Rider-Waite and Ezekiel = Continuity
Note the four corners of the Wheel of Fortune card of the Rider-Waite Tarot. They are the angel, eagle, ox, lion. They are the four angelic beings in Ezekiel's vision. I enjoy the art work of other tarot decks, but it is for this reason I prefer the classical symbolism of the Rider-Waite deck.
Also, it was designed (not designed, but commissioned...you can read all about it in the link below) by Arthur Edward Waite, a very pedantic occultist who wrote about and connected the Medieval tarot, the Jewish Kabbalah, and the Golden Dawn system of magic. This deck is a sort of portal to Golden Dawn, which connects the writings of Israel Regardie, S.L. MacGregor Matthers, Dion Fortune, and even W.B. Yeats and yes, even Aleister Crowley. Beyond that, the Rider-Waite deck is consistent with Judeo-Christian mythology and theology. I'm stating this as a matter of history, not proselytizing, so that people who might be new to tarot can begin to see they are not just pretty pictures somebody dreamed up, but have some basis in older traditions.
By the way, the designs of this deck, strictly speaking, are in the public domain, the U.S. Games licensed edition notwithstanding.
note the letters in English read "T-A-R-O"
The Hebrew letters on the Wheel, beginning at the one o'clock position read: "Yod" "He" "Vau" He" (YHVH -> Yahweh)
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...x-Major_10.jpg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Major_10.jpg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rider-Waite_tarot_deck
Quote:
Originally Posted by
MaryLupin
Cornerstone Constellations
Bull (Taurus), the WaterBearer (Aquarius), Eagle (Scorpio), Lion (Leo). This (in part) has to do with the 4 faces of the cherubim in Ezekiel (Ezek. 1:10, 10:14, 20-22). See what I mean about how deep these myths go? In Ezekiel the bull is an ox; the eagle is the highest of 3 manifestations, the lowest being the scorpion.
One of the reasons they differ for me is that I live in Native North America and the animals that correspond to the energy sought after by the relationship between human society and the animals are represented here by different creatures. I have to say though that many of the Indian people I know put the buffalo in the north as well as the wolf. The sense of the bull is of power, tenacity, endurance and the potential of seed, rebirth, sexuality. This is carried in the wolf here with emphasis on power and carried in the buffalo with emphasis on the seed. The ox or bull carries quite a different set of connotations here and ones that aren’t what Crowley (or Ezekiel) imagined.
So here, even though eagles (well some of them) fish, a whistle made from its leg bone (a rather important spiritual tool here) is something that, through the agency of air, calls to the spirits of the place. There is also the sense that knowledge comes like a sun rise, like a yellow tide of warmth (or heat if it is unwelcome knowledge) that changes darkness into light and lifts you up through the clouds into the sun. Have you ever seen an eagle or crow flash white?
I am not arguing about what is right, by the way. Both symbol systems work for the respective people. What is wonderful is how similar they are as well as how intriguing are the apparent differences.
World Card, Wheel of Fortune and the Four Elements
The World is numbered 21 in the Major Arcana, and is governed by Saturn:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...x-Major_21.jpg
The Wheel of Fortune is numbered 10 in the Major Arcana, and is governed by Jupiter.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...x-Major_10.jpg
Note the four corners of the World Card, which, just like the Wheel of Fortune Card, bears the symbolism of the four Sepharic or angelic beings from Ezekiel's vision: Angel, Eagle, Ox and Lion.
These creatures were associated with the four directions, and the four elements of alchemy
(angel=air; eagle=water; ox=earth; lion=fire):
During New Testament times, these would be associated with the four Evangelists, Matthew (human or angel), Mark (lion), Luke (ox), and John (eagle).
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...vangelists.jpg"The four Evangelists appear on the ceiling of the choir in the 15th-c. Church of St. Moritz in Rottenburg am Neckar, Germany." - from a Wikipedia entry on the Four Evangelists
angel - air - light blue - spirit - intelligence - east - swords
lion - fire - yellow - life - will - south - wands
eagle - water - dark or green/blue - soul - wisdom - west - cups
ox - earth - dark green or russet, brown - body - strength - pentacles/coins