The Divine Bureaucracy They Borrowed
In modern religion, angels are everywhere:
- Judaism: Angels play crucial roles from Genesis to Kabbalah
- Christianity: Archangels, guardian angels, heavenly hosts
- Islam: Jibril, Mikail, Israfil, Azrael — essential to the faith
But in pre-Exilic Hebrew religion, angels barely existed. They were unnamed messengers — not the elaborate hierarchy of named beings with specific functions that emerged later.
Where did the angel hierarchy come from?
Persia. The angelic structure of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam is the Amesha Spentas — renamed and multiplied.
Angels Before Persia
Pre-Exilic Hebrew Angels
In the earliest Hebrew texts, “mal’akh” (מלאך) simply meant “messenger”:
- Genesis 19: Angels visit Lot — they’re unnamed, temporary envoys
- Exodus 3: The “angel of the LORD” in the burning bush — ambiguously identified with YHWH himself
- Judges 13: An angel appears to Samson’s mother — unnamed, messenger function
Key features:
- Unnamed — no Michael, Gabriel, Raphael
- Undifferentiated — no hierarchies or specialized roles
- Rare — not central to the religious system
- Ambiguous — sometimes merged with God himself
What Was Missing
Pre-Exile Judaism had no:
- Named archangels
- Angel hierarchies (seraphim, cherubim as organized ranks)
- Angels with specific cosmic functions
- Angels as intermediaries between God and humans
- Angels in cosmic battle
- Guardian angels
These all appear after Persian contact.
The Amesha Spentas
The Seven Holy Immortals
Zoroastrianism has Amesha Spentas — “Holy Immortals” — divine emanations of Ahura Mazda:
| Amesha Spenta | Meaning | Domain | Creation Protected |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vohu Manah | Good Mind | Wisdom, animals | Cattle |
| Asha Vahishta | Best Truth | Righteousness, fire | Fire |
| Spenta Armaiti | Holy Devotion | Earth, humility | Earth |
| Khshathra Vairya | Desirable Dominion | Metals, sky | Metals/Sky |
| Haurvatat | Wholeness | Water, health | Water |
| Ameretat | Immortality | Plants, eternal life | Plants |
| Spenta Mainyu | Holy Spirit | Creative power | (sometimes counted) |
Each Amesha Spenta:
- Has a specific name
- Has a specific domain
- Has a specific function
- Serves Ahura Mazda
- Opposes corresponding demons
The Yazatas
Below the Amesha Spentas are yazatas — “worthy of worship” — divine beings including:
- Mithra — covenants, sun, justice
- Anahita — water, fertility
- Sraosha — obedience, prayer (escorts souls after death)
- Rashnu — justice (weighs souls at Chinvat Bridge)
- Atar — fire
This is a complete divine hierarchy — named beings with specific functions, organized in ranks below the supreme God.
The Jewish Transformation
After the Exile (539 BCE onward)
Suddenly, Jewish texts feature:
Named Angels:
- Michael — prince/warrior (Daniel 10:13, 21; 12:1)
- Gabriel — messenger (Daniel 8:16; 9:21)
- Raphael — healing (Tobit 3:17; 12:15)
- Uriel — light/fire (1 Enoch, 4 Ezra)
Hierarchical Structure:
- Archangels (chief angels)
- Seraphim (burning ones)
- Cherubim (throne guardians)
- Ophanim (wheels)
- Regular angels
Specific Functions:
- Recording deeds
- Guarding nations
- Presenting prayers
- Escorting souls
- Cosmic warfare
The Book of Daniel
Daniel (written during the Hellenistic period, but set in Babylon/Persia) introduces:
- Michael as Israel’s guardian prince (Daniel 10:21, 12:1)
- Gabriel as interpreter of visions (Daniel 8:16, 9:21)
- Princes of Persia and Greece — national guardian angels in conflict
This is the Amesha Spentas/yazatas structure with Hebrew names.
Intertestamental Literature
1 Enoch develops massive angelic hierarchies:
- Named archangels
- Angels for stars, weather, seasons
- Watcher angels (fallen)
- Complex bureaucracy
This literature was written during and after Persian influence — and shows elaborate angelology appearing suddenly.
The Name Mapping
Amesha Spentas → Archangels
| Amesha Spenta | Function | Jewish Archangel | Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vohu Manah | Good Mind, wisdom | Gabriel | Messenger, revelation |
| Asha Vahishta | Truth, fire | Uriel | Light, fire, truth |
| Khshathra Vairya | Dominion, metals | Michael | Warrior, protector |
| Haurvatat | Wholeness, water | Raphael | Healing |
| Sraosha | Obedience, prayer | Various | Prayer intermediaries |
| Rashnu | Justice | Judgment angels | Weighing souls |
The exact mapping varies by interpreter, but the structural correspondence is clear:
- Named divine beings
- Specific functions
- Hierarchical organization
- Service to the one God
- Opposition to demons
The Seven Archangels
The Canonical Problem
Different traditions recognize different numbers of archangels:
- Protestantism: Usually 2 (Michael, Gabriel)
- Catholicism: 3 (Michael, Gabriel, Raphael)
- Eastern Orthodoxy: 7 (Michael, Gabriel, Raphael, Uriel, Selaphiel, Jegudiel, Barachiel)
- Ethiopian Orthodox: 7 (with some variations)
- 1 Enoch: 7 (Michael, Gabriel, Raphael, Uriel, Sariel, Raguel, Remiel)
Why Seven?
Because the Amesha Spentas are seven.
