53 OF THE
LOCAL MOVEMENT OF THE ANGELS
We must next consider the local movement
of the angels; under which heading there are three points of inquiry:
(1) Whether an angel can be
moved locally.
(2) Whether in passing from
place to place he passes through intervening space?
(3) Whether the angel's
movement is in time or instantaneous?

ARTICLE 1
Whether an angel can be moved
locally?
Objection 1
It seems that an angel cannot be moved
locally. For, as the Philosopher proves (Phys. vi, text 32,86)
"nothing which is devoid of parts is moved"; because, while it
is in the term "wherefrom," it is not moved; nor while it is
in the term "whereto," for it is then already moved;
consequently it remains that everything which is moved, while it is
being moved, is partly in the term "wherefrom" and partly in
the term "whereto." But an angel is without parts. Therefore
an angel cannot be moved locally.
Objection 2
Further, movement is "the act of an
imperfect being," as the Philosopher says (Phys. iii, text 14). But
a beatified angel is not imperfect. Consequently a beatified angel is
not moved locally.
Objection 3
Further, movement is simply because of
want. But the holy angels have no want. Therefore the holy angels are
not moved locally.
On the contrary
On the contrary, It is the same thing
for a beatified angel to be moved as for a beatified soul to be moved.
But it must necessarily be said that a blessed soul is moved locally,
because it is an article of faith that Christ's soul descended into
Hell. Therefore a beatified angel is moved locally.
Body
I answer that, A beatified angel can be
moved locally. As, however, to be in a place belongs equivocally to a
body and to an angel, so likewise does local movement. For a body is in
a place in so far as it is contained under the place, and is
commensurate with the place. Hence it is necessary for local movement of
a body to be commensurate with the place, and according to its exigency.
Hence it is that the continuity of movement is according to the
continuity of magnitude; and according to priority and posteriority of
local movement, as the Philosopher says (Phys. iv, text 99). But an
angel is not in a place as commensurate and contained, but rather as
containing it. Hence it is not necessary for the local movement of an
angel to be commensurate with the place, nor for it to be according to
the exigency of the place, so as to have continuity therefrom; but it is
a non-continuous movement. For since the angel is in a place only by
virtual contact, as was said above (Q52, ARTICLE 1), it follows
necessarily that the movement of an angel in a place is nothing else
than the various contacts of various places successively, and not at
once; because an angel cannot be in several places at one time, as was
said above (Q52, ARTICLE 2). Nor is it necessary for these contacts to
be continuous. Nevertheless a certain kind of continuity can be found in
such contacts. Because, as was said above (Q52, ARTICLE 1), there is
nothing to hinder us from assigning a divisible place to an angel
according to virtual contact; just as a divisible place is assigned to a
body by contact of magnitude. Hence as a body successively, and not all
at once, quits the place in which it was before, and thence arises
continuity in its local movement; so likewise an angel can successively
quit the divisible place in which he was before, and so his movement
will be continuous. And he can all at once quit the whole place, and in
the same instant apply himself to the whole of another place, and thus
his movement will not be continuous.
Reply to Objection 1
This argument fails of its purpose for a
twofold reason. First of all, because Aristotle's demonstration deals
with what is indivisible according to quantity, to which responds a
place necessarily indivisible. And this cannot be said of an angel.
Reply to Objection 1
Secondly, because Aristotle's
demonstration deals with movement which is continuous. For if the
movement were not continuous, it might be said that a thing is moved
where it is in the term "wherefrom," and while it is in the
term "whereto": because the very succession of "wheres,"
regarding the same thing, would be called movement: hence, in whichever
of those "wheres" the thing might be, it could be said to be
moved. But the continuity of movement prevents this; because nothing
which is continuous is in its term, as is clear, because the line is not
in the point. Therefore it is necessary for the thing moved to be not
totally in either of the terms while it is being moved; but partly in
the one, and partly in the other. Therefore, according as the angel's
movement is not continuous, Aristotle's demonstration does not hold
good. But according as the angel's movement is held to be continuous, it
can be so granted, that, while an angel is in movement, he is partly in
the term "wherefrom," and partly in the term
"whereto" (yet so that such partiality be not referred to the
angel's substance, but to the place); because at the outset of his
continuous movement the angel is in the whole divisible place from which
he begins to be moved; but while he is actually in movement, he is in
part of the first place which he quits, and in part of the second place
which he occupies. This very fact that he can occupy the parts of two
places appertains to the angel from this, that he can occupy a divisible
place by applying his power; as a body does by application of magnitude.
Hence it follows regarding a body which is movable according to place,
that it is divisible according to magnitude; but regarding an angel,
that his power can be applied to something which is divisible.
Reply to Objection 2
The movement of that which is in
potentiality is the act of an imperfect agent. But the movement which is
by application of energy is the act of one in act: because energy
implies actuality.
Reply to Objection 3
The movement of that which is in
potentiality is the act of an imperfect but the movement of what is in
act is not for any need of its own, but for another's need. In this way,
because of our need, the angel is moved locally, according to Heb. 1:14:
"They are all *Vulg.: 'Are they not all . . . ?' ministering
spirits, sent to minister for them who receive the inheritance of
salvation."

