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Divination PracticesTarot, Part 2

By Dr. John Ankerberg and Dr. John Weldon

Tarot Psychotherapy
When occultist Alfred Douglas describes some of the cards esoteric principles in The
Tarot: The Origins, Meaning and Uses of the Cards, we see how they may be used in
psychology, and also the risks of tarot meditation. The potential for the tarot deck to incorporate spiritistic contacts can also be seen via the tarot characters coming alive, for
example, through the personification of the inner self as a guardian angel or in the ritual of
dismissing occult powers 1):
The Tarot cards display a powerful array of psychic images, and it can be surmised that
they were used not only as teaching aids but as focal points of consciousness during
individual meditation. The twenty-two cards of the Tarot major arcana have been used
extensively by Western occultists during the past century as an important part of their
Qabalistic Tree of Life meditation system.... The aim of Tarot meditation is to project
oneself in the imagination into each card in turn, exploring its imagery, getting the feel of its
symbolism, uncovering its meaning in terms of ones own psychic structure.... Step in your
imagination over the threshold of the card as if through an open door, and stand with the
characters in their own world.... But gradually you will find that new ideas regarding the
significance of the images appear in your mind. These may take the form of abstract
thoughts which suggest fresh lines of enquiry... or the characters might move and perform
various actions or even speak, in which case you should listen and try to catch what is being
said. Visualise the characters as strongly as you can. It is important when you have
finished your meditation that you close down properly. The powers which can be invoked
during the visualisation process must be dismissed thoroughly before you return to everyday
consciousness.... By building up a detailed account of your progress and discoveries over a
period of weeks, months or even years you will gain a true and valuable insight into the
inner significance of the mystical quest and its relevance to the realities of your personal
psyche. Such a program of meditation not only has a harmonising and therapeutic effect,
but can lead in time to what some mystics have called the Knowledge and Companionship
of the Holy Guardian Angel, which is the living presence of the inner self. 2

Some writers view the tarot as a form of esoteric psychology, and so it is not surprising
that many psychologists have turned to the cards as a method to trigger client self-insight.
Angeles Arrien, assistant professor of anthropology at the New Age-oriented California
Institute of Integral Studies, asserts, Basically the tarot is an esoteric psychology, a science that symbolically represents through visual symbols a record of known possibilities of
experience.... Currently, there is a resurgence of interest to use the tarot as a therapeutic
and transformative tool. An effective therapeutic model utilizing the tarot could be devised
by looking at esoteric-exoteric systems that have been developed by Eastern cultures. 3
The use of the tarot in psychotherapy is also illustrated by Dr. Genie Z. Laborde, an
authority on Neuro Linguistic Programming (NLP). Laborde is in charge of John Grinders
Executive Excellence program, and she is an educator who received her Ph.D. in the
controversial confluent education program from the University of California at Santa
Barbara. She points out how easily psychological processes can be taught and illustrated
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using the images of the tarot deck. The tarot is used to elicit and dramatize the psychological process of projection, as evidence of a long tradition of archetypes and symbols which
can evoke affect, and as visual examples of potential images available from the undiscovered self, Carl Jungs phrase denoting the unconscious of the human psyche. 4
Dr. Laborde has taught this tarot therapy to numerous groups of individuals, including
corporation presidents, school and university teachers, psychologists, stockbrokers, editors, and housewives, all of whom say they have personally benefited from the sessions.
She states, The more l worked with the Tarot the more convinced I became of its rich
potential for evoking responses in my own unconscious and in the unconscious of my
students. 5
In conclusion, when people freely dabble in tarot magic and divination, or in other
forms of the occult, they are asking for the problems characteristically associated with
these methods. 6 Introducing unsuspecting clients to the occult in the form of tarot
psychotherapy only complicates matters. Unfortunately, fringe psychotherapy today is
utilizing the methods of dozens of occult traditions, many with their own brands of
esoteric occult psychology. 7
Regardless, the cards are obviously not something to be played with at parties or utilized
in divination or for so-called self-actualization. Because the cards are so potent symbolically, they are also most dangerous when misused or perverted. Attempts to use them to
predict the future are definitely to be discouraged. Tarot symbolism strikes to the recesses
of the unconscious, where the archetypes reside. To try to harness this energy for prognostication and the control of ones destiny is simply to ask for trouble. 8
Tarot Progeny: Cartouche and Phoenix Cards
The popularity of tarot cards has produced a number of related systems, among them
Cartouche and the Phoenix cards. In The Way of Cartouche: An Oracle of Ancient Egyptian Magic author Murray Hope describes their history and function. The cards are similar
to the tarot in arrangement spread, and they are used for a broad variety of occult activity.
The cover jacket describes the cards as a system of self understanding and awareness
that taps into the wisdom of the ancient Egyptians. Thus it is supposedly an exciting new
system of divination because it encapsulates the archetypal and powerful energies known
and understood by the ancients and embodies them in identities recognizable in todays
world. The Cartouche cards are said to provide startlingly accurate answers to dreams,
family or emotional problems, financial or business matters, protection, spiritual seeking, or
any of lifes enigmas. And the user is told to try the Cartoucheyou will be astounded by
their accuracy.
The Phoenix cards stress divination and self-insight, but they also concentrate on personal growth through understanding ones alleged past lives. The following promotional
description of a standard text, The Phoenix Cards (Destiny, 1990), by astrologer and psychic Susan Sheppard, reveals the occult focus of this particular method. (Sheppard is a
descendant of the Swedenborgian mystic John Chapman, better known as Johnny
Appleseed.)
This book and deck of 28 Phoenix cards provide the first divination tool especially created
for delving into past lives to better understand our experiences in the here and now. Each of
the 28 images is a symbolic, visual representation of a particular world culture that will help
you recall and bring into sharp focus the times and places of your previous incarnations.

