
TRUMP 15 -
THE DEVIL
We come now to one of the
most difficult and controversial cards in the entire deck. Many people we see in common circles, in movies, on
television, and in commercials seem to remember two cards better than any
others--one is the Devil, the other is Death.
And, with this iconography they automatically assume that the Tarot
cards are darkness incarnate.
When we discuss the Devil, we
are discussing a subject which is very near and dear to the hearts of many
people. People feel very
passionate one way or the other about the Devil.
For some, the Devil is a living physical individual being who is the
conscious deliberate underlord of all that goes wrong with this world.
For others, the Devil is a symbol of negative tendencies within man and
is, therefore, really not essential.
The pathway of Temperance
leads us straight to the Devil's doorway, and if we wish to finally have our
homecoming, we must overcome the Devil in one form or another.
We must come to terms with who or what the devil is.
We must come to terms with the Devil's temptation.
We must become unchained and unfettered and have the Devil get behind
us, if we are to proceed.
As I present some historical
perspective, I do not wish to offend anyone.
As I said, many people take the Devil quite seriously, and this is one
matter which people find intently personal.
Some feel immediately threatened if you challenge any of their
conceptions or preconceptions about the Devil.
Before we go into any form of religious or spiritual interpretation or
understanding of the Devil, we must understand the history.
The Devil was invented or
discovered, depending upon your perspective, approximately in the year 580
B.C. How do I say this?
I am not fabricating and I am not interpreting.
I am expressing to you actual documented facts of history, which the
Bible makes clear to us. If you
read in the Bible there are several writings in what we call the Old
Testament, the Hebrew Bible, which account the history of the early Jewish
race as it transforms a theocracy into a monarchy.
Those books are 1st and 2nd Samuel and 1st and 2nd Chronicles.
They account almost chapter for chapter the same events, the same
perspectives, the same times. The
difference is they are written at two very different time periods.
1st and 2nd Samuel where written first.
Most authors will say approximately around the time of their events.
Many people actually believe that they were written by Samuel himself,
and I have no reason to dispute this one way or the other.
1st and 2nd Chronicles were
written much later, some few hundred years later after the Babylonian
captivity. What was the
Babylonian captivity? You should
review your history if you're unfamiliar with this event.
This was a pivotal moment in the life of the Jewish people.
The Babylonians from the North, in what we now call Iraq and Iran, came
down and through war, conquered the Jews.
In those days, the
Babylonians were actually relatively kind people.
Yes, there was a lot of slaughter, but the way the Babylonians dealt
with things was not to kill everyone, but to disperse them.
The Babylonians recognized that the political and economic rulers of a
given country were talented, bright, energetic people, and if they could, they
would harness them for their own purposes.
So rather than slaughter all of the lords and the kings and the queens
and the mayors and the merchants, they would take them back to Babylon with
them. In this way, they left their conquered people without any
leadership, seriously reducing the opportunities for uprising, and at the same
time making available for themselves the wit, wisdom, and enterprise of the
best and brightest of the conquered nations.
This is what was known as the Babylonian captivity.
After the Babylonian
captivity around 535 B.C., the Jews were able to come back to Jerusalem, back
to the holy promised land. During
this time, they attempted to recount their history.
After years of study, they "published" 1st and 2nd Chronicles
which is a review of the early history of Judaism. This is the same period that 1st and 2nd Samuel dealt with,
the early days of Saul, Samuel, King David.
Now why have I taken you on
this miniature tour of history? What
in the world does that have to do with the Tarot cards? What in the world does that have to do with the Devil?
The first accounting of the
Devil we have, historically speaking, is in Samuel. The second accounting is in Chronicles. In 2nd Samuel 24, David takes a census. He counts all of the people.
He was punished for this because God saw that he was attempting to
usurp God's authority. David was
not merely satisfied to be the king, but he also wanted to count all the
people, make himself more glorious by knowing exactly how many people he truly
ruled.
