no, seraph protects the future, not the oracle. it is because the oracle is the one pushing the future along that seraph is with her.
this is my understanding of the lucifer story. perhaps we can unlock what sifer is giggling about:
lucifer was one of the highest angels in heaven (and yes, he had free will). he was sort of like heaven's prime minister of the angels. one day, an unrighteousness developed in lucifer, and he was cast out of heaven because of the 5 "I Will's" that he said to god --
(paraphrased)
1 -- i will rise over all of heaven
2 -- i will raise my throne higher than any other angel
3 -- my throne will be the center of the governing body of the universe
4 -- my glory will be more glorious than god's
5 -- i will become like god, if not better
god apparently did not strike lucifer down immediately -- he waited to see if lucifer would repent. otherwise, lucifer would have been thrown out after his first "i will." instead, god waited for him to finish, and cast him to earth. lucifer then became what we think of as "satan." he was absolutely corrupted and became bitter and evil. he created his own throne in hell. with him, he convinced an entire third of heaven's angels to go with him and help create his kingdom. the angels apparently had mistakenly thought that lucifer (their "prime minister"😉 was the one that gave them power -- and thus, they would continue to be as powerful in hell. they did not realize that they got their power from god -- through lucifer, but by god. they too became bitter and evil. when it was all said and down, god mourned over lucifer's choice. even though he became satan, god still referred to him as "lucifer," his light-bearer, and brightest of his stars.
so . . . sifer, isn't it god that struck lucifer down? or maybe you're hinting at michael, the angel that stuck by god? either way, who do you think represents those characters in the movies?
i can see several similarities between lucifer and the merovingian. namely, that the merovingian is an outcast and seats his throne in a type of hell -- the matrix (we know how agent smith felt of the matrix, so i imagine many other AI's shared that sentiment). he obviously has a thirst for power. lucifer was called the God of Self Love, and the merovingian certainly appears to be quite vain and full of himself.
but i'm interested again, sifer, by who you are referring to when you say, "Who was Lucifer struck down by?" -- if you mean god, i would suppose that the architect plays that role in the movie, and so the merovingian was thrown out by the architect. hmm. or, if you mean michael, maybe that's the oracle? the oracle and seraph, side by side, representing angels? unless the oracle is god, and the architect isn't . . .
*massive head scratch*
by the way, flipmode, good thinking on the order of the characters . . . i never would have thought of that.