23rdApril
Anselm’s Brilliant Commentary
You have to hand it to theologians for their typically brilliant explanations of biblical events. Here is a fine example of Anselm’s explanation for the division of good and bad angels in Heaven and Hell, respectively.
In On the Fall of the Devil (De casu diaboli) Anselm extends his account of freedom and sin by discussing the first sin of the angels. In order for the angels to have the power to preserve rectitude of will for its own sake, they had to have both a will for justice and a will for happiness. If God had given them only a will for happiness, they would have been necessitated to will whatever they thought would make them happy. Their willing of happiness would have had its ultimate origin in God and not in the angels themselves. So they would not have had the power for self-initiated action, which means that they would not have had free choice. The same thing would have been true, mutatis mutandis, if God had given them only the will for justice.
Since God gave them both wills, however, they had the power for self-initiated action. Whether they chose to subject their wills for happiness to the demands of justice or to ignore the demands of justice in the interest of happiness, that choice had its ultimate origin in the angels; it was not received from God. The rebel angels chose to abandon justice in an attempt to gain happiness for themselves, whereas the good angels chose to persevere in justice even if it meant less happiness. God punished the rebel angels by taking away their happiness; he rewarded the good angels by granting them all the happiness they could possibly want. For this reason, the good angels are no longer able to sin. Since there is no further happiness left for them to will, their will for happiness can no longer entice them to overstep the bounds of justice. Thus Anselm finally explains what it is that perfects free choice so that it becomes unable to sin.

breakerslion says 3rd May @ 19:26
Or not. Maybe the rebel angels realized that there is no justice in a dictatiorship, no matter how benign the dictator. Maybe they realized that there was more to life than being happy all the time. Maybe they realized that God could not make a rock so large that he himself couldn’t lift it, and therefore was not all-powerful. Maybe they realized that they were cartoon minions, and figments of the human imagination. Maybe they traded it all away for a broiled pork chop with applesauce, or a deep-fried Twinkie. Maybe it’s all just about making people nervous enough to put money in the plate.
So the angels have free will, they just have no reason to exercise it. The reason they have no reason is the environment that has been provided for them. Sounds like opiate addiction to me. When one is thoroughly besotted by one’s pleasurable environment, one has no reason or desire to sin. Nice one Anselm!