ARTICLE 2
Whether an angel passes through
intermediate space?
Objection 1
It would seem that an angel does not
pass through intermediate space. For everything that passes through a
middle space first travels along a place of its own dimensions, before
passing through a greater. But the place responding to an angel, who is
indivisible, is confined to a point. Therefore if the angel passes
through middle space, he must reckon infinite points in his movement:
which is not possible.
Objection 2
Further, an angel is of simpler
substance than the soul. But our soul by taking thought can pass from
one extreme to another without going through the middle: for I can think
of France and afterwards of Syria, without ever thinking of Italy, which
stands between them. Therefore much more can an angel pass from one
extreme to another without going through the middle.
On the contrary
On the contrary, If the angel be moved
from one place to another, then, when he is in the term
"whither," he is no longer in motion, but is changed. But a
process of changing precedes every actual change: consequently he was
being moved while existing in some place. But he was not moved so long
as he was in the term "whence." Therefore, he was moved while
he was in mid-space: and so it was necessary for him to pass through
intervening space.
Body
I answer that, As was observed above in
the preceding article, the local motion of an angel can be continuous,
and non-continuous. If it be continuous, the angel cannot pass from one
extreme to another without passing through the mid-space; because, as is
said by the Philosopher (Phys. v, text 22; vi, text 77), "The
middle is that into which a thing which is continually moved comes,
before arriving at the last into which it is moved"; because the
order of first and last in continuous movement, is according to the
order of the first and last in magnitude, as he says (Phys. iv, text
99).
But if an angel's movement be not
continuous, it is possible for him to pass from one extreme to another
without going through the middle: which is evident thus. Between the two
extreme limits there are infinite intermediate places; whether the
places be taken as divisible or as indivisible. This is clearly evident
with regard to places which are indivisible; because between every two
points that are infinite intermediate points, since no two points follow
one another without a middle, as is proved in Phys. vi, text. 1. And the
same must of necessity be said of divisible places: and this is shown
from the continuous movement of a body. For a body is not moved from
place to place except in time. But in the whole time which measures the
movement of a body, there are not two "nows" in which the body
moved is not in one place and in another; for if it were in one and the
same place in two "nows," it would follow that it would be at
rest there; since to be at rest is nothing else than to be in the same
place now and previously. Therefore since there are infinite "nows"
between the first and the last "now" of the time which
measures the movement, there must be infinite places between the first
from which the movement begins, and the last where the movement ceases.
This again is made evident from sensible experience. Let there be a body
of a palm's length, and let there be a plane measuring two palms, along
which it travels; it is evident that the first place from which the
movement starts is that of the one palm; and the place wherein the
movement ends is that of the other palm. Now it is clear that when it
begins to move, it gradually quits the first palm and enters the second.
According, then, as the magnitude of the palm is divided, even so are
the intermediate places multiplied; because every distinct point in the
magnitude of the first palm is the beginning of a place, and a distinct
point in the magnitude of the other palm is the limit of the same.
Accordingly, since magnitude is infinitely divisible and the points in
every magnitude are likewise infinite in potentiality, it follows that
between every two places there are infinite intermediate places.
Now a movable body only exhausts the
infinity of the intermediate places by the continuity of its movement;
because, as the intermediate places are infinite in potentiality, so
likewise must there be reckoned some infinitudes in movement which is
continuous. Consequently, if the movement be not continuous, then all
the parts of the movement will be actually numbered. If, therefore, any
movable body be moved, but not by continuous movement, it follows,
either that it does not pass through all the intermediate places, or
else that it actually numbers infinite places: which is not possible.
Accordingly, then, as the angel's movement is not continuous, he does
not pass through all intermediate places.
Now, the actual passing from one extreme
to the other, without going through the mid-space, is quite in keeping
with an angel's nature; but not with that of a body, because a body is
measured by and contained under a place; hence it is bound to follow the
laws of place in its movement. But an angel's substance is not subject
to place as contained thereby, but is above it as containing it: hence
it is under his control to apply himself to a place just as he wills,
either through or without the intervening place.
Reply to Objection 1
The place of an angel is not taken as
equal to him according to magnitude, but according to contact of power:
and so the angel's place can be divisible, and is not always a mere
point. Yet even the intermediate divisible places are infinite, as was
said above: but they are consumed by the continuity of the movement, as
is evident from the foregoing.
Reply to Objection 2
While an angel is moved locally, his
essence is applied to various places: but the soul's essence is not
applied to the things thought of, but rather the things thought of are
in it. So there is no comparison.
Reply to Objection 3
In continuous movement the actual change
is not a part of the movement, but its conclusion; hence movement must
precede change. Accordingly such movement is through the mid-space. But
in movement which is not continuous, the change is a part, as a unit is
a part of number: hence the succession of the various places, even
without the mid-space, constitutes such movement.

ARTICLE 3
Whether the movement of an angel is
instantaneous?
