WELCOMING SHABBAT

Shabbat is more than a day of refraining from worldly activity.

When experienced to its spiritual fullest, its holiness enlightens all other days of the week.

We invite you to enhance your Shabbat with these words of Torah.

 

A ladder reaching into the clouds

PARASHAT VAYETZE: Awakening from Below

PARASHAT VAYETZE: Awakening from Below

Rabbi Avraham Arieh Trugman
November 27, 2025

This teaching on Parashat Vayetze explores the mystical vision of Jacob’s ladder through the lens of Kabbalah and Chassidut. Highlighting the concept of “Awakening from Below,” it delves into the spiritual dynamic between human initiative and Divine intervention, the role of angels as energy forces, and the profound influence of human action on the upper worlds.

In Jacob’s dream, the image of angels ascending before descending reflects a foundational spiritual principle known in Kabbala and Chassidut as hit’orerut mil’matah—“Awakening from Below.” Ideally, human beings initiate a relationship with God by awakening their spiritual selves. However, when inner strength falters, Divine compassion may intervene through an “Awakening from Above,” a moment of unmerited grace that rekindles our connection with the Divine.

The angels in Jacob’s vision are also understood to represent the spiritual forces assigned to every person and nation. According to Bereishit Rabbah, angels are the unseen energy that animates all elements of creation. Every aspect of the natural world, from individual organisms to entire species, is guided by a corresponding spiritual force that directs their development.

A deeper layer of interpretation reveals a key distinction: the soul of a human being is rooted in a higher spiritual world than that of angels, who lack free will. This capacity for moral choice endows humanity with a unique power—to generate angels through action. Human deeds create spiritual entities—defending or prosecuting angels, depending on the nature of the act. Rabbi Eliezer ben Jacob’s words in Pirkei Avot affirm this concept: each mitzva creates an advocate; each sin, an accuser.

Jacob’s vision thus expresses both Divine communication and human creativity. As he lay dreaming, Jacob was simultaneously forming spiritual energies through his inner state and receiving heavenly messages. The ladder he saw—firmly grounded yet reaching heavenward—symbolizes the ongoing interplay between human initiative and Divine response.

NOTE: The above is a summary based on the original teaching.