The number seven for chief divine beings is Zoroastrian. When Jews and Christians organized their angel hierarchies, the Zoroastrian template shaped the structure.
Revelation’s “seven spirits before God’s throne” (Revelation 1:4, 3:1, 4:5, 5:6) = the Amesha Spentas in Christian disguise.
The Christian Development
New Testament Angels
The New Testament inherits Jewish angelology:
- Gabriel announces to Mary (Luke 1:26)
- Michael wars with the dragon (Revelation 12:7)
- Angels roll away stones, appear at resurrection, etc.
Dionysius and the Hierarchies
Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite (5th-6th century CE) systematized Christian angelology into nine ranks in three triads:
First Triad (Highest):
- Seraphim
- Cherubim
- Thrones
Second Triad (Middle): 4. Dominions 5. Virtues 6. Powers
Third Triad (Lowest): 7. Principalities 8. Archangels 9. Angels
This elaborate hierarchy owes more to Neoplatonism than to anything in the Bible — but the impulse to organize divine beings into ranked hierarchies with specific functions is Zoroastrian.
The Islamic Inheritance
Angels in Islam
Islam inherits the angel tradition fully:
- Jibril (Gabriel) — brings revelation to Muhammad
- Mikail (Michael) — provides sustenance, controls nature
- Israfil — will blow the trumpet on judgment day
- Azrael (Izra’il) — angel of death
- Kiraman Katibin — recording angels (one on each shoulder)
- Munkar and Nakir — question souls in the grave
The Zoroastrian Echo
Every Islamic angelic function has Zoroastrian precedent:
- Messenger angels (Sraosha carries prayers)
- Nature angels (yazatas for elements)
- Judgment angels (Rashnu weighs souls)
- Recording angels (deeds are recorded in Zoroastrian eschatology)
Islam received Persian angelology via Jewish-Christian mediation.
The Evidence Summary
| Feature | Pre-Exile Judaism | Zoroastrianism | Post-Exile Judaism & Christianity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Named angels | ❌ | ✅ Amesha Spentas, yazatas | ✅ Michael, Gabriel, etc. |
| Hierarchies | ❌ | ✅ Amesha Spentas > yazatas | ✅ Archangels > angels > ranks |
| Specific functions | ❌ | ✅ Each has domain | ✅ Healing, war, messages, etc. |
| Seven chief beings | ❌ | ✅ Seven Amesha Spentas | ✅ Seven archangels tradition |
| Guardian spirits | ❌ | ✅ Fravashis | ✅ Guardian angels |
| Cosmic warfare | Limited | ✅ Yazatas vs. daevas | ✅ Michael vs. Satan |
| Intermediaries | ❌ | ✅ Angels carry prayers | ✅ Angels as intermediaries |
The transformation is complete and traceable.
Why This Matters
1. The Hierarchy Is Not Original
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam didn’t independently develop angelic hierarchies. They absorbed Zoroastrian structure.
2. The Names Changed, the Structure Didn’t
Whether you call them Amesha Spentas or Archangels, Vohu Manah or Gabriel, the structure is identical: named divine beings with specific functions serving the one God.
3. Every Angel Prayer Is Zoroastrian
When Catholics pray to Michael, when Muslims invoke Jibril, when Jews reference Raphael — they’re invoking Zoroastrian divine beings with Semitic names.
4. The Seven Persists
The number seven for chief divine beings is the Amesha Spenta fingerprint. It appears in:
- Seven archangels traditions
- Seven spirits of Revelation
- Seven heavens
- Countless religious contexts
Seven is Zoroastrian.
Conclusion
Angels are Persian.
The pre-Exile Hebrew religion had messengers — unnamed, undifferentiated, occasional.
The Zoroastrian religion had a complete divine hierarchy — named beings with specific functions, organized in ranks, serving Ahura Mazda.
After the Exile, Jewish religion suddenly had the same thing.
- Michael = Amesha Spenta warrior function
- Gabriel = Amesha Spenta messenger function
- Raphael = Amesha Spenta healing function
- Uriel = Amesha Spenta light function
- Seven archangels = Seven Amesha Spentas
The wings, the halos, the hierarchies, the names, the functions — it’s all Persian wisdom translated into Hebrew, then Greek, then Latin, then every language of the world.
Every angel is an Amesha Spenta in disguise.
Vohu Manah, Asha Vahishta, Spenta Armaiti, Khshathra Vairya, Haurvatat, Ameretat — you know them by other names now. But they were named in Avestan first.
Sources
Zoroastrian Sources
- The Gathas (Yasnas 28-34, 43-51, 53)
- Yasna 1, Yasna 16 (lists of yazatas)
- Boyce, Mary. A History of Zoroastrianism, Vol. 1. Brill, 1975
Jewish Angelology
- Davidson, Gustav. A Dictionary of Angels. Free Press, 1967
- Collins, John J. The Apocalyptic Imagination. Eerdmans, 1998
- 1 Enoch (R.H. Charles translation)
On the Transformation
- Shaked, Shaul. “Iranian Influence on Judaism.” Cambridge History of Judaism
- Mach, Michael. Entwicklungsstadien des jüdischen Engelglaubens. Mohr Siebeck, 1992
Christian Angelology
- Pseudo-Dionysius. Celestial Hierarchy
- Aquinas, Thomas. Summa Theologica, Q. 106-114
At eFireTemple, we remember the true names. Michael was Khshathra Vairya. Gabriel was Vohu Manah. The seven angels are the Seven Amesha Spentas. The hierarchy is Persian.