Now the key issue here is in
the differences between two verses in the Bible.
2nd Samuel 24:1 says, "Now the anger of the Lord burned against
Israel and it incited David against them to say, ‘Go number Israel and
Judah.’" 1st Chronicles
21:1 says, "Then Satan stood up against Israel and moved David to number
Israel." I, of course, don't
know anything about you my reader, but perhaps you have been reading the Bible
and going to church for decades, and have never had this pointed out to you.
The contrast cannot be more apparent.
Read the context yourself.
Study it. Become convinced
that they are talking about the same events, because they are.
Before the Babylonian captivity, the historians said that the Lord
incited David to make the census,. David
did the census, and then the Lord punished him for doing it.
This was Jewish thought.
As in the book of Job, shall
we accept good from the hand of the Lord and not evil. Jewish thought, early Jewish thought, was that the only
reality was God, and that all things come from Him.
As in the book of Ecclesiastes, a time to live and a time to die. They
are both seen as being parts of God's unfolding plan.
The only active agent in the
world is God, to the early Jewish mind. Therefore,
if David was to be incited to take a census, either it would be himself, some
of the humans, or God. There was
no concept of a devil in early Jewish thought.
And, if you read the book of Genesis, it never says that the Devil told
Eve to eat this forbidden fruit. It
says that the serpent talked to her. We
have discussed this before. The
serpent, hundreds of years later, became reinterpreted by St. Paul as the
Devil. But this interpretation
did not exist when Moses wrote Genesis and did not exist for the first several
hundred years that that book was read. The
only active agent is God.
Now, in 1st Chronicles, it is
quite clear that Satan inspires David to do this horrible thing.
God obviously couldn't do this, because it was evil and God punished
David for it. Therefore, how
could it have been God's will? Why would God tell David to do this and then punish him for
it? It doesn't make any sense.
Now ladies and gentlemen you
can be as fundamentalist as you choose. By “fundamentalist,” I mean
essentially a Bibliolotrist, someone who worships the Bible and doesn't
worship God. All of this talk
about the Bible being perfect, the Bible not having a single contradiction,
the Bible not having any "mistakes" or errors of any kind, either
scientific or moral or philosophical, is the creation of a false God.
It seeks to worship the Bible instead of God. It seeks to have one magical answer book that one can follow,
without having to be involved with the Spirit. without having to follow the
religious pathway, without having the testimony of the Holy Spirit in one's
life.
You tell me the answers God,
and I will do it. You tell me the
command, and I will do it. This
is exoteric religion as delivered in retail establishments. It has nothing to do with the true path.
This is plain, because the Bible could not be clearer in this direct
and immediate contradiction. 2nd
Samuel 24 says God told David to create the census.
1st Chronicles 21 says that Satan told David to create the census.
Either God did, or David did, or Satan did. It cannot be the same. A
contradiction is defined when something in the same time, same way, and same
manner is both true and not true. Did
God tell David to create this census? The
Bible contradicts itself. In the
one place the answer is God, and another place the answer is Satan.
Is God Satan? Is Satan God? That
is the only way to resolve the contradiction.
I must hasten to add here
that this does not in the slightest way devalue the power of the Bible and the
revelation it contains. To simply
close our eyes and shut our minds to a plain simple fact of history, however,
does not serve God, Christendom, the Bible, or ourselves any good.
The Biblical record is here for a reason and the writers of the Bible
were not offended by this contradiction.
That is a key point. If
they had wanted to, they could have changed Chronicles to make it match
Samuel. They could have edited
the texts of Samuel to make them match Chronicles.
They did not do that; it was not necessary.
They were comfortable with this contradiction because this
contradiction teaches us much. It
teaches us is that in the early days, God was seen as the only active agent
within the world. After the
Babylonian captivity, Satan is seen as being the great tempter.
What changed? Well,
Zoroastrianism is what changed.
