![]() ![]() The Ace represents the first step to your goal, but if that step is repeated, it can cover great distances. If your talents are planted and tended carefully, this seed will sprout and reward you with a good harvest. The Ace of Pentacles is usually pictured with a garden or agricultural backdrop to emphasize its connection to Earth, and the potential of this Ace to serve as a seed of future fulfillment. Keep reading to learn about the meaning of each card in the suit of Pentacles.įind out if the Pentacles cards have a message for YOU now » The suit of Pentacles in a classic Tarot deck consists of 14 Tarot cards beginning with the Ace of Pentacles, progressing upward through the 10 of Pentacles, and concluding with the four Court cards, the Page, Knight, Queen and King of Pentacles. If you can translate this into a way to pay your bills and take care of your family, you have mastered the Pentacles. This suit also represents your personal values - the things you love, are attracted to, and collect around yourself. Whether it’s intellectual, entrepreneurial, artistic, or any other "property" you command (including the sheer brute energy and strength to outwork those around you), the Pentacles symbolize the value of your assets. The Pentacles provide those rewards, as well as supply the means to earn and deserve them. Those who are willing to invest themselves - their time, money, and labor - deserve the rewards of effort. The Pentacles Tarot cards can also symbolize strengths or gifts you hold. Even the poorest person can be enriched and increased by the experience of a golden moment, contact with goodness, or beauty - all parts of the Pentacles suit. The theme of prosperity is not limited to only a financial experience. This can be positive - such as a successful business transaction or a large inheritance or negative - such as health troubles or obstacles in the way of your success.Įmotionally, the Pentacles symbolize energies of safety, security, and abundance. When a Pentacles card turns up in a Tarot reading, it’s typically an indicator that something in your material world needs attention. The suit of Pentacles is connected to the winter season and the Earth element, which represent stability, practicality, and determination, as well as giving and receiving. But in truth they speak of success and prosperity on all levels - this includes money and career success, but also family, body, and health matters. Often Pentacles are mistaken as only symbols of wealth and money matters. ![]() Tarot cards in the Pentacles suit - sometimes referred to as "Coins" - pertain to things in the material and physical world. Although she was martyred young, her model crystallizes the message that sometimes the good of the whole is more important than the good of the individual, and in that case, even if you lose, you win just for being there.Learn more about the Pentacles card meanings: Ace of Pentacles | Two of Pentacles | Three of Pentacles | Four of Pentacles | Five of Pentacles | Six of Pentacles | Seven of Pentacles | Eight of Pentacles | Nine of Pentacles | Ten of Pentacles | Page of Pentacles | Knight of Pentacles | Queen of Pentacles | King of Pentacles If you notice this theme in your deck, it is a reference to Joan of Arc, the Maid of Orleans, archetype of a devout and inspired woman warrior, who was mystically led to abandon her social role to defend what she saw as the greater good. Occasionally this man is subtly detailed to imply that he is a woman in male armor. In the end, his even-handedness and objectivity earn him the respect he receives from his community, and those who cannot work out their problems come to him voluntarily for advice. ![]() With the philosophical overview that comes from long experience, he listens deeply, watches closely and speaks last. Sometimes appearing cool and detached, he can be misunderstood as not caring.īut emotional displays are just not his medium, nor is he moved by appeals to sympathy or pity. His archetype is Solomon, ancient lawgiver and philosopher of the Old Testament. He helps parties in conflict discover common ground and build upon it, and guides societies to see their greater good. Traditionally, representing the energy of a King, this masculine energy form is The Adjudicator, the wise judge or mediator. ![]()
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