Join
us in reverence!
|
Cancer
Full Moon
January 7, 2004
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Sun
at 16.40 Capricorn
Sabian
Symbol:
Repressed woman finds a psychological release
in nudism.
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Moon
at 16.40 Cancer
Sabian
Symbol:
The
archetypal soul becomes filled with life-contents
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15:40
GMT
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8:40
MST
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10:40
EST
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7:40
PST
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9:40
CST
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2:40
AEST (12/8)
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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. |
Cancer
Full Moon Reflections:
Greeting the Holy Family
By Jean Hinson Lall
At
the New Moon in Capricorn we observed the rebirth of the Light
in the darkest time of the year. As the days begin to lengthen,
this mystery can be observed as a physical and spiritual fact.
The Full Moon in Cancer symbolizes and fosters this realization.
It invites our meditations on the mystery through which the Light
(still seemingly so small and weak) will be nourished, and by
which it will in turn nourish the world in the coming seasons.
As the
Sun moves through the Zodiac in the course of the year, it illuminates
and energizes each of the four Elements – Earth, Air, Fire and
Water – in turn. In Capricorn, it warms the cold, dense, rigid
Earth and fuels the capacity of all things to take on the structure
suitable to their nature. Whatever we are in essence now becomes
realized as living form. We are fully bound into the world
of matter, shaped and confined by time and place. And the Sun
blesses time and locality through its radiance and warmth,
making particular things and moments meaningful despite their
limitations.
The Moon
now brings her maternal care to nourish the newly incarnated being.
In her own sign, Cancer, she is strong and confident, pouring
out the water of life upon the dry Earth. We might think of the
Full Moon in Cancer as a heavenly image of the Cosmic Mother.
According
to the calendar of the Western Christian churches, it was at this
time of year that astrologers from the East arrived in Bethlehem
seeking the newborn Christ child. Their feast day is January 6,
Epiphany, which follows immediately after the twelve days of Christmas
and ushers in a new liturgical season, the theme of which is the
spreading of the Light. The story of these astrologers, or Magi,
is told in the second chapter of the Gospel according to Matthew.
Guided by a star, they found the hope of the world embodied, not
in a prince born at court of a royal mother, but in the infant
son of an ordinary Jewish family taking shelter among the animals
in a borrowed barn.
Until the
visit of the Magi, the birth at Bethlehem could be seen as a local
event with significance for a single ethnic and religious community.
Within Jewish tradition, the Messiah had long been expected; the
gospel narratives emphasize the many ways in which Christ’s coming
fulfilled the pattern foretold by the Hebrew prophets. The coming
of the foreign astrologers now reveals the Christ child to be
a Light for all the world (which itself was part of the prophecy).
As objective observers from abroad, the Magi validate the event
and carry word of it back to their own people.
One need
not, I think, be a Christian to find wisdom and significance in
the story of the Magi. The rebirth of the Light in the depths
of winter is an archetypal reality – not only a natural phenomenon,
but an inner experience of psyche and spirit, as we see so clearly
in the unfolding of the Zodiac. The birth of the Light is at first
subtle and subjective. Like the Magi, we can be guided to its
obscure location via "the stars" – whether literally
through astrology or simply by the grace of our inner firmament,
through concentrated thought, imagination and intuition. For astrology
is not only from outside ourselves; it is built into us. Our own
minds partake of the same intelligence that guides the planets
in their courses. The stars are mental and spiritual as well as
physical; subtle as well as literal. They not only lead us to
the place where the mystery is unfolding, but enable us to grasp
it and to speak about it.
Like the
astrologers of old who followed the star to Bethlehem, we too
can greet the Holy Family in their makeshift quarters,
witness the mystery of the divine presence in the world and hold
its light in our hearts and minds. The vision of the holy Child
in the lap of his mother is not merely an emotional event but
the foundation of a world-view and a way of living. From
such a direct encounter with spiritual truth will arise ethics
and philosophy as well as devotion and ritual.
At this Full
Moon, the Sun trines and the Moon sextiles Jupiter, lord
of long journeys, philosophy and ethics, which turned retrograde
in Virgo on January 3rd. This gives us an image of
the deep reflection and study in which the Magi would have engaged
on their return home. Mercury meanwhile turns direct on
the 6th (Epiphany), in Sagittarius, preparing for a
more outgoing expression of thought after a period of retrogradation.
The two planets of the mind are in mutual reception (placed in
each other’s signs), so they may be complementary in their action
even though working in opposite directions. As you receive the
radiance of the Cancer Full Moon, allow its maternal energy to
nourish your thought and understanding. Try to hold the ineffable
in silence within, but give voice to that which can be spoken.
Like the Magi, be a witness to the mystery of being and find
the language in which to spread the light.
Look
for the Aquarius New Moon on January 21, 2004.
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