"Jordan" as a Cultural Symbol Today: FromSacred Geography to the Spirit of Ecology
Introduction: The Evolution of the Symbol
"Jordan" is the traditional Russian name for a hole cut in the shape of a cross to perform the Great Water Baptism ritual on the feast of the Epiphany. Historically, it was a local but powerful sacred center, reproducing in the geographical landscape the place of Christ's baptism in the River Jordan. Today, in the context of secularization, urbanization, and an ecological crisis, this symbol is undergoing a complex transformation. From a purely religious ritual object, "Jordan" is turning into a multi-layered cultural code where tradition, national identity, modern challenges, and the search for spirituality intersect.
Sacred Geography and Public Theology
In its original meaning, "Jordan" is an embodied liturgy in ice and water. It creates a "powerful place" where there is none physically, symbolically transferring the Palestinian sanctuary to the Russian winter reality. This is an act of sanctifying space, turning any river or lake into "Jordan" for the duration of the festival.
Public Theology: In pre-revolutionary Russia, especially in capitals, the ritual at the tsar's "Jordan" (at the Winter Palace in St. Petersburg, at the Uspensky Cathedral in Moscow) was a state-church event, legitimizing power through participation in the sacred. Today, this aspect has greatly weakened, but it remains as a public statement of the Church's presence in public space. Culturally, it is perceived as part of the "traditional" Russian winter landscape, an element of national color.
Symbol of Purification and Renewal: For believers, immersion in the icy "Jordan" is an act of ascetic struggle and communion with the sanctified element. In the mass consciousness, even distant from the church, this action is often associated with the idea of "cleansing from sins," "strengthening the spirit and body," symbolically washing away the old before the new year (by the o ...
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