The two cards have
very similar layouts. If you look at the Devil card, you notice that the
figures on the front are the same as the Lovers. Archangel Raphael presides
over the healing of the two Lovers on the No. Six card, while the fallen angel
Lucifer presides over the couple on the Devil. Archangel Raphael's hair are
leaves, while the pentacle sits on the head of the Devil--both are earthly
symbols that mean two entirely different things. The Devil is about attachment
to the material, while the leaves represent a kind of harmony with nature and
Mother Earth. In this way, the two cards represent two sides of the same
coin--love. The Lovers is the ideal love, the blessed love, the harmonious soul
mate relationship, while the Devil represents the perversion of love, obsessive
love, the attachment to the material, or the superficial, the fear of love, the
lack of personal power (this powerlessness comes to represent addiction in the
Tarot, also you can see that the female figure has a tail of grapes, meaning
she is attached to wine), and of course, addiction. Juxtaposed with the Lovers,
the Devil teaches us what love isn't. Or maybe even it is a warning about what
love, selfish and self-serving without Spiritual connection, can become.
The Lovers depicts what Marcia Masino
calls the mystical rite of Kything, which means to "appear
without disguise." Their nakedness represents the absolute vulnerability
that becomes the couple's greatest strength. Ms. Masino says "kything is a method of spiritual presence
whose purpose is to bring about a loving spiritual connection, union or
communion between two or more persons without the spoken word."
The sun shines over the whole scene. There
are no secrets, no mysteries, no shadow issues going on. This person who you
pull in the Lovers is your soul mate, your twin flame, your partner, your other
half. And I think it is important to mention that Archangel Raphael is present
in this card. He is the Archangel of Healing and
Health. He blesses the two, helps them heal their wounds, nurture their past
aches to move into a new spiritual awareness. By our openness with another
person, we begin to bear our soul to the Divine. We allow trust to be our
guiding force. It is easy in the throes of love, after all, to believe in God
and the Divine. Fate, God, Divine pathways and connections, it all makes sense.
We are spiritual beings having a human
experience, and this card is about the beauty of that human experience. The
mystery of love enlivens us, invigorates our souls, makes us feel the absolute
amazing sensations of being human 100 times more intensely. We are human, and
it is beautiful. This is what our experience in a body teaches us. To be
present. Remember the heart chakra, after all, is the gateway to Spiritual
connection--the bridge between the material concerns of the lower chakras to
the spiritual issues of the upper chakras. It is here that we learn to unite
them, because in romantic love, we bring together all the lower chakra issues--Security
from the Root Chakra, Sexual satisfaction from the Sacral, and Courage
and Strength from the Solar Plexus with the Upper Chakra issues--Listening and
Speaking the Truth of your Soul in the Throat, Seeing and opening to your Soul
Path in the Third Eye, and finally, opening the connection to the Divine in the
Crown. We play all this out through our Heart Chakra in the Lovers.
The presence of the angel is not a
mistake. There are six archangels in the Tarot, and they appear in the Major
Arcana. This is the ideal, then, the oneness of
this trinity--the Lovers--Two Humans and the Angel, symbolizing the Divine. We
invite God into our partnership and we are granted a lifelong relationship. It
is the power behind healing, as Archangel Raphael reminds us.
A great affirmation for this card might
be:
I open my heart to loving, being loved and
trusting in love.