Jesus's superiority over the angels
It's hardly surprising the Pharisees wanted him dead.

A. A. Milne, the legendary English author of Winnie-the-Pooh, wrote a closed-room whodunnit detective novel called the Red House Mystery - back in 1922. Although complementary about it, the murder/mystery was criticised by Raymond Chandler who took issue with the fact that one’s knowledge of reality had to be suspended a tad too far. In relation to a good plot he stated that: “ If the problem does not contain the elements of truth and plausibility, it is no problem; if the logic is an illusion, there is nothing to deduce.”
In direct contrast we find the exact opposite with the words
of scripture. There is indeed a problem which has to be solved i.e. God’s children
need to be saved. On the way to achieving this we discover heroes, love stories, mass-murderers, miracles and
self-sacrifice.
The fact is, holy scripture is very plausible indeed and there’s much to deduce from it. Even if one were to argue that it’s a work of fiction then one cannot deny that it’s a damn good one. And one in which logic is abundant. Firstly it’s a compelling story, it’s totally original, full of drama, it has a good beginning, middle and an end and is packed full of intrigue and suspense.
In the bible one is transported back in history only to encounter the human condition again. Here we meet characters such as Abraham, Moses and Elijah. We enounter a God of fire who parts the Red Sea, wreaths Mount Sinai in smoke and who can command angels to destroy cities. Most importantly though, we meet Jesus himself. We get to know him a little as a man; we see how he handles people, the lengths to which he is prepared to go to deliver his message, how he expands on Old Testament scriptures but also how he does things which only God and his angels can do. He’s anathema to the Jewish authorities in that he makes claims – not only to be the only Son of God – but actually God himself. This is odious and reprehensible to the hostile Pharisees who – even when Jesus proves himself – still don't believe him.
Their main issue was that Jesus (a mere man), by his own admission, had equalled himself to God. What was upsetting them just as much was that he was healing the sick and saying he could forgive sins.
To the minds of the Pharisees only God could do this. The thing is, God was unapproachable, immortal and thunderous – a mighty man capable of despatching the angel of death. In direct contrast, here was a young carpenter who had slept rough but who was placing himself on a par with the Most High God.
What confounded the problem was that Jesus was saying and doing things which only angels could do.
By forgiving sins he did what the Seraph did when he forgave Isaiah’s sin as he repented. In the presence of the Seraphs Isaiah became aware of his own sinfulness and also of his people’s.
“Woe is me,
for I am ruined,
because I am a man of unclean lips
dwelling among a people of unclean lips;
for my eyes have seen the King,
the LORD of Hosts.”
Then one of the seraphim flew to me, and in his hand was a glowing coal that he had taken with tongs from the altar. And with it he touched my mouth and said:
“Now that this has touched your lips,
your iniquity is removed
and your sin is atoned for.”
The Pharisees believed they knew their scripture but Jesus knew it fully and spoke it in context to challenge them. But the whole forgiving of sins was just too much. By equalling himself to a Seraph he was saying he was very close to God. But because he healed and said it was of God he was also equalling himself to the angel who disturbed the waters (John 5:4).
It was bad enough that he was healing (and doing it on the Sabbath) but Jesus was also casting out demons. This rankled and perplexed the Jewish leaders to the point where they actually accused Jesus of being in league with the Devil. His comeback was the proof of his superiority when he told them that a kingdom could not succeed if it was divided against itself. He then added insult to injury by asking by whom their exorcists drove out demons. Not a good move if you wanted to stay alive.
The fact is that Jesus was putting himself on at least the same footing as the Angel of the Lord when he spoke in the burning bush to Abraham.
And to top it all off, Jesus was placing himself in the elevated position of being the one who delivered the ten commandments.
This, the influence he had on the people, his prophesies, teaching
and challenging behaviour, was just too much for the learned men of the day. They
wanted him dead. The Son of Man, of course, was very aware of this when he told
them that they were of the same mind as those who had killed the prophets
(Psalm 147).
Jesus was, and still is, equal to God and superior to the angels. St Paul clarifies this when he says:
The Son is the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of His nature, upholding all things by His powerful word. After He had provided purification for sins, He sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high. So He became as far superior to the angels as the name He has inherited is excellent beyond theirs.









