9: when the apostle John tries to worship the angel showing him the heavenly visions, the angel rebukes him — "see thou do it not, for I am thy fellowservant... worship God." If a canonical angel rebukes John for attempting to worship him, the apostolic warrant against angel-veneration is decisive.

Angels minister; they do not mediate. Christ alone mediates (1 Timothy 2:5). The archangels in the bema arch are doing their proper work — attending the throne, dispatched as messengers, standing at the King's command. That is the angelic ministry. They do not stand between humans and God; they pass between God and humans, carrying messages in one direction and reports in the other.

When you preach the angels, preach what scripture says they are: ministering spirits, sent forth. Don't lift them above their post.

Scripture references