Here’s what the Bible actually says about angels, once you strip away all the greeting card imagery and the slightly ethereal deceased-grandmother vibes. The Greek word for angel — angelos — simply means messenger. A sent one. Someone who goes on commission, with a task, to a person, at a specific time, for a specific purpose.
Hebrews 1:14 is about as clear as it gets: ‘Are they not all ministering spirits sent forth to minister for those who will inherit salvation?’ Sent. Ministering. For us.
And in Jacob’s dream, this is exactly what we see. The staircase isn’t just a pretty vision. It’s a picture of continuous, purposeful, two-way traffic between heaven and earth. Angels descending with what God has spoken. Angels ascending, returning to report: accomplished. All that you said is done.
errands of mercy
I love a phrase I came across from an old-school preacher that stopped me in my tracks when I was studying for this. He called it ‘errands of mercy.’ Two words. An errand isn’t a wander — it’s a purposeful trip with a task and a completion. And mercy tells you the nature of it. Heaven doesn’t dispatch angels like a cold logistics company. The errands carry something good toward someone who needs it.
Errands of mercy. Directed at you. Right now.
Chapter 3 of What You See Matters unpacks what that actually looks like — strength arriving at the moment you’re most depleted, provision appearing when you couldn’t see a way, protection you only understand later. And it closes with a sentence that I think will stay with you: the staircase always had a name. It just took centuries to be spoken out loud.
📖 What You See Matters is available now. Grab your copy and start seeing differently.




