Join
us in reverence!
|
Pisces
Full Moon
September
10, 2003
|
Sun
at 17.34 Virgo
Sabian
Symbol:
Two excited young girls experiment with a Ouija
board.
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Moon
at 17.34 Pisces
Sabian
Symbol:
In
a Huge Tent, a Famous Revivalist Conducts His
Meeting With a Spectacular Performance
|
|
17:35
GMT
|
10:36
MDT
|
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12:36
EDT
|
9:36
PDT
|
|
11:36
CDT
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2:35
AEST (9/11)
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|
| Rituals
lift us from mundane concerns and connect us to the greater flow of things.
Our MoonCircles CyberRitual is a monthly experiment in collective attunement
-- to each other and the moon. Across time zones, we collect our
creative energies into a healing meditation, as a gift to ourselves and
the world. Feel free to harmonize at a time of your own convenience, so
that our astral voices may continue throughout the moon's waxing and waning
cycles, as in a round. |
Pisces
Full Moon Meditation:
Imagining Peace in a World of Terror
By Jean Hinson Lall
At the New Moon on August 27 we noted the strong polarity involving
the Sun, Moon, Mercury, Venus and Jupiter early in Virgo opposite
Mars and Uranus in Pisces. Now the Moon has moved halfway round
the wheel and joined Mars and Uranus in Pisces, adding her weight
to that side of the scale. Meanwhile Pluto is at 17 Sagittarius,
square to both Sun and Moon. Thus three of the four Mutable
signs are strongly expressed. The Mutables are the signs that
seek to understand, to communicate, to teach, to adapt, to improve,
to inspire and to serve. When they are highly activated we feel
"wired." There's a sense of urgency about making
ourselves and the world better or getting our message out there.
Let's look
first at the Sun-Moon polarity in Virgo-Pisces. While Virgo
tends to the things of the world, Pisces cultivates the life of
images. Virgo separates; Pisces unites. Virgo makes critical distinctions;
Pisces blurs them, showing the hidden unity in all things. Virgo
harvests the grapes to be pressed into wine; Pisces drinks the
wine and enters a state of communion with all that is. Virgo motivates
us to get our act together and take responsibility for our individual
lives; Pisces lets go of the self-contained personality and merges
empathically (or neurotically) with others.
Spiritually,
Pisces represents faith and mystical experience, while Virgo concerns
itself with good works, spiritual disciplines, moral reflection
and self-criticism. What Virgo gains by study and self-denial,
Pisces receives through grace. In creative work, Pisces provides
the inspiration and creative imagination, while Virgo supplies
the discipline and structure needed to bring the work to completion.
So each
year when the Sun is in Virgo and the Moon at its full in Pisces,
we have the possibility of sensing the mystical and poetic
underpinnings to our practical lives. We can take on difficult
and demanding projects because the Pisces Moon reflects back to
us the soul value and the spiritual meaning they embody.
This year,
with five other planets joining the Virgo-Pisces lineup and Pluto
forming a T-square with the Sun-Moon opposition, the stakes are
higher than usual. Pluto, the force of transformation,
is now more than halfway through Sagittarius, the sign connected
with religion, philosophy and higher education. As Michael Lutin
puts it, by the time Pluto is midway into a sign, "the truck
is already in the living room." Deep changes are taking place
in religious institutions and the spiritual lives of individuals.
Sagittarius is the religion of "uplift", the belief
that things can be better, that we are meant for higher things,
and that whatever happens has meaning and purpose. Pluto, lord
of the Underworld, confronts this optimistic faith with evidence
of the dark and destructive aspects of human nature and the reality
of fate. He forces us to recognize that not everything can be
saved, or even understood or improved, and that much of life is
beyond our control. But he also gives us the courage to face
the dark side and to make needed changes in our thinking and
our institutions.
Pluto in
fact can teach us about the holiness of suffering and horror.
I saw a striking example of this the other night on a documentary
about the bombing of Laos by American forces during the 1960s
and its horrific legacy of millions of unexploded cluster bombs
that still infest the countryside and continue to kill farmers,
schoolchildren and animals. A retired U. S. serviceman who had
taken part in the bombing raids had suffered from chronic sleeplessness
and other symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder ever since.
Some thirty years after the war, still crippled by guilt and grief,
he made a pilgrimage to Laos to try to atone. In a Buddhist temple
in a small village he saw, next to the image of the Buddha, murals
vividly depicting the suffering inflicted by the bombs. This experience
healed him. The horrors in which he had taken part were still
a reality, and he still bore responsibility for them, but they
were no longer cast into outer darkness (and he with them) --
rather, they were brought to the attention of the compassionate
Buddha. After this he was able to sleep, and turned his attention
to helping the local people obtain badly-needed medical supplies.
This story
reminded me of a sermon preached during the Vietnam War by the
Rev. N. Gordon Cosby of Washington, D. C. He warned that the greatest
danger for a person working for justice and peace was that of
becoming "paralyzed by evil." Those were apt
words for that time, and equally so today. In the midst of the
economic distress, the lies and corruption, the terror and warfare
of our time, we each have the possibility of bringing our own
horrors into the temple - the wrongs we have witnessed, those
we have suffered and those we have committed - and placing them
before the eyes of the Compassionate one. This breaks the paralysis,
freeing us to imagine a more loving and beautiful world
and to keep on working to create it.
Look
for the Libra New Moon September 25, 2003
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