New Testament to
Zechariah, by
Alexander Andreyevich Ivanov, 1824 to
Mary,
by Fra Angelico, c. 14401445 Gabriel's first appearance in the
New Testament is found in
the first part of
Chapter 1 of the
Gospel of Luke, in which he relates the annunciation of the birth of
John the Baptist. John's father
Zechariah was childless because his wife
Elizabeth was barren. An angel appears to Zechariah to announce the birth of his son. When Zechariah questions the angel, the angel identifies himself as Gabriel.() Gabriel appears again in
the second part of Chapter 1 of the Gospel of Luke, this time to
announce the birth of Jesus to
Mary.() While in the first passage the angel identifies himself as Gabriel, in the second passage it is the author of Luke who identifies the angel as Gabriel. The only other named angels in the New Testament are Michael (in and ) and
Abaddon (in ).
Non-canonical texts Gabriel is more frequently referenced in early Christian
pseudepigraphic texts than in any of the
canonical Biblical texts. For example, Gabriel is mentioned in some of the
infancy gospels (e.g., Chapter 7 of the
Nativity Gospel of Mary, Chapter 9 of the
Protevangelium of James, and Chapter 1 of the
First Gospel of the Infancy of Jesus Christ). Gabriel is also mentioned in some of the early Christian
apocalyptic texts, such as the
Greek Apocalypse of Ezra and the
Second Book of Enoch (e.g., Chapter 21 and Chapter 24). In
Gnosticism, angels are portrayed as belonging to a pantheon of spiritual beings involved in the creation of the world. According to one ancient
Gnostic manuscript, the
Holy Book of the Great Invisible Spirit, Gabriel is a divine being and inhabitant of the
pleroma that existed before the
demiurge. There is also a reference to Gabriel in Chapter 17 of the
Gospel of Judas, a Gnostic text dated to 280 AD.
Latter-day Saints In the theology of
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Gabriel is believed to have lived a mortal life as the prophet
Noah. The two are regarded as the same individual; Noah being his mortal name and Gabriel being his heavenly name.
Feast day The feast day of Saint Gabriel the Archangel was exclusively celebrated on 18 March according to many sources dating between 1588 and 1921; unusually, a source published in 1856 has the feast celebrated on 7 April for unknown reasons (a parenthetical note states that the day is normally celebrated on 18 March). Writer
Elizabeth Drayson mentions the feast being celebrated on 18 March 1588 in her 2013 book "The Lead Books of Granada". One of the oldest out-of-print sources placing the feast on 18 March, first published in 1608, is
Flos sanctorum: historia general de la vida y hechos de Jesu-Christo ... y de los santos de que reza y haze fiesta la Iglesia Catholica ... by the Spanish writer
Alonso de Villegas; a newer edition of this book was published in 1794. Another source published in Ireland in 1886 the
Irish Ecclesiastical Record also mentions 18 March. The Feast of Saint Gabriel was included by
Pope Benedict XV in the
General Roman Calendar in 1921, for celebration on 24 March. In 1969, the day was officially transferred to 29 September for celebration in conjunction with the feast of the archangels Ss. Michael and Raphael. Today, the 29 September date (known as
Michaelmas) has been adopted by not only the Catholic Church, but also the
Church of England, the
Lutheran churches, the
Anglican Communion, and the
Western Orthodox churches. The
Eastern Orthodox Church and those
Eastern Catholic Churches that follow the
Byzantine Rite celebrate the
Feast of the Archangels (Synaxis of the Archangel Michael and the Other Bodiless Powers) on 8 November. For those churches that follow the traditional
Julian Calendar, 8 November currently falls on 21 November of the modern
Gregorian Calendar, a difference of 13 days. Eastern Orthodox commemorate Gabriel not only at the Feast of the Archangels, but also on two other days: • 26 March, the "
Synaxis of the Archangel Gabriel" and celebrates his role in the
Annunciation • 13 July, also known as the "Synaxis of the Archangel Gabriel", which celebrates all the appearances and miracles attributed to Gabriel throughout history. The feast was first established on
Mount Athos when, in the 9th century, during the reign of Emperor
Basil II and Empress Constantina Porphyrogenitus and while
Nicholas Chrysoverges was
Patriarch of Constantinople, Gabriel appeared in a cell near
Karyes, where he wrote with his finger on a stone tablet the hymn to the
Theotokos, "
It is truly meet ...". Saint Gabriel the Archangel is
commemorated on the
vigil of the
Feast of the Annunciation by
Antiochian Western Rite Vicariate and
Western Rite in the ROCOR. The
Coptic Orthodox Church celebrates Gabriel's feast on 13
Paoni, 22
Koiak, and 26 Paoni. One medieval Coptic work, the
Investiture of the Archangel Gabriel, attributes the feast day of 22 Koiak to the day Gabriel was given the rank of archangel in heaven. The
Ethiopian Church celebrates Gabriel's feast on 18 December (in the Ethiopian calendar), with a sizeable number of its believers making a pilgrimage to a church dedicated to "Saint Gabriel" in
Kulubi and Wonkshet on that day.
Gabriel's horn A familiar
literary trope of Gabriel has him blowing a
trumpet blast to announce the resurrection of the dead at the end of time. However, though the Bible mentions a trumpet blast preceding the resurrection of the dead, it never specifies Gabriel as the trumpeter. Different passages state different things: the angels of the Son of Man (
Matthew 24:31); the voice of the Son of God (
John 5:25–29); God's trumpet (
I Thessalonians 4:16); seven angels sounding a series of blasts (
Revelation 8–
11); or simply "a trumpet will sound" (
I Corinthians 15:52). Likewise the early Christian
Church Fathers do not mention Gabriel as a trumpeter; and in Jewish and Muslim traditions, Gabriel is again not identified as a trumpeter. The earliest known identification of Gabriel as a trumpeter comes from the "Hymn for Protection in the Night", attributed to the Armenian Saint
Nerses IV the Gracious (1102 – 1173): The sound of Gabriel's trumpet on the last night, make us worthy to hear, and to stand on your right hand among the sheep with lanterns of inextinguishable light; to be like the five wise virgins, so that with the bridegroom in the bride chamber we, his spiritual brides may enter into glory. A 1455 Armenian manuscript shows Gabriel sounding his trumpet as the dead climb out of their graves. Another example occurs in
John Milton's
Paradise Lost (1667): Betwixt these rockie pillars Gabriel sat Chief of the Angelic guards (IV.545f) ... He ended, and the Son gave signal high To the bright minister that watch'd, he blew His trumpet, heard in Oreb since perhaps When God descended, and perhaps once more To sound at general doom. (XI.72ff). It is unclear whether Milton was inspired by the Armenian works, though they presumably have a common source. ==Islam==