Terry....Actually, there is a distinction but it is a rather thin one. It's similar to the difference between monotheistic Judaism and the earlier polytheistic Israelite religion. Under polytheism (and to a lesser extent under henotheism), there were many different gods who were responsible for different activities and responsibilities in the cosmos. In the context of ancestor worship, the dead were also regarded as "gods" (cf. 1 Samuel 28), and some (called Rephaim, or "healers" in Hebrew) could be beseeched for healing from disease (cf. 2 Chronicles 16:12, corr.). Under henotheism and especially monotheism, these gods could no longer be worshipped or even thought of as deities. Rather, the old gods of the popular Canaanite and Israelite religion were turned into angels in post-exilic Judaism (the same process occurred in Arabia in the emergence of Islam). These angels functioned as maintainers of the cosmos (such as controlling the movements of the sun, moon, the seasons, etc.) and as intercessors between man and God. The fine distinction is this: (1) these angelic intercessors were less than fully divine and thus could not be called "gods", and (2) they were not to be objects of worship. However, they could still be prayed to because as intercessors, they were believed to be "messengers" between man and God (who now was believed to be so remote from humanity that he could not be directly approached). So now, for instance, instead of the god Rapha in the Canaanite religion who was the chthonic king of the Rephaim, we now have in the post-exilic era the angel Raphael who had oversight over the souls of the dead (cf. 1 Enoch 20:3, 22:3-14) and was associated with healing (cf. Tobit 3:17; 1 Enoch 10:4-7, 90:9). The concept of angels as intercessors underwent one further crucial development. The term qdshym "holy ones" originally applied to the gods (= "sons of God", "sons of El") and later "angels" as Job 5:1, 15:15; Psalm 89:6-7; Zechariah 14:5 attest, but by the second century BC, the term became ambiguous between applying to divine beings and applying to those faithful to God (cf. especially Daniel; cf. Wisdom 18:9; Testament of Levi 18:11, Testament of Dan 5:11-12). By the first century AD, the Greek term hagioi "holy ones" (= Latin sancti, from which "saint" is derived) referred most frequently to the Christian community in the NT (cf. Romans 15:25-26, 31, 16:2, 15; 1 Corinthians 14:33, 16:15; 2 Corinthians 1:1, 8:4, 9:1, 13:13; Ephesians 1:1, 6:18; Philippians 1:1, 4:21-22; Colossians 1:22, 26; 1 Timothy 5:10; Philemon 5-7; Jude 3; Revelation 5:8, 8:3, 13:7, 17:6, etc.), tho the older sense of the "holy ones" as the host accompanying the Lord on Judgment Day is still found in 1 Thessalonians 3:13, Jude 14. The identification of the Christian community with the (originally angelic) holy ones is made clear in 1 Corinthians 6:2 which refers to Christians as the holy ones who "will judge the world". This merger is also facilitated by the belief that the resurrection occurs at Judgment Day (cf. 1 Thessalonians 4:14-17), that the resurrected are like angels (cf. Daniel 12:3; Matthew 22:30; Luke 20:35-36; 2 Baruch 51:10), and that the resurrected will join with the angels in heaven (cf. 1QH 3:19-23, and especially Revelation), and that those still living would be transformed to be like the resurrected (cf. 1 Corinthians 15:51-54). When the church adopted more of a realized eschatology and reinterpreted the resurrection in fully Platonic terms, the dead "saints" were no longer viewed as inactive (e.g. "sleeping in death") but active in the present. The belief that dead saints function as intercessors is a natural development from the pre-Christian belief that angels were intercessors and the early Christian identification of living and dead Christians with the "holy ones". There is also a pre-Christian precedent in 1 Enoch, in which the human Enoch was taken into heaven and was commissioned as an intercessor between God and the fallen angels (cf. 13:4-7). Not all forms of early Christianity accepted the notion of angelic intercessors, BTW. The homily of Hebrews denied that angels have such an exalted role and claimed that Jesus Christ is the exalted high priest who alone mediates the holy covenant (cf. 9:15, 12:24). The Pastorals similarly posit Jesus as the single mediator between God and mankind (cf. 1 Timothy 2:5).