translation to eternity

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The origin of the symbolism of translation to eternity is probably Egypt:

(a)

In early Egyptian religion the dead were thought to be turned into stars or companions of the sun. James Breasted writes: “In the splendor of the mighty heavens the Nile-dwellersaw the host of those who had preceded him; thither they had flown as birds, rising above all foes of the air, and received by Re as the companions of his celestial barque, they now swept across the sky as eternal stars” ( Breasted, A History of Egypt, p. 64 )

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(b)

A pyramid text describes the translation of the dead king to the heavenly realm in these words: “The king ascends to the sky among the gods dwelling in the skyHe [Re] gives thee his arm on the stairway to the sky. `He who knows his place comes,' say the gods. O Pure One, assume thy throne in the barque of Re and sail thou the skySail thou with the imperishable stars, sail thou with Unwearied Stars” ( Breasted, Development of Religion and Thought in Ancient Egypt, p. 136 )

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THE LADDER

(c)

The injunction [Egyptian religious texts] to stand upright is reminiscent of the Djed or Tet pillar. This classic image of the resurrected Osiris looks remarkably like a ladder in some pictures (fig. 005.08) . The process of translation to eternity was graphically represented in antiquity by the image of ascending the ladder of the planetary spheres. When a soul is born into an earthly body it descends from heaven through the planetary spheres and acquires the qualities pertaining to each:

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(c)

AOP Pg 134 (c) FigNo005.08

(c)

Osiris as a Ladder

(c)

From the papyrus of Ani, British Museum

(c-1)

Saturn: reason and understanding

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(c-2)

Jupiter: the power to act

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(c-3)

Mars: bold spirit

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(c-4)

Sun: sense-perception and imagination

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(c-5)

Venus: the impulse of passion

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(c-6)

Mercury: the ability to speak and interpret

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(c-7)

Moon: the function of molding and increasing bodies,the function farthest removed from the gods, but the first in us and all earthly creation ( Macrobius, Commentary on the Dream of Scipio, pp. 136f. )

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(d)

When the soul has purified itself it may ascend the ladder of the planetary spheres, “for when it has rid itself completely of all taint of evil and has deserved to be sublimated, it again leaves the body and, fully recovering its former state, returns to the splendor of everlasting life” ( Macrobius, Commentary on the Dream of Scipio, p. 137 )

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(e)

There is a kabbalistic parallel to the theme of returning to the planetary archons the qualities pertaining to each, as indicated in this passage by Gershom Scholem:

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THE KABBALAH

(e-1)

The task of the Kabbalah is to help guide the soul back to its native home in the Godhead. For each single Sefirah there is a corresponding ethical attribute in human behavior, and he who achieves this on earth is integrated into the mystic life and the harmonic world of the Sefirot.The kabbalists unanimously agreed on the supreme rank attainable by the soul at the end of its mystical path, namely, that of devekut, mystical cleaving to God.(This is achieved by climbing) the ladder of devekut ( Scholem, Kabbalah, pp. 174f. )

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HASIDIC IMAGE OF THE LADDER

(f)

Certain Hasidic sayings use the image of the ladder, such as the following: “The souls descended from the realm of heaven to earth, on a long ladder. Then it was taken away. Now, up there, they are calling home the souls. Some do not budge from the spot, for how can one get to heaven without a ladder? Others leap and fall and leap again, and give up. But there are those who know very well that they cannot achieve it, but try and try over and over again until God catches hold of them and pulls them up” ( Buber, Ten Rungs: Hasidic Sayings, p. 40. )

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(f-1)

Another saying states, “Man is a ladder placed on earth and the top of it touches heaven. And all his movements and doings and words leave traces in the upper world” ( Buber, Ten Rungs: Hasidic Sayings, p. 40 )

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IMAGE OF THE SPIRITUAL LADDER

(g)

The image of the spiritual ladder was used extensively by ascetic Christian mystics (fig. 005.09) . It derives probably from the passage in St. Augustine's Confessions concerning the ascent of the soul to the heavenly Jerusalem. “We ascend thy ladder which is in our heart, and we sing a canticle of degrees; we glow inwardly with thy firewith thy good fireand we go forward because we go up to the peace of Jerusalem” ( 13, 9 )

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(g)

AOP Pg 137 (g) FigNo005.09

(g)

The Mystics' Ladder to Heaven

(g)

Icon from St. Catherine's Monastery, Mount Sinai, 11th-12th century

(h)

Several Christian martyrs are associated with the image of a ladder. Moist notable is St. Perpetua, who had the following dream while in prison shortly before her martyrdom in the arena of Carthage in the year A.D. 203:

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Dream:

Ladder to Heaven

(h-1)

I beheld a ladder of brass, of miraculous size, which reached up to heaven, and was so narrow that it could only be ascended singly. On either side of the ladder, all manner of iron implements were fastenedswords, lances, hooks, daggers and spearsso that anyone who was careless, or did not hold himself erect while climbing, was torn to pieces and remained hanging. Beneath the ladder lay a gigantic dragon, lying in wait for the climbers and frightening them awayAnd the dragon slowly lifted his head out from under the ladder, as if in fear of me, and I trod on it, as though I were treading on the first rung of the ladder, and ascended to the top ( Quoted in Von Franz, The Passion of Perpetua, pp. 10f. )

DREAM COMMENTARY

(i)

This awesome dream illustrates the Zeitgeist of the Christian era then just beginning. The new Christian spirit was the spirit of sublimatio

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