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The Angel and the Devil
I took a dive into two Major Arcana cards, the Lovers and the Devil, and the connections between them.
I had the pleasure of being a guest teacher at the Jamar Enlightenment Center in Palm Beach Gardens this month. It had been a few years since I taught a tarot class in a shop. I had forgotten how much fun that sort of class can be.
The class I taught was an all-level Major Arcana class, with a focus on the Waite-Smith images. When we got to Major Arcana 15, I talked about the Devil as the necessary gatekeeper on the path to spiritual enlightenment. I talked about the inherent choice offered by the Devil to stay attached or to break free. I also spoke about the Devil’s connection to Major Arcana 6, the Lovers.
One student looked at the Devil and asked a brilliant question. “Who is the third character in the Lovers?”
I was not sure what she meant, so I asked her to clarify.
“In this picture, there are two people and the Devil. Who is with the two people in the Lovers?”
I did not have to look at the card to remember that there is indeed a third character in the Waite-Smith Lovers, and that character visually dominates the image.
“It’s an angel”, I answered her.
This is why I love teaching tarot. Never, in the more than three decades of my study of tarot have I considered this aspect of these two cards. I have thought about their numeric connection, each being a Six. I have thought about the fact that in each image the two people are Adam and Eve. I have thought about ‘choice’ as a dominant theme in both cards. I have thought that each card asks us to contemplate our relationship to something or someone. Never have I thought about how there is an angel in the Lovers and a devil in the Devil.
I do not have a personal connection with either angels or devils. This realization about the Six cards in the Major Arcana made me want to dig a little.
Benebell Wen presented a fascinating presentation on the exorcism of demons for StaarCon 2021. Other than what I gleaned from that I know next to nothing about demonology. The mainline Protestant church of my youth did not acknowledge any sort of Satanic being, so the whole concept of demonic entities has been largely foreign to me.
I do talk a bit about angels in tarot readings because people ask about them. When people speak about angels, they mean varying things. For some, angels are their loved ones in spirit. For some, angels are God’s messengers on earth. For some, angels are the fearsome beasts of the Bible. For others, angels are the specifically named archangels.
The Christian Bible only names three angels, Michael, Gabriel, and Raphael. Michael and Gabriel are also recognized in Islam and Judaism. The Eastern Orthodox Church recognizes seven archangels. Many scholars point to Iranian Zoroastrianism as the origin of these named archangels.
There are names and classifications for demons in Christianity, Hindu, and occultism.
The book of Abramelin includes named demons. The Abramelin was translated into English by Macgregor Mathers, one of the founders of the Golden Dawn. Of course, A.E. Waite, designer of the Waite Smith Tarot, was a member of the Golden Dawn.
In 1856, Éliphas Lévi drew the ‘Sabbatic Goat’ image. This image has been associated with Baphomet; a deity allegedly worshipped by the Knights Templar. Waite chose this image to become the Devil on his Major Arcana 15 card. This drawing was originally meant to represent a balance and integration of opposites.
This idea that this Devil image was not intended to be sinister, but rather to depict a balance of, and connection between, light and dark, human and animal, male and female, is an important point to consider. When we think of the Lovers we also think of that same balance and connection.
A.E. Waite did not name the angels in his tarot deck. Yet, many scholars assume the angel in Major Arcana 6, the Lovers, is Raphael, the angel associated with the element of Air.
Waite was clear that the Lovers image was to depict Adam and Eve before the Fall. We might say that the Devil is Adam and Eve after their banishment from Eden.
When we think of the Genesis myth in the context of these two cards, we again might think specifically of choices. In the Lovers, Adam is looking at Eve and Eve is looking at the angel. There is a choice between the physical and the spiritual. Once the choice resulted in banishment, new choices became available. In this new world of pain and toil, how should one live? In our life on earth, we are all yoked to many devils. Which devils do we chose, and how do we manage those realities?
