Three of Cups
The celebration of true fellowship with the wine of communion is pictured here as three women lift cups in joyous dancing.
As the psalm goes, "You have given me more joy than when their crops and new wine abound!"
Going beyond the intimate relationship of couples, this card may represent larger groups of friends, family, or fellowship. As Solomon notes, "A cord of three strands is not easily broken."
Orthodox Christianity teaches that the archetypal pattern of fellowship exists even within God as expressed through the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, a perfect unity in a prism of being.
This joy of fellowship is also seen in Abraham, Sarah, and Isaac who became the foundation of the faith.
Among his disciples, Jesus invited Peter, James, and John into his inner circle of intimacy.
In Jacob's dream, a symbolism repeated in the book of Revelation, the family was represented by three symbols: the sun, the moon, and the twelve stars.
At all the feasts and festivals, all of Israel gathered together, the unity and diversity was also prophetically celebrated.
As the psalm goes, "You have given me more joy than when their crops and new wine abound!"
Going beyond the intimate relationship of couples, this card may represent larger groups of friends, family, or fellowship. As Solomon notes, "A cord of three strands is not easily broken."
Orthodox Christianity teaches that the archetypal pattern of fellowship exists even within God as expressed through the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, a perfect unity in a prism of being.
This joy of fellowship is also seen in Abraham, Sarah, and Isaac who became the foundation of the faith.
Among his disciples, Jesus invited Peter, James, and John into his inner circle of intimacy.
In Jacob's dream, a symbolism repeated in the book of Revelation, the family was represented by three symbols: the sun, the moon, and the twelve stars.
At all the feasts and festivals, all of Israel gathered together, the unity and diversity was also prophetically celebrated.
|
|