| ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| >> Book >> Experience >> ID #1211684 |
| |||||||||||||
|
I pull a card...if it doesn't speak to me...perhaps it was meant for you? ![]() How to Read the Tarot Begin by brewing a cup of tea, a nervine, lemon balm or chamomile, this is after all, your future. A reading at the dark of the moon is best, before the night creatures crawl and bad humours fill the air. Pick a circular deck, with a fairy-tale motif, and no reversals. Hold a question in your heart, shuffle the cards and place them on the table. Choose only two. Like the ancient Israelites, these are your seer stones, Urim and Thumimm, black and white, yes or no. Isn't that all you were asking? ![]() |
| 1. the magician | ID #678059 |
| Posted: 11-29-2009 @ 5:30 pm EST Edited: 11-29-2009 @ 5:33 pm EST | |
|
I pulled the magician card this morning. It set me to thinking about magic---not the pull rabbits out of the hat magic. Not even about ritual magic and alchemy----but about deep magic. C.S. Lewis believed that Christianity was about deep magic. I agree, when you consider the Christianity that was taught by Jesus, before popes and kings and politicians interfered. Jesus spoke of the deep magic of love. Of trust in the universe, of Abba, father, of extending acceptance to all. Jesus called everyone to the banquet table. |