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Chabad.org » Learning & Values » Weekly Torah (Parshah) » Bereishit - Genesis » Vayeitzei » Parshah Columnists » For Friday Night » Joining Worlds
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For Friday Night
Joining Worlds


The dream of the ladder in our Parshah is something that has captivated people’s imaginations for thousands of years. Jacob, the ancestor of the Jewish people, was on a journey going far away from home. The sun set, and he lay down and slept, dreaming of a ladder reaching from earth to heaven.

The basic perspective of Judaism is that “earth,” meaning practical, physical life in all its detail, and “heaven,” spirituality and holiness, are closely connected.

In every area of activity, we have the opportunity to express this connection. The physical details of Jewish law provide guidance how to achieve this.

For example, the Zohar tells us that the ladder in Jacob’s dream represents prayer. Like the ladder, prayer reaches from earth to heaven. It is the means for every individual person to connect with G‑d.

The prayer service has different sections. In the morning service there is the preliminary part of the prayers, then the Shema, then the Amidah. These are different stages, similar to the rungs of a ladder. During the service the person is climbing higher and higher, reaching ever closer to G‑d. The highest stage is the Amidah prayer, in which you stand in the immediate presence of G‑d, as in the throne room, and you speak directly to Him.

Following this interpretation, the angels going up the ladder in Jacob’s dream represent the words of prayer. The words coming from our mouths and our hearts rise up to G‑d. They carry with them a little bit of the radiance of our soul: our feelings of love and dedication.

The angels coming down the ladder are the messengers from G‑d carrying divine blessing to the person who is praying, to his or her family, to the community, to the Jewish people and to the entire world.

After having the dream of the ladder, Jacob made a declaration establishing the bond between another version of these two worlds. One world is that of his own personal material success. The other is holiness. How can these two be joined?

Jacob said to G‑d, “. . . of whatever You give me, I will give a tenth to You” (Genesis 28:22). By giving a proportion of his income to charity, Jacob was ensuring that all his wealth was tinged with holiness—because every hundred pieces of silver he earned meant that an extra ten pieces of silver would be used for a sacred purpose. Thus, two worlds are joined, the material and the holy, like earth and heaven.

Through the ages, Jews have tried to follow Jacob’s example, giving a tenth of their income to charity. This practice has been a vital factor in the preservation of the Jewish ideal, learnt from Jacob’s dream: to seek in every aspect of life, whether in prayer or at work in the office, to join earth and heaven.

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By Tali Loewenthal   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Dr. Tali Loewenthal is Lecturer in Jewish Spirituality at University College London, director of the Chabad Research Unit, author of Communicating the Infinite: The Emergence of the Habad School and a frequent contributor to the Chabad.org weekly Torah reading section.

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Dec 3, 2011
Tithe
Yes, and not only did Jacob tithe...but his grandfather set the stage when he tithed to Melchisadech. Do we have any earlier examples of tithing? Or was Abraham the first to do so?
Posted By Anonymous, Prescott, AR/US

Posted: Dec 2, 2011
Jacob's Ladder & Tithe
Thanks very much for such an insightful and skillfully written article. This is a keeper, and will be shared with many others we know.
Posted By Dennis Worthington, Alamogordo, NM / USA

Posted: Nov 30, 2011
snakes and ladders
I remember playing a child's game by this title.
We climbed some rungs by advancing in the spaces and sometimes wound up going down a long shute, taking us backwards. It was all about a throw of the dice.

I think there are deep metaphors in whatever we do, in all our games, in our experiential lives, but we often do not see them, and maybe, as we get older the threads become more visible. But what we do here, this engagement, has all the earmarks of what is divine on another level, and to "divine" or understand this, seems to take a profound journey of soul and a climb up what we call Jacob's ladder.

Jacob was blessed and cursed at the same time, as he was wounded in this skirmish with the Angel some term as a manifestation of G_d. Life has these aspects of blessing and wound. In French, within the word blesser is bless, and the word itself is about being wounded. There is this constant bipolarity of words, and it is reflected in our lives. As for snake: the original garden story.
Posted By ruth housman, marshfield hills, ma

Posted: Nov 11, 2010
Heaven and earth.
Great inspiration, beautifully written. Thanks for every word.G-D bless you.
Posted By Mariam, Bahawalpur, Pakistan

Posted: Dec 17, 2009
the tithe is holy
Posted By Eric



 


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