Zoroastrianism is the
religion of the Parsees, the Babylonians.
Zoroastrian was a prophet, who sought for God. Around the year 580 B.C., he came to a revelation that
everything that happens in the world that is good is the act of God, and
everything that is bad is the result of a single controlling underlord, the
evil mind, Anya Maynu. This is
the evil one; this is Satan.
Through the Babylonian
captivity, the Jews encountered Zoroastrianism, and became familiar with the
idea of the Devil. When they came
back, the Devil was intimately a part of their religion. As they chronicled their early history, some things were
rewritten with their new understanding and their new interpretation, saying
that you know it couldn't have been God who inspired David to do that census.
It had to have been the Devil. Oh,
that serpent of old, you know, that had to have been the Devil.
This is a new interpretation.
So you have choices, and these are the choices of history--not
theology--history. Either, the
people who wrote the earliest Biblical records understood that God was the
only active agent and they were correct, but that through the influx of an
evil paganism the notion of a devil crept into the Bible.
Or, you can say that the early people, who wrote the Bible, did not
understand exactly everything that they were talking about and dealing with,
and that through the revelation which God gave to Zoroaster, they came to see
the higher deeper truths of the nature of evil.
Now the Biblical record is
quite clear that in the New Testament times, the Devil is an actual, factual
being. The Devil is cursing
people. The Devil is seen as
being the primal enemy of God. The Devil must be enchained inside of the lake
of fire. And, Jesus wrestles with
the Devil throughout his ministry, not as a symbol, but as a real being.
Well, perhaps you could say
Jesus was speaking of the Devil as though he was in a parable form. But, Jesus
was not so much admitting the actual, personal underlord of all evil, so much
as he was using the symbol of the Devil for illustrative purposes.
The Bible is quite clear that Jesus was tempted of the Devil, spoke of
the Devil, and had to deal with the Devil.
People become very uncomfortable with talk of the Devil as a symbol,
because they feel that this is the first step that the Devil wants in order to
get people to not believe in him. It
is only through believing in him, that the Devil loses his power.
Each personal aspirant must
make these decisions for himself. If
I am to take a position, I would say, yes, it is apparent that there are
personal forces of evil. The
Devil is a very real entity and must be dealt with.
It is through the revelation which God gave to Zoroaster, a Parsee,
hundreds of miles from Jerusalem, in the year 580 B.C. that we have been able
to discover the Devil and meet him.
This touches upon the broader
issue that there are perhaps other revelations that God has given to other
people in other lands and other religions, that we could also learn from.
But we will leave that question for you.
In terms of the Devil, the
Devil is the controlling force of matter.
The Devil is the opposite of God, to worship the creation instead of
the creator, to amass the powers of all manifest existence and harness it as a
separate entity apart from the prevailing will of God.
The temptation of Jesus by
the Devil is astoundingly illustrative. Regrettably
so few seem to recognize what these temptations are.
Temptations are not simply Jesus being able to prove that he is really
the Son of God. There are three
temptations, and each one represents a very specific danger on the pathway of
spiritual existence. As we learn,
as we grow, as we are able to harness strength and manifest the divine will,
and as we begin to overcome the temptations of ego, there are three definite
temptations which the Devil gives to us.
Temptation #1:
If you are the Son of God, command that these stones become bread.
The temptation here is to use the spiritual powers which the adept
acquires for the purpose of satisfying his own flesh and his own needs and
wants.
Temptation #2:
If you are the Son of God, stand upon this high pinnacle of the temple
and throw yourself down. The temptation here is, as one overcomes the limits of normal
humanity and begins to glow with the celestial light of God, to make a
spectacle of one's self and point to one's self as an object of worship and
adoration.
Temptation #3:
The devil took Jesus to a very high mountain and showed him all of the
kingdoms of the world and all of their glory.
He said to Jesus, "All these things I will give you if you fall
down and worship me." This temptation is the final and most difficult.