When I think of an angel and a devil together, I have two immediate cultural references in my mind. One is a song by Dory Previn entitled “Angels and Devils the Following Day”. The song begins, “Loved I two men equally well, though they were different as heaven and hell. One was an artist, one drove a truck, one would make love, the other would…”
The song concludes with a preference for the devilish man over the angelic one, because the angelic one could not enjoy pleasure without suffering guilt. “And the one who was gentle hurt me much more than the one who was rough and made love on the floor”.
This very secular song offers me a way of considering the Lovers and the Devil, and their connection to one another. We might assume the Lovers to be desirable and the Devil to be undesirable. The Lovers might indicate a thoughtful choice, while the Devil might indicate an obsession. Yet, either could end up being hurtful, and either might turn out to be worthwhile. As with all of tarot, context is everything.
The other cultural reference is the “shoulder angel” who is always accompanied by a “shoulder devil”. We saw these characters in the cartoons we watched as children. The angel encouraged good decisions, while the devil enticed the character to give in to temptation.
This idea of a good angel and a bad angel is present in non-Biblical Christian writings as early as 150 AD. Perhaps most famous and influential is the play from the late 1500s, The Tragic History of Doctor Faustus.
There are similar paired characters in Islam, and in Japanese Buddhism.
This makes me think of an interesting meditation one could try when stuck in a decision-making process. One could, in meditation, think about the dilemma and consider Major Arcana 6 as the angel on one shoulder, and Major Arcana 15 as the devil on the other shoulder. What advice might each whisper into the ear?
Likewise, one could do a divination by using the Lovers to create one tarot spread position, such as “This is the advice of the Lovers”, and a second position created by the Devil, “This is the advice of the Devil”.
In those cartoons of our childhood, the Devil’s input is always ill-advised. We root for the character to listen to the angel at all costs. In tarot, there seems to be room for either character to offer wisdom, depending on the question and the situation.
It is easy to interpret Major Arcana 6 simply as a love relationship, and Major Arcana 15 simply as a negative attachment. Sometimes these simple card meanings will be appropriate in a reading.
Yet, these two cards offer opportunities for deep contemplation, meditation and magic, especially when we think of them as an angel and devil pair.
Daily Tarot Devotionals
Here are three exercises to help you on your tarot journey, and on your journey through life.
Whether you are just learning tarot, are a professional reader, or somewhere in between, a daily tarot exercise can be insightful and rewarding. Daily tarot exercises help us learn tarot. Even more, daily tarot exercises facilitate a meaningful time of spiritual devotion and meditative introspection.
Here are three different tarot exercises to try on a daily basis. You can pick one and try it every day for a week. Or perhaps you have time to do all three every day. See how creating space in your life for introspection, focus and insight changes your life in just seven days. Over time, you will find the daily tarot devotionals that are best for you to do in an ongoing practice. You may even experiment with some that you create yourself.
Card of the Day (COTD)
A Card of the Day is first and foremost reflective, rather than predictive.
If you can find the time to pull a card every day in the morning, take that card as a focal point for the day. If you are a new student, study the card. Write about the card and how it makes you feel. Research the card and learn some basic classic meanings for it. Find a few other illustrations of the card to broaden your understanding of its energy.
Then, at the end of the day, think about the ways in which the energy of this card appeared in your day. This will help you understand in a very practical way how this card might speak in a reading.
If you do your COTD in the evening, use it to reflect on your day. How does this card fit in to things that happened throughout the day, or things you learned during the day?
If you are a more experienced reader you do not have to spend as much time on study and research unless you feel the need. Instead, simply make note of the way the card’s energy makes itself known throughout the day.
If you faithfully journal your Card of the Day, you will create a valuable personal tarot study book over time.
A Daily Tarot Affirmation and Manifestation
What do you want to tell yourself today? What do you want to bear in mind? What do you want to welcome into your life? Look through your deck and find a card by choosing it cognitively, rather than at random. Decide what you need or want, and find a card that to you, represents that energy. When you pull it from your deck, spend a few minutes with it. Breathe in the card’s energy. Visualize your life with this energy made manifest. Create an affirmation based on this card. Write your affirmation and read it to yourself when you have free moments throughout the day.
