There is a standard idea in the West that one of the
objectives of the Christian Church, because it was an objective of Jesus
himself, is to make the world a better place.
I submit that this is in fact recent by historical measures, dating to
the Reformation perhaps, and not really gaining steam as a practice of the
churches until it started ramping up in the Anglosphere.
I have mentioned before that Matthew 25, the parable of the
sheep and the goats, does not really talk about improving society, and may be
referring primarily to care of other Christians (“my brethren”) rather than
even individuals in general. Helping
them is not excluded, and over the first few centuries of the Church that
indeed started to happen, but the NT focus is on a new tribe, a new
people. So too the improvement of
society isn’t incompatible with Christian practice, but the focus is
different. The distinction may be more
important than I recognised, a potential stumbling block for both left and
right.
I have wondered how this idea wandered in and grew. It is clearly well in place by the time the
Methodists start reforming the institutions of English and American society in the early 19th
C. I can’t trace back to a time when one
can say that nothing in the church connects with a vision of improving society, but it is largely
absent from the thinking before 1500.
The focus of charitable work is enormously on individuals, on souls, and
not on building a nice place everyone can be comfortable to live in and proud
to be a part of. Such is not only a just by-product, it is not even a
frequently-mentioned by-product.
Since exploration and colonisation of the world by Christian
Europeans, there was a hearkening back to Old Testament rules for
societies. Settlers saw their situation
as related to that of the tribes of Israel – some indeed stated quite
explicitly that they were a new replacement for same – and tried to fit the
concepts of in-group justice in OT Palestine to their society. As it wasn’t a bad set of rules, and lots of
Christians have been quite literal, there has been a lot of pushing and shoving
over the years exactly what of those strictures applies now, either in specific
or in principle. Is this God’s order for
us as well? YMMV.
So Jacques Barzun’s explanation that this is a Greco-Roman,
not a Judeo-Christian idea struck me with some force. Again, I wonder why it did
not strike me with force the first time I read From Dawn To Decadence.
Perhaps I thought this was but an attempt by a secular scholar to steal credit
from the church and give it to the humanists. Perhaps I was looking for
something else while reading that section.
Either way, I did not see it, but I noticed it this time. The idea of improving society – for the
Greeks, the city they lived in, for the Romans, a more mixed idea of demonstrating
superiority and keeping the peace in the heart of the empire – was revived in
the Renaissance and grafted on to Christian thinking. It was certainly never incompatible with it,
but it was not prominent until then.
In Christianity, improving society was secondary; care of
the individual was primary.
The ideal of a comfortable and orderly place to live is
Confucian as well, and the grand public works projects in the cities of the
ancient Middle East and the Mayans suggest that this idea rather naturally
occurs to wiser people as they become prosperous. Apart from any milk of human kindness or
personal generosity, they find that life is just better when those around you
are also doing well. There is less
strife, more politeness, and gradually increasing prosperity. It is an earthly
wisdom, not a revelation. The
Scandinavian nations have increased in this attitude of group good and group
order dramatically even as they became more secular. Helping the poor even when it doesn’t do you
any good – even when it may cost you a fair bit of discomfort – is the
specifically Christian idea.
The argument that this has been a net gain for Christian
societies in the West seems overwhelming.
Grafting Athens onto Jerusalem has been a winner. Both would build hospitals, for example, and
the motives might be seen as complementary rather than competitive. But I think there are hidden costs, and as
the church falters in the West, we begin to see those now. There is the rather obvious
loss of focus on New Jerusalem in favor of Old Saybrook. That comfort here
distracts us from heaven is a Christian cliché at this point, especially at
Christmas as Santa pushes Jesus out of the manger. (Santa is now being pushed
out himself, in favor of God-knows-what.)
Yet it is a cliché we never seem to do anything about. We just chirp about it from time to time, to
show we remember the lesson. This
world is not my home, we embroider and frame in our comfortable houses, or
sing about accompanied by expensive musical instruments over even more
expensive sound systems. I’m not trying
to kick anyone in particular here. Such
contrast is so deeply embedded in our culture at this point that I don’t see
how we change it. Even the accusers are
guilty, and sometimes they know it.
More subtly, but more perniciously, the value of the
individual is eroded. This may seem
strange, even impossible, for an idea that came into especial prominence in the
Renaissance and then the Enlightenment, both distinguished for exalting the
value of the individual. But both those
movements, however much they purported to be about indivuals, were in the end
about the redistribution of power among groups within society. This had enormous practical benefit to many
people who had no prospects and no voice before, so that their individual worth
in society was indeed increased. But it
increased in conjunction with their group’s rise, not their own.
Thirdly, the practical balance that actually has resulted is
to look at individuals as part of groups.
That is not much part of the NT, but very much part of politics in the
West, including America. Not only have we not been able to shake that, it may
be increasing. I can’t see that as
entirely positive.
It was the best that could be managed at the time, and
perhaps for any society at any time, so I don’t fault it too heavily. More,
many more, individuals got to be valuable.
Some thought worthless at least got some status in our societies, which
is not at all the case in most of the world to this day. But that is not the same as all individuals
being valuable. They said that, but it wasn’t what happened. The Enlightenment was ultimately a class of
people who did better under the new boss.
When you look at it all from a distance, any movement toward
improving society is necessarily a movement away from the individual. We allow a great deal of that and approve of
it because it improves our individual lives to be made to give money to have
fire departments and courts of law. But
societies which focus entirely on the their own improvement tolerate less and
less deviation by the individual. On the
Christian Right, the America-as-Christian-Nation crowd, it is a set of cultural
values that are seen as belonging to the good of society, the founding society
and the majority society, which the individual resists at his peril. To the Christian Left’s
Jesus-was-pretty-much-a-redistributionist crowd, it is the individual’s goods
that are seen as belonging essentially to society.
In both cases I am trading in political stereotypes that are
not entirely fair. Yet they are both
more true than not. The good of society
underlies both group’s actions. Take
that away, and what do either have to talk about? We don’t see that the very ground they are
standing on to pursue their competitive visions of society is entirely earthly
terrain. It is an assumption both make
that neither sees. In neither case is it a clear NT idea.
I like how it has worked out for me and mine as
individuals. I’m not seeing any
organisation of society I’d plan to move to instead. But I am seeing a new hidden cost. I don’t see clearly where it’s all headed.
3 comments:
I'm not quite sure. It seems as though some of the OT prophets pronounced collective punishment coming for collective guilt, and "woe to those who frame mischief by statute". This suggests that at least the seed of "improving society", or at least making it less evil, was planted long ago.
We've made perfecting society an idol, of course. I love Miller's description of us "forever building Edens--and kicking them apart in berserk fury because somehow it isn't the same."
I don't disagree. But the OT lessons were for improving life for that one tribe, and the point in the NT seems to be that we transfer tribes. Not much mention of outsiders' societies. Their individuals are welcome to become part of our new one is about it.
The idea did not remain contained. Extending not only courtesy but even charity to all the poor, not just one's own, shows up even in the 2nd C, and gradually expands. Things get confused after the 4th C, for with secular power, all the poor are now "one's own."
One way to make a better world is to separate the sheep from the goats maybe? And keep the wolves at bay.
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