Topic: What is the importance of Jacob's Ladder?
Source of this posting: Moderator response
Date originally posted: October 22, 2003
Moderator who originally posted this source: Father Phillip
Question: I am doing a presentation on All Saints and All Souls. My questions is why do we use/make a Jacob's Ladder as a memorial for someone deceased? I have the scripture, I have the infor on Jacob, but I am not sure I understand the symbolism of the ladder. Is it about the journey? our transformation? Help please as I have not found any information that has helped me to understand the significance of Jacob's Ladder. Thank you, God bless, marcia
Answer:
Thanks for writing
to CatholicQandA.org, and lots of luck on your presentation!
The image of Jacob's Ladder comes, as you probably know, from the story in the
Hebrew Bible -- what we sometimes call the Old Testament -- of the Patriarch
Jacob's dream about a stairway reaching all the way to heaven and God's messengers
going up and down it. Genesis 28:10-22.
This stairway, which was called a ladder in some translations and which was
popularized in the African-American spiritual, "We Are Climbing Jacob's
Ladder," symbolized the 'help' that God gives to God's people while they
are journeying on earth. The stairway was the symbol of God's connection to
the chosen people. And the messengers going up and down were 'evidence,' so
to speak, of God's continual provision for the people while the earthly journey
was going on.
The ancient Israelites had a significantly different understanding of life-beyond-death
than we as Catholic Christians do. In fact, many scholars would argue that at
the early period represented in the Jacob stories, these ancient Hebrew people
had no sense of life-beyond-death at all; I tend to agree with that scholarly
assessment of the ancient Hebrew mind-set. But what I think doesn't really matter
for your question.
The point is that for the ancient Israelites who heard and then later who read
this story about Jacob and the stairway to heaven, the emphasis was on God's
provision for the people in the here and now. Jacob's Ladder in this biblical
context really didn't have any particular importance for life-after-death.
However, when early Christianity (wisely) decided to adopt the Hebrew Bible
as an integral part of our own Scripture, we started reading those ancient stories
from a different point-of-view. And clearly the Resurrection of the Lord made
belief in life-after-death one of the primary tenets of our Christian faith.
So, when Christians would read the Hebrew Scriptures we saw God's revelation
of different meaning in those Scriptures than had the early Hebrew people.
From that Christian perspective, then, the story of Jacob's dream, with the
stairway in it, came to have a different meaning and significance.
We still see that the messengers going up and down the stairway suggests God's
willingness to provide for us on our earthly journey, but we also see another
meaning implicit in Jacob's dream.
Since we know that we are destined to share the Lord's Resurrection, we believe
in life-after-death. Furthermore, we believe that in the great communion of
saints we are 'connected to' those who have gone before marked with the sign
of faith -- as Eucharistic Prayer I says.
The "ladder" came to be seen by Christians as representing that "link"
between heaven and earth which binds us to those saints whom we celebrate on
All Saints' Day.
God's messengers going up and down came to represent the fact that our prayers
can assist those souls in Purgatory who are awaiting their final entrance into
the full glory of heaven. Just as the messengers brought help to Jacob in the
dream and as they carried Jacob's supplication and prayer up to heaven, so they
represent our prayers "going up Jacob's ladder" on behalf of the faithful
departed.
Hope that helps.
Blessings,
Father Phillip