The Church of the Holy Sepulchre
Immovable ladder: Wood step ladder that leaning over balcony against the right window at Church Sepulchre's second-tier facade in Jerusalem's old town. The cornice is where the ladder rests, and it is placed against the window. The Armenian Apostolic Church owns this window. Church of the holy sepulchre ladder is the symbol of Christianity's interfaith conflict is the ladder. The six Christian denominations owning the Church agree to place the immovable ladder in their proper places. They are forbidden from moving, repairing, or changing anything inside the Church without their consent.
Immovable Ladder at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre
The appearance of an immovable ladder on the facade of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre is associated with a conflict between Christian denominations for the right to control the shrines of the Church of the Lord and the division of the Church between six Christian denominations. Various parts of the Church are now owned by the Catholic Church , the Greek Orthodox Church , the Armenian Apostolic Church , the Syrian Orthodox Church , the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, and the Coptic Orthodox Church, since the 16th century, the most numerous, wealthy and influential communities, were especially hostile.
Conflicts in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre happened constantly. The Ottoman government issued decrees regulating relations between Christian denominations - such decrees were issued in 1604, 1637, 1673, 1757 and 1852.
Statu Qou
It is not known when precisely the steps appeared on the Church facade. Since the Armenian Apostolic Church owns the ancient ladder, they can use it and leave it through their window during religious holidays. Ladder in Jerusalem is owned by the Greek Orthodox Church and should be kept in place because of strict observance of the "Status Quo." The Christian Information Center of Jerusalem uses the same method to locate the ladder on the facade. "The short ladder is part of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre facade because of the Status Quo."
Immovable ladder of Jerusalem
The holy sepulchre ladder is now a sign. Looking at the facade and a ladder leans against a wall one can see that the "St atus Quo", or the status quo, is being respected. The six Christian denominations owning the Church have agreed to place the ladder there. They will not move, fix or modify anything inside the Church without their consent. Pope Paul VI described the Jerusalem ladder as "a visible sign of the schism within Christianity" and "a visual symbol of the observance of the status quo" during his 1964 pilgrimage to Holy Land.
Church of the Holy Sepulchre (Google Map)
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