This is, in some respects, the last dying gasp of the ego.
As the ego becomes cleansed and spiritual abilities are granted, and as
the soul begins to recognize that it is a manifestation of God, the temptation
is to harness those energies to control the entire world.
Temptation #1, we use our
spiritual powers for our own personal pleasure.
Temptation #2, we use our
spiritual powers to draw attention to ourselves as an object of worship.
And temptation #3, we use our
spiritual powers to control the world.
To overcome temptation #1, we
must always seek to serve others and recognize that we are all one.
For temptation #2, we must
recognize that we are, in fact, nothing more then a conduit of the divine
light and a channel of God's presence in this world.
And for temptation #3, we
must recognize that the totality of manifest creation, as glorious as it is,
is simply the dancing of shadows upon the face of God. We are to live not by bread alone, but by every word that
proceeds from the mouth of God. We
shall not tempt the Lord our God, and we shall worship the Lord our God and
serve Him only.
The Devil must be overcome,
and these temptations must be overcome as we return on the pathway.
Jesus, through his passion
and his death on the cross, states quite clearly, "It is finished."
The struggle between good and evil, God and man, the spirit and the
flesh, is over. The bonds of sin
and death have been broken. The chains which ensnare the human race have been cast aside.
We are now free to worship God and no longer be cast about and plagued
by the Devil, yet the Devil is still alive and still well.
This is the symbolism of card
#15. What else do we see?
The most striking element perhaps is that this card has a completely
black background. This card and
the next card are the only two cards in the Tarot deck like that.
The other backgrounds are either blue, the color of air; yellow, the
color of the fiery sky; or, gray, which is non-committal.
The Devil's black background indicates the absence of light.
This leads us to another key point--the difference between light and
dark. Many people ignorantly feel
that light and dark are part of the pairs of opposites, just like male and
female, heads and tails, North and South, but this is absolutely and
categorically wrong.
From a perceptive standpoint,
it is true in that we perceive light and we perceive darkness and we perceive
them as being opposites. But they
are, as we are transformed by metanoia, not opposites at all. Male and female are equally existent entities.
Both are good. Both have the same ontological status in that they exist in
the same way and the same manner although they are opposites.
Heads and tails on a coin are equal entities but they are opposites.
Light and dark are not equal entities.
Light is an energy; light is a presence; light is a physical aspect of
reality. Darkness is simply the
absence of the light. When I turn
on a light switch, the light comes flooding into the room.
When I turn off the light switch, darkness does not flood the room.
The light simply disappears. Light
is the positive existence. Light
is the truth. God is light. Darkness is the absence of light. It is not a power and a presence of its own.
It is a lessening. It is a weakness. Strength
is power. Light is energy.
Darkness is a dimming or a blocking of the light.
And in a universe of all
light, how do we get darkness? We
cannot turn off the light of God. How
then do you get darkness? There
is only one way. Via a shadow.
You must have something stand between you and God.
There must be something solid, something created, something material,
which is standing between you and the Divine light.
This revelation could not be clearer.
The Devil and his darkness result as we block out the light of God by
placing some part of the physical creation between us and the celestial
presence. When we turn from the Creator to worship the creation, we
place that darkness into our souls. This
is clear.
So if we are worshipping our
automobiles and considering them to be more important than fellow human
beings, or if we fulfilling our monetary dreams and desires at the expense of
our family, friends and against the will of God, we have placed some part of
the creation between us and God. That
is where the darkness of the Devil comes from.
God is light and in Him there is no darkness at all.
Therefore, since God fills the heavens and the earth, the only way that
there can be this darkness of the Devil is through the casting of a shadow,
where we have placed something between ourselves and God.
To overcome the Devil, is to overcome these temptations, rise above the
fetters of matter, and once again dwell in the limitless light.
What else do we see on this
card? On the Devil's head, we see
an inverted star. The star is a
blessed symbol. It is the four
elements: earth, water, air,
fire, crowned with a fifth. This
is known as sometimes ether. This
is the spirit, the actual individual spark of God.
