January, and the God of Two Faces

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Estimated time to read:

3–4 minutes

Did you know the month of January is named for Janus, the Roman god of two faces? When Saturn was cast out and wan­der­ing, it was Janus alone who wel­comed him, offer­ing him shel­ter when every­one else offered only sus­pi­cion and deri­sion. For that act of open-heart­ed­ness, Saturn, the god of time, blessed Janus with a deep wis­dom of time­lines, sea­sons, and cycles. Janus was grant­ed the rare abil­i­ty to see two truths at once, and to hold safe space in the midst of con­tra­dic­tion. Janus taught the Roman peo­ple how to live an eth­i­cal life in rhythm with the sea­sons. In this ver­sion of Rome’s begin­ning, the com­mu­ni­ty arose not from con­quest, as the sto­ry of Romulus and Remus tells, but from kind­ness and generosity.

Janus is also the god of begin­nings and end­ings, gates and thresh­olds. He is often shown with two faces, one look­ing behind and one look­ing ahead, a mir­ror for mod­ern America.

One face looks back, remem­ber­ing what has been lost, what once felt sta­ble, what seemed promised. The oth­er face looks for­ward, imag­in­ing a more just, inclu­sive, whole future that has not yet arrived. Janus does not flinch from either view. 

We live in a coun­try that urges us to choose sides, sim­pli­fy sto­ries, and flat­ten com­plex­i­ty. But Janus reminds us that hold­ing two truths at once is wis­dom. We are not who we were, and we are not yet who we claim to want to become. Instead of hon­or­ing that lim­i­nal space, we have turned it into a bat­tle­ground. We are told to choose a sin­gle face: past or future, tra­di­tion or progress, cer­tain­ty or change. To look both ways at once is framed as weak­ness, betray­al, and indecision.

In ear­ly Roman life, Janus was invoked before every prayer, every jour­ney, and every civic act because begin­nings made with­out reflec­tion are dan­ger­ous. You can­not move for­ward wise­ly if you don’t under­stand where you came from. America’s polit­i­cal cri­sis is, at its core, a cri­sis of refusal: refusal to lis­ten, refusal to remem­ber hon­est­ly, refusal to imag­ine a future that does not per­fect­ly resem­ble one’s own comfort.

One side clings to the past with­out reck­on­ing with its harm. The oth­er races toward the future with­out always acknowl­edg­ing fear and loss. Janus would tell us that both posi­tions are incom­plete on their own.

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Montfaucon's Janus
Different depic­tions of Janus from Bernard de Montfaucon’s “L’antiquité expliquée et représen­tée en fig­ures.” (Wikipedia)

The doors of Janus’s tem­ple stood open dur­ing war and closed dur­ing peace. For much of Rome’s his­to­ry, they were open. Conflict was nor­mal­ized. In America, our civic doors are flung wide with out­rage, mis­in­for­ma­tion, and griev­ance. We live as if per­ma­nent divi­sion is inevitable, as if peace is naïve rather than intentional.

But Janus reminds us that peace is not pas­sive. It requires nam­ing real­i­ty ful­ly. We can­not close the doors while pre­tend­ing there is no war. We must acknowl­edge that tra­di­tion can offer belong­ing and that it has exclud­ed many. We must admit that progress is nec­es­sary and that rapid change can be frightening. 

We must accept that lov­ing this coun­try also means refus­ing to excuse its fail­ures. Janus does not demand that we agree. Only that we see

America does not need few­er dif­fer­ences. It needs more courage to acknowl­edge that any lived expe­ri­ence or point of view has many lay­ers of com­plex­i­ty, even ones that seem to con­tra­dict them­selves. We can grieve what was lost and still hope for what is com­ing. We can acknowl­edge harm and still believe in heal­ing. We can love deeply and remain hon­est about pain.

Janus does not ask us to choose a sin­gle face. He asks us to become whole enough to car­ry both. And in doing so, we learn that the strongest way for­ward is not by deny­ing the past, but by walk­ing into the future with it ful­ly, hon­est­ly, and brave­ly in view.

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