IF you were to enter a home in ancient Rome, you would find in the doorway a dog with two heads. A statue, of course. It is Janus, the Roman god of the doorway. One head looked to the past, the other to the future. Since the first month of the year has this two-fold function, it acts as a bridge between past and future, the Romans called it January. It is a demanding month, a frightening month, perhaps more frightening than a birthday. It requires more than remembering to put the right year on our letters and our checks. It is a threshold, a passage, and every threshold makes us pause. Every passage leaves us different from the way we were.
Resistance is futile. Road trips in Middle Earth must be mind mapped with Borg precision. There is much to assimilate.
Showing posts with label Janus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Janus. Show all posts
Saturday, January 6, 2018
№ 346. January: A New Hope
(A perennial favorite homily among Fr. James Donelan, S.J.'s faithful--a good read & inspiring thoughts on New Year)
Sunday, December 24, 2017
№ 344. Christmas Carol
What's a cure for old age and death? For chaos? For pandora's bane?
When world peace is a sight unseen in a galaxy far, far away, when death and sickness come bearing down on our doorposts, what's the proper response?
The year 2017 will come to a close soon. Like in so many years before it, people will again hope for a better year, for a better world.
World peace will always be a cliche. Climate change may soon be a tired slogan on a fake campaign platform. Gender fairness is so 1990s as one writer admitted.
Humankind is a never ending craft.
When world peace is a sight unseen in a galaxy far, far away, when death and sickness come bearing down on our doorposts, what's the proper response?
The year 2017 will come to a close soon. Like in so many years before it, people will again hope for a better year, for a better world.
World peace will always be a cliche. Climate change may soon be a tired slogan on a fake campaign platform. Gender fairness is so 1990s as one writer admitted.
Humankind is a never ending craft.
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