The star is inverted here to show that the Devil is the pathway of
inversion. The creation flows from the Creator and returns to the
Creator, in, of, and through Him, to Him.
That is the natural flow of things.
The pathway of the Devil is
when we get the energies of the universe inverted, when our minds are being
used to serve our desires. Our
desires are being used to serve the body.
The body is there to carry the higher vehicles.
When the higher vehicles exert all of their energy for the sustenance
and manipulation of the lower vehicles, then we have an inversion.
We have a blocking of the light. Things
are there to help the people. People
are not to be used to gain access to more things.
All of the mechanical devices are there to help other people to live
theoretically, happier, better lives. When
we manipulate people, lie to them, use them for purposes of procuring more
money so that we can have more things, then we are dwelling in the realm of
the Devil. We are experiencing
the inverted pentagram. This is
darkness. This is blocking the
light.
We see at the foot of the
Devil, Adam and Eve, the Lovers, chained to the Devil's footstool.
As we talked about Jesus saying that he had overcome the powers of sin
and death, he had overcome the Devil. As
he said, it is finished. We see,
though, that people are still being plagued by the Devil.
Why?
This card gives us the
clearest indication it possibly could. These
poor fools, Adam and Eve, are wearing the Devil's horns.
They're dressing like him. Adam's
got his Devil's tail, and so does Eve. They
are acting as though they are enslaved to their sin, enslaved to their
conscience. The Devil made me do it.
I am weak. I have no
control. I am being held prisoner
here. My parents didn't love me
as a child, and that's why I can't love you.
I had a rotten day, so that's why I'm going to tell you a lie.
Oh, I was misunderstood in my youth, and people made fun of me on the
playground, so that's why I'm going to murder you and eat you for dinner.
The card is telling us very
clearly that this is all a lie. If
you look, you can plainly see that Adam and Eve, with their fettering chains
around their necks, could very easily remove those chains. The loops are so large that they could quite simply slip over
their heads. All they have to do
is want to be released through the divine will.
Through an exercising of their conscience, they will be free.
It is truly over. The only forces and power that the Devil and darkness have
over us are the forces which we voluntarily grant to them. This is the key.
The only power which darkness
has is that which we grant to it by volunteering to become its agent.
The only truth is God. The
only truth is the light. That
freedom and that oneness is your divine call.
Why do we have this at this stage of the aspirant’s life?
We have come through the
Wheel of Fortune, Justice, the Hanged Man, Death, and we have the divine
guidance of Temperance. Why now
do we face the Devil?
Because all of the fetters of
creation, all of the temptations which we have seen, stand as the dark night
of the soul, as one of the final obstacles for the seeker of God to overcome.
Until we begin to deal with the Hanged Man, and until we begin to
respond to the call to the egoless state, we are encased inside of the Devil's
powers and his creation. It is
only through working with God's enlightening forces that we are able to
recognize other entrapments, other ensnarements, and other temptations.
At this point of the
spiritual seeker’s life, the Devil exists when he becomes conscious and
aware of the temptations of life. Those
final three temptations which Jesus had with the Devil are the temptations
which we all must overcome--to not use the material creation for either our
own personal gratification, our own fame, or as the center of our worship.
Instead, we must use the physical creation to assist the soul in its
ascent, as the soul becomes free from its own personal glory, and to move
through all aspects of the creation back to the limitless godhead of the
Creator. That is why we encounter
the Devil here. We have
accomplished so much, yet there is still so much to learn.
The three important points on
this card are:
Number 1, that the
temptations that Jesus encountered are the temptations that we must all
encounter.
Number 2, darkness is only
the blocking of the light and is not a positive existent reality, as light is.
And, number 3, that we are
free to slip the bonds of Satan off our heads anytime we choose.
Our imprisonment to the fetters of materiality is none other than our
own doing.