A Card of Gratitude
Pull a card at random to remind you of something for which to be grateful. The exercise of interpreting each card as a gratitude is very helpful in learning to interpret cards in context. The exercise of practicing gratitude for something specific each day is one that can foster growth and healing.
So often, people think of tarot simply as a tool of fortune telling. These daily exercises will certainly improve your skills at telling fortunes with tarot. Even better, these exercises will help you understand the deeper side of tarot. Better still, these daily exercises will help you stay focused, peaceful, and proactive in your day-to-day life.
Tarot in My Life: Four of Swords - Calming Restless Thoughts
In quietness and confidence, shall be your strength. Isaiah 30:15
For several days this week I couldn’t identify why a feeling of heaviness troubled me.
I went to my Shadowscapes Tarot deck – my first, most personal and trusted deck. When I turned the deck to begin to shuffle, there on the bottom was the message I needed to receive - the Four of Swords.
Last week a couple was brutally attacked while at anchor on a nearby island. Within the past month we’ve heard of attacks or thefts in the cruising community in the islands where we have up until now felt very safe. I kept envisioning scenarios in my mind of what I would do if someone boarded my boat and attacked me or Chris. I felt as if I was drowning in my thoughts. I wasn’t sleeping well, I wasn’t focused, and I was cranky.
I revisited the artist’s (Stephanie Pui-Mun Law) description of this card: “Her limbs are composed in the attitude of death, but this is not the final sleep. It is just a moment of rest and recovery. Her mind floats free. … Close your eyes, and find that still and silent place at your core, where inner strength resides. Draw from that reserve in the times to come.”
The Four of Swords tells us it’s time to take a break from our troubles, real or imagined. It asks us to lay down the betrayals, hurts, and sorrows of the Three of Swords (it was a betrayal I was feeling – wasn’t it?) and seek silent meditation for a deeper awareness in order to find our answers.
The figure in this card holds a sword in vertical alignment with her body’s energy centers or chakras. Her hands hold the sword above and below her heart chakra as if protecting herself from words not spoken represented by the throat chakra and the mouth and the tightness of fear (“flight or fight”) represented by the solar plexus chakra and the feet. When we get stuck in our thoughts and aren’t able to express them, we create our own cage around ourselves and find ourselves continually trapped as in the Eight of Swords.
Inner contemplation of the heart is what is needed when we are visited by the Four of Swords. Like the Swords suit in Tarot, the heart chakra represents the Air Element. The heart chakra is also the fourth chakra, residing in the center of the chakras – the place of Spirit. It is located at the heart, upper chest, and upper back. It is where we find balance between the material world (the lower three chakras) and the spirit world (the upper three chakras). Through the heart chakra, we open to and connect with harmony and peace. The Sanskrit name is Anahata and implies unstruck or unhurt.
In my yoga practice I can open the heart chakra by doing backbend postures. These poses help to develop trust by allowing me to lead with my heart and surrender my fears. As my heart moves away from my head and my chest opens I give my troubling thoughts to the universe thereby allowing my mind and body to relax.
The Four of Swords asks us to let go of those thoughts that are constricting our ability to open our hearts, still our restless minds, and seek guidance from our higher power whatever we conceive that to be.
*Linda & Chris have been traveling and living in the Caribbean on their sailboat, Troubadour. Read about their journey at http://sailingtroubadour.blogspot.com
*Image of “Four of Swords” from Shadowscapes Tarot by Stephanie Pui-Mun Law
*Linda & Chris have implemented several safety measures aboard Troubadour, and are adding others as a result of the most recent news.
*Our hearts go out to the couple on S/V Rainbow and we thank them for their courage in sharing their story. Read about the attack on the sailors here: http://amarulasail.com/2013/10/07/lets-all-ensure-anchorages-are-for-cruisers-not-criminals/