52 OF THE
ANGELS IN RELATION TO PLACE
We now inquire into the place of the
angels. Touching this there are three subjects of inquiry:
(1) Is the angel in a
place?
(2) Can he be in several
places at once?
(3) Can several angels be
in the same place?

ARTICLE 1
Whether an angel is in a place?
Objection 1
It would seem that an angel is not in a
place. For Boethius says (De Hebdom.): "The common opinion of the
learned is that things incorporeal are not in a place." And again,
Aristotle observes (Phys. iv, text 48,57) that "it is not
everything existing which is in a place, but only a movable body."
But an angel is not a body, as was shown above (Q50). Therefore an angel
is not in a place.
Objection 2
Further, place is a "quantity
having position." But everything which is in a place has some
position. Now to have a position cannot benefit an angel, since his
substance is devoid of quantity, the proper difference of which is to
have a position. Therefore an angel is not in a place.
Objection 3
Further, to be in a place is to be
measured and to be contained by such place, as is evident from the
Philosopher (Phys. iv, text 14,119). But an angel can neither be
measured nor contained by a place, because the container is more formal
than the contained; as air with regard to water (Phys. iv, text 35,49).
Therefore an angel is not in a place.
On the contrary
On the contrary, It is said in the
Collect *Prayer at Compline, Dominican Breviary: "Let Thy holy
angels who dwell herein, keep us in peace."
Body
I answer that, It is befitting an angel
to be in a place; yet an angel and a body are said to be in a place in
quite a different sense. A body is said to be in a place in such a way
that it is applied to such place according to the contact of dimensive
quantity; but there is no such quantity in the angels, for theirs is a
virtual one. Consequently an angel is said to be in a corporeal place by
application of the angelic power in any manner whatever to any place.
Accordingly there is no need for saying
that an angel can be deemed commensurate with a place, or that he
occupies a space in the continuous; for this is proper to a located body
which is endowed with dimensive quantity. In similar fashion it is not
necessary on this account for the angel to be contained by a place;
because an incorporeal substance virtually contains the thing with which
it comes into contact, and is not contained by it: for the soul is in
the body as containing it, not as contained by it. In the same way an
angel is said to be in a place which is corporeal, not as the thing
contained, but as somehow containing it.
And hereby we have the answers to the
objections.

ARTICLE 2
Whether an angel can be in several
places at once?
Objection 1
It would seem that an angel can be in
several places at once. For an angel is not less endowed with power than
the soul. But the soul is in several places at once, for it is entirely
in every part of the body, as Augustine says (De Trin. vi). Therefore an
angel can be in several places at once.
Objection 2
Further, an angel is in the body which
he assumes; and, since the body which he assumes is continuous, it would
appear that he is in every part thereof. But according to the various
parts there are various places. Therefore the angel is at one time in
various places.
Objection 3
Further, Damascene says (De Fide Orth.
ii) that "where the angel operates, there he is." But
occasionally he operates in several places at one time, as is evident
from the angel destroying Sodom (Gn. 19:25). Therefore an angel can be
in several places at the one time.
On the contrary
On the contrary, Damascene says (De Fide
Orth. ii) that "while the angels are in heaven, they are not on
earth."
Body
I answer that, An angel's power and
nature are finite, whereas the Divine power and essence, which is the
universal cause of all things, is infinite: consequently God through His
power touches all things, and is not merely present in some places, but
is everywhere. Now since the angel's power is finite, it does not extend
to all things, but to one determined thing. For whatever is compared
with one power must be compared therewith as one determined thing.
Consequently since all being is compared as one thing to God's universal
power, so is one particular being compared as one with the angelic
power. Hence, since the angel is in a place by the application of his
power to the place, it follows that he is not everywhere, nor in several
places, but in only one place.
Some, however, have been deceived in
this matter. For some who were unable to go beyond the reach of their
imaginations supposed the indivisibility of the angel to be like that of
a point; consequently they thought that an angel could be only in a
place which is a point. But they were manifestly deceived, because a
point is something indivisible, yet having its situation; whereas the
angel is indivisible, and beyond the genus of quantity and situation.
Consequently there is no occasion for determining in his regard one
indivisible place as to situation: any place which is either divisible
or indivisible, great or small suffices, according as to his own
free-will he applies his power to a great or to a small body. So the
entire body to which he is applied by his power, corresponds as one
place to him.
Neither, if any angel moves the heavens,
is it necessary for him to be everywhere. First of all, because his
power is applied only to what is first moved by him. Now there is one
part of the heavens in which there is movement first of all, namely, the
part to the east: hence the Philosopher (Phys. vii, text 84) attributes
the power of the heavenly mover to the part which is in the east.
Secondly, because philosophers do not hold that one separate substance
moves all the spheres immediately. Hence it need not be everywhere.
So, then, it is evident that to be in a
place appertains quite differently to a body, to an angel, and to God.
For a body is in a place in a circumscribed fashion, since it is
measured by the place. An angel, however, is not there in a
circumscribed fashion, since he is not measured by the place, but
definitively, because he is in a place in such a manner that he is not
in another. But God is neither circumscriptively nor definitively there,
because He is everywhere.
From this we can easily gather an answer
to the objections: because the entire subject to which the angelic power
is immediately applied, is reputed as one place, even though it be
continuous.

ARTICLE 3
Whether several angels can be at the
same time in the same place?
Objection 1
It would seem that several angels can be
at the same time in the same place. For several bodies cannot be at the
same time in the same place, because they fill the place. But the angels
do not fill a place, because only a body fills a place, so that it be
not empty, as appears from the Philosopher (Phys. iv, text 52,58).
Therefore several angels can be in the one place.
Objection 2
Further, there is a greater difference
between an angel and a body than there is between two angels. But an
angel and a body are at the one time in the one place: because there is
no place which is not filled with a sensible body, as we find proved in
Phys. iv, text. 58. Much more, then, can two angels be in the same
place.
Objection 3
Further, the soul is in every part of
the body, according to Augustine (De Trin. vi). But demons, although
they do not obsess souls, do obsess bodies occasionally; and thus the
soul and the demon are at the one time in the same place; and
consequently for the same reason all other spiritual substances.
On the contrary
On the contrary, There are not two souls
in the same body. Therefore for a like reason there are not two angels
in the same place.
Body
I answer that, There are not two angels
in the same place. The reason of this is because it is impossible for
two complete causes to be the causes immediately of one and the same
thing. This is evident in every class of causes: for there is one
proximate form of one thing, and there is one proximate mover, although
there may be several remote movers. Nor can it be objected that several
individuals may row a boat, since no one of them is a perfect mover,
because no one man's strength is sufficient for moving the boat; while
all together are as one mover, in so far as their united strengths all
combine in producing the one movement. Hence, since the angel is said to
be in one place by the fact that his power touches the place immediately
by way of a perfect container, as was said (ARTICLE 1), there can be but
one angel in one place.
Reply to Objection 1
Several angels are not hindered from
being in the same place because of their filling the place; but for
another reason, as has been said.
Reply to Objection 2
An angel and a body are not in a place
in the same way; hence the conclusion does not follow.
Reply to Objection 3
Not even a demon and a soul are compared
to a body according to the same relation of causality; since the soul is
its form, while the demon is not. Hence the inference does not follow.