Guest guest Posted May 11, 2000 Report Share Posted May 11, 2000 "Be that as it may, the charioteer of the Arcanum "The Chariot" is the victor over trials, i.e. the temptation, and if he is master, then it is thanks to himself. He is alone, standing in his chariot; no one is present to applaud him or to pay homage to him; he has no weapons - the sceptre that he holds not being a weapon. If he is master, his mastership was required in solitude and he owes it to the trials alone, and not to anyone or anything external to himself. The victory achieved in solitude...what glory and what danger it comprises at one and the same time! It is the _real_ glory, for no way depends on human favour and judgement; it is _intrinsic glory_ - the real radiance of the aura become luminous. It is, however, at the same time the most real and most serious spiritual danger which exists. "Pride" and "vaingloriousness", the traditional names which one gives to it, do not suffice to characterize it in an adequate way. It is more than this. It is rather, a kind of _mystical megalomania_, where one deifies the regulating centre of one's own being, one's ego, and where one sees the divine only within oneself and becomes blind to the divine above and outside of oneself. The "higher self" is then experienced as the supreme and unique Self of the world, although it is only "higher" in relation to the ordinary, empirical self, and it is far from the _supreme_ and unique being...far from being God, in other words." >From "Meditation on the Tarot, A Journey into Christian Hermeticism". Antoine Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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