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TRUMP 13 -
DEATH
If you haven't already, spend a
few minutes just looking at this card. It
says much about the mortal human condition, and it says much about the spiritual
pathway. We have just come through
the experience of the hanged man. The
ego is beginning to die, and the aspirant for God is seeking to have his self
will submerged into the glorious ocean of God's will.
After that, comes death.
Jesus was willing to die to His self, was placed upon the cross, and
died. This is a card of darkness
and hope, although the hope is not easily perceived.
Death is death, and it is never easy nor pretty.
There is a myth in America today of “the good death.”
The myth basically goes that if we live a nice life, and we are good
people, and we take care of our bodies, then at some point we will peacefully,
painlessly pass into the arms of our Savior and we will be given the final gift,
that of a good death. This is the
pot of gold at the end of the rainbow--the final reward, the blue ribbon for
those who have lived the proper life. This
myth causes untold suffering, because, that pot of gold at the end of the
rainbow is available to practically no one.
Those who have studied death will tell you that less than 3% of the
people on this earth will experience the good death, and even if they do somehow
wind up slipping into the unknown peacefully, it is much more often than not
because they're in some form of a coma after a prolonged illness.
The number of people who live
healthy, long, fulfilling lives, go to bed one night and wake up dead without
any struggle or pain, are such a small minority of the populous that they may as
well not exist. Yet people
continually strive after this vision, this dream, this hope.
They feel guilt and their pain is exponentially multiplied when they
watch a loved one suffer in death. The
feelings of guilt and the feelings of sorrow come from the sensation that if we
had lived a better life or if we had loved our wife or child better, that
somehow this wouldn't have happened. None
of this is true. Death is death.
We perpetuate this myth within
the Christian church. Easter
morning is usually severely misplaced. We
have a Good Friday service, which seldom is attended in large numbers in any
church or denomination, and that service is usually one of great peace.
The candles are lit and subdued; we sing gentle hymns.
We have a wonderful little germinate about how beautiful is the gift that
God has given us, and we go from the peace and the tranquility of Good Friday to
the glorious Resurrection Sunday of Easter.
The trumpets blare, everybody wears their new Spring/Easter outfits.
The flowers are budding, the birds are singing, the choirs scream the
ecstasy of God at the top of their lungs. It's
all understandable, but it is all wrong. It
has nothing to do with history. It
has nothing to do with our lives.
The history of the Gospels is
much closer to the truth of our lives. What
is that history? You know it very
well. Jesus died on a cross, a very
unpleasant, nasty, miserable, painful death. To imagine he did not suffer is truly one of the most
psychotic ideas that human beings have come up with.
The physical pain was immense. Crucifixion
was designed by the Romans for a very specific purpose.
Its purpose was to make the victim suffer.
They knew a certain technique that would extract the pain and anguish as
long as anything that they could imagine, and the way that a human body was
strung up on a cross was to provide the crucified person with two options.
Number 1, was to hang loosely from the arms as the wrists were pinned to
the cross beam. That would enable
him to get some rest from his feet, but it would also cause the lungs to
collapse, and create incredible pressure upon the heart and the lungs--a most
unpleasant experience.
If the crucified person tired
of that, then he could stand up, relieve the pressure on his arms and his lungs
and his heart by putting the weight of his body upon this nail that was pounded
through his feet. The crucified
person would struggle for hours, caught between the anguish of the sharp pain in
the feet and the strangling convulsive pull of the lungs being crushed by the
rib cage, until finally, the crucified would lose all energy, pass out and
ultimately die from strangulation. No
more air could get into the lungs.
Even if you are the Holy Son of
God, this is not a fun thing to go through.
And, when on Good Friday we commemorate death with these sweet little
songs and these tender little meditations, we whitewash and profane history.
The history of the death of Jesus is the history of pain, suffering,
blood and filth.
In exactly the same way, we
profane the message of Easter. Because
on the following Sunday after Jesus was buried, the women and disciples wound
their way to the tomb at one time or another, and found that the tomb was empty.
There were no trumpets blaring. There
were no angelic children running around hunting for Easter eggs.
There was no great dance and celebration and Easter breakfast.
There were scared, frightened people hiding for their lives.
Their leader had just been crucified, and their greatest fear was that
they would be next. In their fear
and in their anguish and in their aloneness, they went and found a tomb that was
empty. This compounded their fear;
this compounded their anxiety. They
heard a message from an angel saying that He is not here, He is not dead, He has
risen. Not a one of them believed
this initially. It took them days,
months, and years to fully comprehend all that this meant.
So you see death is always much
more painful than in our imaginings, and resurrection is much more laborious,
gradual process than we wish to confess.
