[RELATED: Don't miss this classic DovBear Post: We all were taught the Leah had eyes that were rackh tender from crying; the Targum Onkeles, however, reads rackh as beautiful. Read the hysterical and educational thread that resulted when I pointed this out]
Points to ponder: Why a ladder, and why a dream? [Note: Alter translates it as ramp, noting that the language used here is similar to the language used to describe the migdal baval which was, likely, a ziggurat.] If the Lord wished to speak to Jacob and deliver to him the latest variation of His promise to Abraham's family, why complicate matters with the ladder vision?
There are, generally, two answers:
(1) The ladder was a message in its own right. What it means is any one's guess, and everyone from Philo to Leviticus Rabba to Samson Rephael Hirsch have attempted to interpret it. Some of these interpretations work together; others are mutually exclusive. Some interpreters say the foot of the ladder was at Bethel, others say the foot was at Beer Sheva, the midpoint was at Jerusalem, and the top was over Bethel. There's no one universally accepted view here.
(2) The ladder was neither part of the dream nor part of the vision. This is the approach taken by Rashi, who says that angles are assigned specific territories, and that while Jacob slumbered and dreamt, those angles who had been escorting Jacob in Israel returned to heaven, while their replacements descended. Another manuscript of Rashi says (source unknown) that the angels going up to heaven were those who had been sent to visit Abraham 100s of years earlier. They had sinned by telling Lot about God's plan to destroy Sedom, and the punishment was a ban from heaven that expired on the night of Jacob's dream A more precious idea, found in the Talmud (Chulin 91b) and also in the Targum Neofiti, is the angles wished to gaze upon Jacob.
Chulin says the angles came to see if the genuine Jacob as he actually lived on earth, could be compared with the reputation he enjoyed in heaven; Berashis Rabba develops the idea and says the angles were disappointed with what they found: "up above they saw his picture engraved as Israel glorifying God, they came down and found him fast asleep" and were so disturbed by the display of disrespect "they intended to endanger his life." Both Chulin and the Midrash read מַלְאֲכֵי אֱלֹהִים, עֹלִים וְיֹרְדִים בּוֹ not as "angels of God ascending and descending on IT, ie the ladder but on HIM, ie. Jacob.
Targum Neofiti has the same reading, but a more favorable take, saying that Jacob's celestial escort ascended the ladder to invite the other angles to "Come and see the righteous man whose likeness is set upon the divine throne."
Interestingly enough, the author of the gospel of John seems to have "learned like Chulin," assigning to Jesus the following words: "Truly, truly, I say to you, you will see heaven opened, and the angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of Man."
As John interprets the story, the ladder was not a message or a vision but the actual merging of heaven and earth, repeated when Jacobs decendants stood at Sinai, with real angles coming to catch a glimpse of Jacob.
[RELATED: Don't miss this classic DovBear Post: We all were taught the Leah had eyes that were rackh tender from crying; the Targum Onkeles, however, reads rackh as beautiful. Read the hysterical and educational thread that resulted when I pointed this out]
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