
Jacob's Ladder(L'Echelle de Jacob)
c. 1490
Painting School of Avignon (1200's-1500/French)Musee du Petit-Palais, Avignon, France
This is from Wikipedia regarding Jewish Interpretations of the dream:
The Jewish Biblical philosopher Philo (d. ca. 50 CE) presents his allegorical interpretation of the ladder in the first book of his De somniis. There he gives four mutually non-exclusive interpretations:
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(1) The angels represent souls descending to and ascending from bodies -- Philo's clearest reference to the doctrine of reincarnation.
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(2) In the second interpretation the ladder is the human soul and the angels are God's logoi, pulling the soul up in distress and condescending in compassion.
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(3) In the third view the dream depicts the ups and downs of the life of the "practiser" (of virtue), and
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(4) in the last one the question is about the continually changing affairs of men.
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The classic Torah commentaries offer several interpretations of Jacob's ladder:According to the Midrash, the ladder signified the exiles which the Jewish people would suffer before the coming of the Messiah. First the angel representing the 70-year exile of Babylonia climbed "up" 70 rungs, and then fell "down". Then the angel representing the exile of Persia went up a number of steps, and fell, as did the angel representing the exile of Greece. Only the fourth angel, which represented the final exile of Rome/Edom (whose guardian angel was Esau himself), kept climbing higher and higher into the clouds. Jacob feared that his children would never be free of Esau's domination, but God assured him that at the End of Days, Edom too would come falling down.Another interpretation of the ladder keys into the fact that the angels first "ascended" and then "descended."
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The Midrash explains that Jacob, as a holy man, was always accompanied by angels. When he reached the border of the land of Canaan (the future land of Israel), the angels who were assigned to the Holy Land went back up to Heaven and the angels assigned to other lands came down to meet Jacob. When Jacob returned to Canaan (Genesis 32:2-4), he was greeted by the angels who were assigned to the Holy Land.The place at which Jacob stopped for the night was in reality Mount Moriah, the future home of the Temple in Jerusalem. The ladder therefore signifies the "bridge" between Heaven and earth, as prayers and sacrifices offered in the Holy Temple soldered a connection between God and the Jewish people. Moreover, the ladder alludes to the Giving of the Torah as another connection between heaven and earth. The Hebrew word for ladder, sulam - סלם - and the name for the mountain on which the Torah was given, Sinai - סיני - have the same gematria (numerical value of the letters).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacob's_Ladder