All of that is addressed in
this card. Death is pain; death is
suffering; death is loss. Deal with
it. The Bible is about death. The
Bible is about blood. The Bible is
about pain. There are nearly a
thousand verses in the Bible which refer to death, dying and the dead.
If one were to print all of these verses out on 8 1/2” x 11” paper,
the document would be over 60 pages long.
It is forever true, that one
cannot begin to live until we are prepared to die. Death is the great equalizer.
It affects the young and the old, the good and the bad, the rich and the
poor, the famous and infamous. And,
absolutely no one can escape it.
Now there is another fantasy,
which we have approached previously, that has developed within western
civilization--that all death resulted from Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden.
There are forests in South Africa, and there are jungles in the world
that have not seen a human being for hundreds of millions of years, if ever.
And, to believe that the constant cycle of death and rebirth that we find
in that jungle is a result of Adam and Eve partaking of the forbidden fruit, is
a great leap of imagination. Death
is a universal law, and there is nothing that can live, as we have seen before,
unless there is death. Death
completes the cycle. Death
completes the breath of God. The
leaves, through photosynthesis, create the food of the world.
Those leaves enter the animals, the animals leave droppings, those
droppings decay and re-nourish the soil. If
the plants did not die or if the animals did not die, there soon would be no
more nutrients for the plants. All
life would cease to exist. This is
the message of the Bible, yet it is remarkable how we have ignored it.
If a seed does not die, it
cannot be reborn. If we do not die,
we cannot be reborn. So the first
aspect of this card is that of physical individual death. That death affects the body.
It affects the emotions. It
connects us to our loved ones. We
must, if we seek health, be prepared for death.
This is simple, existential, factual reality.
If you have a spouse, child,
friend, or acquaintance, there is only a finite number of destinies for that
person’s relationship with you.
Destiny Number 1: You
will lose contact with one another and not go through death.
This can happen through divorce, through people moving away, people
having new lives, or simply losing contact with one another.
The relationship becomes broken and is no longer a factor.
However, if you remain in a relationship with your parents, children,
spouse or friends, then there are only three other destinies.
Destiny Number 2: Your
parent, child, spouse or friend will die and leave you to mourn.
Destiny Number 3: You
die and leave your parent, child, spouse or friend to mourn.
Destiny Number 4: You
will both die together in some sort of catastrophe leaving everyone else around
you to mourn.
There are no other choices.
Once we can embrace this and
face it openly, we can begin to live. Here
is the greatest secret I have ever discovered regarding death:
Embrace death fully.
Recognize that death is the natural state.
Do your mourning now. Recognize
that your cat is already dead; your baby is already dead; your parents are
already dead; you are already dead. Face
this. Embrace this death which sits
upon the horse. Embrace this card
and make it your reality. Live in
it, absorb it, eat it, breathe it, drink it.
Recognize that this is the destiny of one and all, and that it is
completely, utterly inescapable.
Do not let this death stop with
your friends. Embrace death in all
aspects of existence. The clock,
which you cherish, is smashed, destroyed, broken and dead. The business you have worked for so long is bankrupt, dead,
destroyed. The house which you have
spent so many years working for is a rubble, completely useless, gone.
The sum total of the universe
has been swallowed into the mysterious unknown, and death is the only reality.
Once you can do, you will begin to live in resurrection.
The cat is already dead. We
have buried the cat. What would you
do? What would you give if you
could spend just one more day with your dead cat?
Your wife is already dead.
You have just returned from burying her.
What would you give for one more day to be able to tell her all of the
things that you wanted to tell her, but never did?
Your parents are already dead. You
have just come back from the funeral parlor.
What would it be like if you had one last opportunity to spend some time
with them, to live with them?
That is the reality you can tap
into, once you embrace death. Once
you recognize that everything is already dead, then every single day is a gift
of infinite grace. Every single day
is a resurrection. Every single day
is that one last chance to do and be all the things you want to be--to spend the
time and the relationships and the warmth with all of your dead relatives.
One last chance to enjoy working in your dead, bankrupt business.
One more chance, by some divine miracle, to live one last day in that
house which is a burning, rotting, rubble of dust.
Then there is no mourning. There
is no death. There is only
resurrection. When the cat finally
dies, you have already mourned the cat. When
the children finally die, you have already mourned their passing. And you have lived a life of fulfillment, taking advantage of
every opportunity of every moment of every day. When the miracle of resurrection has passed on, then you are
at peace to recognize that things have simply returned to their natural state.
You wake up one morning, and the resurrected cat is no longer there.
There is no reason to grieve, because you have already buried the cat.
That is why this card is in the
Tarot deck. It is meant to be
embraced. It is meant to be a
gateway to a new birth. If we can
embrace death, then our lives are transformed.
