Gabriel
- Hebrew:
- Gavriʾel
- Arabic:
- Jibrāʾīl, Jabrāʾīl, or Jibrīl
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Gabriel, in the three Abrahamic religions—Judaism, Christianity, and Islam—one of the archangels. In Western Christianity Gabriel’s feast is kept as part of the Feast of the Archangels on September 29. In Eastern Orthodoxy the Synaxis of the Archangel Gabriel is observed on March 26 and again on July 13.
In the Hebrew Bible (the Christian Old Testament) Gabriel was the heavenly messenger sent to Daniel to explain the vision of the ram and the he-goat and to communicate the prediction of the Seventy Weeks. The Book of Daniel (9:21–23) states:
While I was speaking in prayer, the man Gabriel, whom I had seen before in a vision, came to me in swift flight at the time of the evening sacrifice. He came and said to me, “Daniel, I have now come out to give you wisdom and understanding. At the beginning of your supplications a word went out, and I have come to declare it, for you are greatly beloved.
In the apocalyptic and apocryphal (non-canonical) Books of Enoch “the four great archangels” are Michael, Uriel, Raphael, and Gabriel, though elsewhere they are said to number seven.
The angel Gabriel appears several times in the New Testament. He was employed to announce to Zechariah that he and his wife Elizabeth would have a son in their old age, John the Baptist. Gabriel also announced the birth of Jesus to the Virgin Mary (an event often referred to as the Annunciation). It is because he stood in the divine presence that both Jewish and Christian writers generally speak of him as an archangel.
Both Gabriel’s name and his functions were incorporated into Islam from Judeo-Christian tradition. (See Jibrīl.) His name is mentioned in the Qurʾān only three times, but various epithets in that scripture are widely recognized as referring to him.