Perspective

Swiatowid or Jesus Christ

We are people of the modern world – the technological age. Nothing in the world or in space is unconquerable. There is no limit to our abilities or possibilities. Even human life is in our control.

Swiatowid was an ancient Slavic god. For many reasons this ancient god is applicable to today – perhaps more applicable than he was to the people of the ‘fields’ the Polonians of 1,039 years ago.

Swiatowid was not the greatest god in the pantheon of Slavic gods and goddesses. Studies have shown that the Polonians did not even worship stone gods, but were deists – believing that the gods were represented in every aspect of the world: people, trees, animals, and nature. It is thought that Swiatowid was created in response to the Christianization that occurred beginning a little before the baptism of Mieszko I in 966. The pagan believers needed a representation of a god that was bigger, better, and stronger than the Christian God.

Who was Swiatowid? Literally he was the god that sees the whole world. Swiatowid had four faces, two male and two female. The four faces on a stone column looked to the four directions, north, south, east and west. He saw it all and was, to his believers, all knowing and all powerful.

The modern age has adopted this ancient Slavic god as its standard-bearer. In today’s world it is easy to know and see all, even to be all. We live in the age of globalization and globalism.

We have the conveniences of the Internet, modern communication systems, mobile and satellite phones. We can be in touch with the news and events of distant places. Modern transportation has bridged the gap. In a few hours we can be in Europe, Asia, or the Near East. We can go to the store and buy cookies from Poland, vodka from Finland, art from Africa, technology from Asia. Even space flight can be made available to the average person.

All of this pales in comparison to the high level technological and medical advances that are to come. Among the advances we easily recognize are nanotechnology, cloning, stem-cell research, organ transplant and replacement, and the use of living cells as containers for vast amounts of data. Science offers us choices without conditions. I can choose who may live, for how long, and then I can choose when to die.

Two or three generations ago our immigrant grandparents and great-grandparents kissed their families goodbye. The opportunity to see them again or even to communicate effectively was slim. A young woman leaving her rural village may have been saying her final goodbye to her parents. Today we live in a society where there is rarely a final goodbye. We can go back and forth as we see fit. Distance, cost, and time are of little concern.

Have we become the children of Swiatowid? This idea should be a cause for reflection and personal concern. Each of us takes advantage of the conveniences of modern life. No one wants to go back to a time that did not offer the benefits we enjoy. This is a false nostalgia. We all want the pill to keep our cholesterol low and our blood pressure down. We would rather spend time with our children and grandchildren then wash clothes by hand or shovel coal into a furnace. We do appreciate what we have – although we forget to be thankful on occasion. Maybe we loose perspective.

Our perspective is the key fact – the essential element. Do we throw ourselves at the feet of Swiatowid or do we call upon the man on the cross? What is my choice?

On Good Friday we Catholics kiss the cross of Jesus. Some of us kiss each of His wounds – His head, hands, feet, and side, a beautiful act of tenderness and compassion. This is an action that we need to repeat daily – an action of love. Regardless of our amassing unlimited power – we cannot truly love; we cannot truly live, without setting the world aside – setting Swiatowid aside for Jesus.

We can see the world and experience it – but we cannot know the world without looking through the lens of Christian faith. It is possible to accept everything our minds and hands create. However, an acceptance of everything without judgment is an illusion. Jesus showed us a life that was based on the two greatest commandments – love of God and love of neighbor. A world without these uniquely Christian elements will lead us to death.

Yes, Swiatowid is more applicable today if we set aside Christ and choose him. If we choose to worship a god of stone – a god out of our own hands – we will miss the redemption that is universal and eternal. This is the redemption offered to us through our repentance and faith, and as the founder of the PNCC stated, in our becoming regenerated.

Jesus was not a creation in response to outside influences. Jesus in fact is God, co-eternal with the Father and the Holy Spirit. The entire Old Testament was a progression from creation to Jesus. Like Advent, it was a preparation time. The Old Testament revealed Him albeit indirectly, pointed to Him, prophesied about Him, and was fulfilled by His coming. Twelve days after Christmas we celebrate the Feast of the Epiphany, which is God’s revelation to the nations in the form of the Three Kings. Jesus is God’s revelation to humanity and every revelation throughout history is done in the person of Jesus, the Son.

There are of course many examples of the Lord speaking and interacting with men and women in the Old Testament, of the pre-figuring of Jesus as the Passover Lamb, and in the words and prophesies of Isaiah which are especially clear to us.

This revelation is more than a man named Jesus who lived 2,005 years ago. Jesus did not begin and end in a span of 33 years. He is eternal and His message, His word, His way of life, His Spirit – the Holy Spirit is present, available, and completely applicable today.

Jesus and Swiatowid are choices. Jesus does not exclude or reject the world – for He moved upon the world as it was created, as the voice of the Father. It is really about choice. Jesus for the sake of my salvation and the salvation of the world or Swiatowid for the sake of the world alone. As for me and my family we choose Jesus.