That is the physical realm. This
is also a card of immense spiritual power.
The crucifixion of ego, that we saw in the Hanged Man, can and will
become reality. As that ego dies,
we then live in a glorious resurrection. As
we continue to look at the card, we see several important elements.
First, we see the skeleton
riding upon the pale horse. The
pale horse throughout the years has become an image of death and dying.
They say he comes on a pale horse, and the rider is Death. The skeleton
is what is left after all of the maggots have consumed the flesh and organs.
The bones are once again the great equalizer between animal and man, male
and female, rich and poor, and the skeleton, for many obvious reasons, has
become a symbol for death. But,
this skeleton is wearing armor. This
is a very powerful image. You
cannot hurt this skeleton. You
cannot stop him. He is a conqueror,
and there is nothing you can do to prevent him from advancing.
He is holding a banner with a
white rose on a black background. The
white rose is in a five-fold multiplication.
Five is the number of grace, the number of the Hierophant, the number of
revelation, the number of new growth. There
is, throughout death, the process of new growth.
At his feet, we see just behind
the horse, a man, dead. This man
represents all of the human achievements. He
represents King Matter. For, in
fact, all of matter, not just the organic matter, but all matter, will
eventually become destroyed and swallowed up.
The very electrons themselves are not eternal, but are subject to death,
decay and entropy.
The horse is stomping upon the
crown. All of our achievements and
all of our growth will not survive. The
greatest, grandest, glorious human creation is merely a tool to hopefully get us
closer to God. Things are meant to
be used to serve people. People
should never be used to serve things. All
of matter and all of human creation will be swallowed up.
Death affects all.
We see the Pope standing beside
Death, praying. Death affects the
old and the young. Here we see the
religious authorities seeking to come to terms with Death.
We see a young woman at the feet of the Pope who has fainted and is
unable to deal with the horrible passing of the King of Matter.
At the feet of the horse, we see a little child holding a white rose,
looking up at death with open eyes. This
magnificently represents the three types of human response to death.
King Matter is dead. Death
has taken his toll.
The three primary human
responses are that of the religious community, through prayer and supplication,
to try to have the hurt and the pain mourned over and dealt with.
We have elaborate rituals for burying the dead, transforming the dead,
talking to the dead--all of the things which the religious community does, both
in a healthy and in an unhealthy way, so we can try and love death, work with
it, make death our friend, and transform death into a good situation.
The young girl in gray has
fainted. This is the majority
response. We look the other way.
We do not want to be here. We
do not want to see; we do not want to know.
In our society, millions of people die every year.
Where are they? We hide
them. This is the secret.
We don't even like to see funeral processions.
In other societies, the death of a person is a central event in the life
of the entire community; not in ours.
Death is a secret, death is a
darkness which we do not wish to look at nor embrace. So if we are not going to supplicate death and we're not
going to ignore death, what response do we have?
The response of the little child. Unless
we have faith like a little child, we will never enter the Kingdom of Heaven and
recognize all truth. The little
child does not seek to turn death into a friend.
The little child does not seek to ask death to go away.
The little child does not turn her eyes and pretend that death is not
there. The little child opens her eyes, sees death in the face,
recognizes death as what it is, and has a simple straight forward natural
acceptance of this reality.
Notice that in the background
there is a ship sailing on the river. Life
goes on. For every death, there is
a rebirth. For every baby that is
born, there is an old person who is planted. This is the eternal cycle of God's plan.
As the final element, I wish to
direct your attention to the right hand side of the card, just above the head of
the Pope. Notice, that we have two
towers, and we have the Sun beginning to rise.
Death is a stripping away of the veils--physical, emotional, mental and
spiritual veils. And as we strip
away veils, we can see more clearly into the heart of truth.
That heart of truth is the light. God
is the light. That is the Sun, and that sun will become our destiny in the
next cards.
That halo of light which
surrounds the head of the Hanged Man is nothing less than the presence of
infinite God himself, and we must now, as we follow with these cards, take a
journey, a long journey up and over the hills, until finally we will come to
these two towers again. We will
come to the Sun again. Death is the
beginning of the pathway to resurrection, not instantaneous, not immediate, not
overnight. Death is rather just the
beginning.
The disciples were engaged upon
the start of the spiritual pathway when they began to understand the
resurrection of Jesus. You must
start there to understand the death and resurrection of Jesus.
But as we have said before, Jesus’ death and resurrection are only the
beginning, because they are an instruction booklet for you and your
personal death and resurrection. That
is the power that enables you to embrace death, look it squarely in the face
with the faith of a little child, and rise beyond the human limitations to a
glorious and infinite resurrection.