Angel Paths for September 27 - The Devil

0 views
Skip to first unread message

msesheta

unread,
Sep 27, 2011, 10:10:55 AM9/27/11
to Opentarot Group, Google Opentarotnexus

 

The Devil



The Devil is numbered fifteen and shows a figure, usually male and satyr-like, half-man and half-animal. Sometimes, male and female forms are shown chained or trapped at his feet. The Thoth deck (shown here) has the Devil as a goat, appearing against a background of the male sex organs. His third eye represents the Eye of God and the staff across his chest is topped with the Winged Disk symbol and double-headed snakes.

The Devil card is often misunderstood and feared. However, before Christianity became a leading religion, there were several pantheons which contained fertility gods and they were often depicted as animals - the Horned God of the Wicca for example, servant and consort of the Goddess. The Devil does not therefore necessarily represent an evil being.

The Devil is the personification of the animal, instinctual and even bestial parts of us. Pre-occupation with matters connected to the Devil can lead to degradation and sheer ugliness, but by identifying and accepting the darkness within we learn to discover that it is simply the dark side of our light.

Working with the Devil card

Now here's a card that most of us would prefer not to run into too often! When the Devil card appears, most people tend to feel that there's trouble ahead - and often they associate this card with the doing of evil, and therefor fear it as well.

But, in some ways, this is a misunderstanding of the principle the card truly represents in life. Certainly it can appear to indicate evil acts, trouble, strife and conflict - but on most occasions we have more control of events than we might at first believe. And it is our lack of belief that causes most of the problems.

You see, one of the Inner mysteries of this card is that it relates to our basic instinctual needs - those things which confirm to us that, like it or not, we are animals. Our survival needs, like hunger, thirst, protection, warmth, safety are ruled by the card, as are our sexual desires and needs.

However, for some mysterious reason we have allowed ourselves to become separated from many of our base-line instincts, even sometimes relating in a negative or distorted fashion toward them. Our ability to think has got in our own way here.

As a result, we build multitudes of problems around what should be the fulfilment of our own animal instincts - eating disorders, sexual disorders, alcoholism..the list is extensive. Even if we don't actually have a disorder as such, we can have hang-ups, inhibitions, insecurities, fears.

And it is these thought patterns, and the behaviours that go with them that cause the Devil card to have such a bad reputation. The important thing to remember here is that, this being the case, by shifting our viewpoint, altering our perspective, we can change the way we feel about the things in the Devil's domain. And in achieving that, we set ourselves free to be who we are.

So on a day ruled by the Devil, look deeply at your responses and feelings about this area of instinctual response. Look into your fears, and try to see if they have any basis in reality. If you find inhibitions in these basic areas, try to examine them. Locate their source..and then try to let go and move on. Remove the restrictions and limitations that narrow the boundaries of your horizon.

Affirmation: I am free to do as I choose.



http://www.angelpaths.com/majors/devil2.html




msesheta

unread,
Jan 17, 2012, 11:13:35 AM1/17/12
to Opentarot Group, Google Opentarotnexus

Opentarot

unread,
Jul 13, 2012, 10:39:24 AM7/13/12
to Group, Google Opentarotnexus
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages