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Meaning of Justice

Upright: Spiritual growth, A positive outcome to legal matters, Legalism. Decision making, Adjustment, Doing the right thing, no matter how challenging, Impartiality, Creating better health habits, Looking beyond the vail, Fairness, Equality, Insensitivity, Severity, Logic, Balance, Equality, Exactitude, Legalese,

Reversed: Bigotry, Imbalance, Corruption, Hidden facts, Unfair advantages against you, Biases, Wearing blinders, Negative outcome to a legal situation,

Message of Justice:

As a personal card, Justice calls you to be blind to external hype and personality, to make decisions with the heart and mind in balance. Justice cannot happen unless judgement is balanced with mercy. If your heart and soul are grounded in compassion your path will remain true. The World's Justice may be blind in a totally corrupt manner. The questions that call the Justice card to you must be clarified by the cards around it.

Justice Card Affirmation

"I will balance my heart with my head, my work with my recreation, and will create more joy in my life."

Journal Prompts for Justice Card
What areas of my life feel out of balance? How can I bring more balance into my life?
What changes can I make to improve my health?
What is my personal philosophy? What are my values and guiding principles that I live by?
Spread Position Meanings for Justice Card

Justice as an Action:

As an action to be taken, Lady Justice always wants you to do the right thing. What benefits the greater good?

Justice as a Person:

As a person, Justice can represent anyone who is in the position to "judge" you--give you a ticket, write your performance review at work, decide if you are to get the job--someone who seemingly has more power over your actions than you do. So, get your ducks in a row.

Justice as Timing:

Libra season (September 23 - October 22)

Justice as Yes/No:

Maybe

Quotes Related to Justice
Theodore Parker was a Unitarian minister and prominent American Transcendentalist born in 1810 who called for the abolition of slavery. In 1853 a collection of “Ten Sermons of Religion” by Parker was published and the third sermon titled “Of Justice and the Conscience” included figurative language about the arc of the moral universe: "Look at the facts of the world. You see a continual and progressive triumph of the right. I do not pretend to understand the moral universe, the arc is a long one, my eye reaches but little ways. I cannot calculate the curve and complete the figure by the experience of sight; I can divine it by conscience. But from what I see I am sure it bends towards justice."