All perfect praise be to Allaah, The Lord of the Worlds. I testify that there is none worthy of worship except Allaah, and that Muhammad, sallallaahu ‘alayhi wa sallam, is His slave and Messenger.
First of all, we would like to mention that the scholars differed in opinion over the Hadeeth narrated by Ibn ‘Abbaas as some of them classified it as Hasan [good] and some of them classified it as Dha’eef [weak], and a third party classified it as Hasan but as being a statement of Ibn ‘Abbaas without attributing it to the Prophet .
However, this narration is evidence that what was narrated indefinitely in some other narrations refers to the angels. This means that they are slaves who are not from the human beings. This definitely refutes the claim that they are Rijaal al-Ghayb (i.e. men of the unseen), which some people may use as evidence for the permissibility of seeking help from the dead or from the live people in matters that they are unable to do. This indeed opens the door for Shirk [associating partners with Allaah], and it is contrary to what the Quran actually states. Allaah Says (what means): {That is Allaah, your Lord; to Him belongs sovereignty. And those whom you invoke other than Him do not possess [as much as] the membrane of a date seed. If you invoke them, they do not hear your supplication; and if they heard, they would not respond to you. And on the Day of Resurrection they will deny your association. And none can inform you like [one] Acquainted [with all matters].} [Quran 35:13-14]
Finally, this narration – if we presume that it is authentic – is evidence that it is permissible to seek the help of a creature in matters that he is capable of, and that if a Muslim supplicates with this supplication, then Allaah may send him angels who can fulfill his wish.
Allaah Knows best.