Objection 1
It would seem that an angel's movement
is instantaneous. For the greater the power of the mover, and the less
the moved resist the mover, the more rapid is the movement. But the
power of an angel moving himself exceeds beyond all proportion the power
which moves a body. Now the proportion of velocities is reckoned
according to the lessening of the time. But between one length of time
and any other length of time there is proportion. If therefore a body is
moved in time, an angel is moved in an instant.
Objection 2
Further, the angel's movement is simpler
than any bodily change. But some bodily change is effected in an
instant, such as illumination; both because the subject is not
illuminated successively, as it gets hot successively; and because a ray
does not reach sooner what is near than what is remote. Much more
therefore is the angel's movement instantaneous.
Objection 3
Further, if an angel be moved from place
to place in time, it is manifest that in the last instant of such time
he is in the term "whereto": but in the whole of the preceding
time, he is either in the place immediately preceding, which is taken as
the term "wherefrom"; or else he is partly in the one, and
partly in the other, it follows that he is divisible; which is
impossible. Therefore during the whole of the preceding time he is in
the term "wherefrom." Therefore he rests there: since to be at
rest is to be in the same place now and previously, as was said (ARTICLE
2). Therefore it follows that he is not moved except in the last instant
of time.
On the contrary
On the contrary, In every change there
is a before and after. Now the before and after of movement is reckoned
by time. Consequently every movement, even of an angel, is in time,
since there is a before and after in it.
Body
I answer that, Some have maintained that
the local movement of an angel is instantaneous. They said that when an
angel is moved from place to place, during the whole of the preceding
time he is in the term "wherefrom"; but in the last instant of
such time he is in the term "whereto." Nor is there any need
for a medium between the terms, just as there is no medium between time
and the limit of time. But there is a mid-time between two "nows"
of time: hence they say that a last "now" cannot be assigned
in which it was in the term "wherefrom," just as in
illumination, and in the substantial generation of fire, there is no
last instant to be assigned in which the air was dark, or in which the
matter was under the privation of the form of fire: but a last time can
be assigned, so that in the last instant of such time there is light in
the air, or the form of fire in the matter. And so illumination and
substantial generation are called instantaneous movements.
But this does not hold good in the
present case; and it is shown thus. It is of the nature of rest that the
subject in repose be not otherwise disposed now than it was before: and
therefore in every "now" of time which measures rest, the
subject reposing is in the same "where" in the first, in the
middle, and in the last "now." On the other hand, it is of the
very nature of movement for the subject moved to be otherwise now than
it was before: and therefore in every "now" of time which
measures movement, the movable subject is in various dispositions; hence
in the last "now" it must have a different form from what it
had before. So it is evident that to rest during the whole time in some
(disposition), for instance, in whiteness, is to be in it in every
instant of such time. Hence it is not possible for anything to rest in
one term during the whole of the preceding time, and afterwards in the
last instant of that time to be in the other term. But this is possible
in movement: because to be moved in any whole time, is not to be in the
same disposition in every instant of that time. Therefore all
instantaneous changes of the kind are terms of a continuous movement:
just as generation is the term of the alteration of matter, and
illumination is the term of the local movement of the illuminating body.
Now the local movement of an angel is not the term of any other
continuous movement, but is of itself, depending upon no other movement.
Consequently it is impossible to say that he is in any place during the
whole time, and that in the last "now" he is in another place:
but some "now" must be assigned in which he was last in the
preceding place. But where there are many "nows" succeeding
one another, there is necessarily time; since time is nothing else than
the reckoning of before and after in movement. It remains, then, that
the movement of an angel is in time. It is in continuous time if his
movement be continuous, and in non-continuous time if his movement is
non-continuous for, as was said (ARTICLE 1), his movement can be of
either kind, since the continuity of time comes of the continuity of
movement, as the Philosopher says (Phys. iv, text 99).
But that time, whether it be continuous
or not, is not the same as the time which measures the movement of the
heavens, and whereby all corporeal things are measured, which have their
changeableness from the movement of the heavens; because the angel's
movement does not depend upon the movement of the heavens.
Reply to Objection 1
If the time of the angel's movement be
not continuous, but a kind of succession of 'nows,' it will have no
proportion to the time which measures the movement of corporeal things,
which is continuous; since it is not of the same nature. If, however, it
be continuous, it is indeed proportionable, not, indeed, because of the
proportion of the mover and the movable, but on account of the
proportion of the magnitudes in which the movement exists. Besides, the
swiftness of the angel's movement is not measured by the quantity of his
power, but according to the determination of his will.
Reply to Objection 2
Illumination is the term of a movement;
and is an alteration, not a local movement, as though the light were
understood to be moved to what is near, before being moved to what is
remote. But the angel's movement is local, and, besides, it is not the
term of movement; hence there is no comparison.
Reply to Objection 3
This objection is based on continuous
time. But the same time of an angel's movement can be non-continuous. So
an angel can be in one place in one instant, and in another place in the
next instant, without any time intervening. If the time of the angel's
movement be continuous, he is changed through infinite places throughout
the whole time which precedes the last 'now'; as was already shown
(ARTICLE 2). Nevertheless he is partly in one of the continuous places,
and partly in another, not because his substance is susceptible of
parts, but because his power is applied to a part of the first place and
to a part of the second, as was said above (ARTICLE 2).