The author explains how our present personalities are psychically programmed to
remember who we were in previous existences, where we have been, and what cultures we
have played a part in the shaping. The symbols of the Phoenix Deck are at once specific
and universal, triggering these unconscious memories to help you discover your latent
talents, identify the lessons you most need to learn, and come to terms with unexplained
fears, attractions, and other perplexing emotions and impulses.
Several configurations are given for laying out the cards to determine which past lifetimes
are the primary keys to your present personality and life experience. This knowledge
eliminates confusion about present circumstances, enables you to see yourself more
clearlyyour habits, values and goalsand facilitates your ability to develop in the
directions you choose. With practice, you can also learn to read the Phoenix cards easily
and effectively for others. 9

In conclusion, the various forms of divination we have examinedrunes, I Ching, tarot,


Cartouche, and Phoenixare utilized today by millions of people throughout the world.
Those who seek out such methods do so for a variety of reasons, rarely suspecting the
demonic nature underlying the power of these systems.
Notes:
1

See discussion of New Age Inner Work in Ankerberg and Weldon, Encyclopedia of New Age
Beliefs (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 1996)
2
Alfred Douglas, The Tarot: The Origins, Meaning and Uses of the Cards (Baltimore, MD: Penguin,
1972), pp. 204-08.
3
Angeles Arrien, Tarot: An Esoteric Psychology, New Realities, vol. 5, no. 2, pp. 56, 58.
4
Genie Z. Laborde, Tarot as a Hook for Fishing, New Realities, vol. 5, no. 2, p. 50.
5
Ibid., pp. 53-54.
6
See John Ankerberg, John Weldon, The Coming Darkness: Confronting Occult Deception (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 1993).
7
For example, Raymond J. Corsini (ed.), Handbook of Innovative Therapies (New York: John
Wiley, 1981). This book discusses some 250 therapies.
8
John Warwick Montgomery, Principalities and Powers (Minneapolis, MN: Bethany, 1972), pp. 13132.
9
Inner Traditions International, Fall 1990 catalog (Rochester, VT), p. 2.

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