| Are
angels male or female?
Angels are referred to in the Hebrew
language as bene elohim, or "sons of God."
Bible scholar Dr. Henry Morris says about the angels:
"The only obvious and natural
meaning [of the designation, “sons of God”]...
is that these beings were sons of God, rather than
of men, because they had been created, not born. Such
a description, of course, would apply only to Adam
(Lk. 3:38) and to the angels, whom God had directly
created (Psa. 148:2, 5; 104:4; Col. 1:16)." Dr.
Morris explains further:
"Whenever angels have appeared
visibly to men, as recorded in the Bible, they have
appeared in the physical bodies of men. Those who
met with Abraham, for example, actually ate with him
(Gen. 18:8) and, later, appeared to the inhabitants
of Sodom in such perfectly manlike shape that the
Sodomites were attempting to take these ‘men’
for homosexual purposes. The writer of Hebrews suggests
that, on various occasions, some ‘have entertained
angels unawares’ (Heb. 13:2).
‘It is true that the Lord Jesus
said that...in the resurrection they ‘neither
marry, nor are given in marriage, but are as the angels
of God in heaven’ (Mat. 22:30). However, this
is not equivalent to saying that angels are "sexless,"
since people who share in the resurrection will surely
retain their own personal identity, whether male or
female.
Furthermore, angels are always described,
when they appear, as ‘men,’ and the pronoun
‘he’ is always used in reference to them.
Somehow they have been given by God the capacity of
materializing themselves in masculine human form when
occasion warrants, even though their bodies are not
under the control of the gravitational and electromagnetic
forces which limit our own bodies in this present
life." (The above excerpt is from The Giants
of Old (Part 2), The Genesis Record - by Henry Morris.)
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