Book Review: The Impulse Of Po Essay, Research Paper
This is the best new book I have read this year. Kelley is by no
means a new author but this is a more sweeping work revealing the
author’s keen grasp of the philosophy of history and particularly
of Western civilization.
Kelley positions the roots of Western civilization in the Homeric
and Platonic world of ancient Greece, but unlike many Christians
and previous generations and today will brook no compromise with
this “enlightenment paganism” as a valid expression of culture. He
shrewdly observes that today’s increasing calls for a return to the
medieval synthesis of Christian and classical civilization is
misdirected: “Should we accept the argument of those who wish to
restore the displaced ideals represented by the medieval synthesis
of Christianity and Humanism? Can such salvage operations succeed?
Is it possible to remake Western civilization on the same basis
from which it first sprang up? If so, why should one accept that it
will turn out better the second time?” Kelley’s answer is
unequivocal: “There are but two options available: that which comes
from God and His revealed Word, or that which arises from man’s
sin-darkened imagination” (pp. 16-17).
Kelley observes Plato’s attempt to depersonalize the pagan religion
of the Homeric era, replacing the gods of ancient Greece with an
abstractionist rationalism whereby the entire universe would be
explained by recourse to human reason: “[I]t was more than just a
struggle between science and religion. Their [the Greek
philosophers'] interest was to shift the locus of ordering power
from the gods to the mind of man, so that the mind of man becomes
the source of order and is able to govern reality according to the
principles innate in the reasoning power of man alone” (p. 56,
emphasis in original). For Plato and the other Greek philosophers,
the creation of culture was to be exclusively the work of the
intellectually gifted, the philosopher-kings especially endowed
with rational faculties capable of reshaping all of society and
life.
Kelley moves on to discuss “The Grand Synthesis” of the medieval
world: pagan classicism and historic Christianity. Like Christopher
Dawson, Alister McGrath, and other deeply informed observers of
this era, Kelley is aware of the dominating influence of
monasticism on it. It was not merely one religio-cultural factor
among many, but in many ways was the dominating feature of medieval
life. Kelley believes the origins of the monastic ideal in certain
aspects of pagan Greek philosophy, and correctly suggests that
“Christianity’s eventual triumph over the ancient pagan world was
tragically undermined by an opposing development, the incursion
into the life of Christianity of a deeply rooted pagan outlook that
took hold as monasticism” (p. 83). The Platonic dualism, according
to which matter, material substance, and the things of this world
were considered vastly inferior to the world of eternal Forms and
Ideas, heavily influenced Christian monasticism, as did the Gnostic
heresy. Further, monasticism carried on that aspect of the pagan
Greek philosophical tradition which divided humanity into the elite
and the masses: for Plato and company, the philosopher-kings
comprised the elite, while for the monastics, those who separated
themselves from the “world” and devoted themselves exclusively to a
pious devotion to God constituted, in fact, the Christian elite.
Kelley notes, moreover, how the ancient Greek notion of man’s
coming to the fullest measure of his humanity in civic or political
association was perpetuated in the monastic ideal of the Christian
elite communing together in the monastery (p. 87). Even St.
Augustine, while recognizing many flaws of the patristic monastic
order and, certainly, the pagan heresies from which it sprang, did
not break decisively with this monastic ideal and thus bequeathed
to the later Middle Ages, along with his sound, Biblical theology,
a certain measure of monastic paganism. Kelley is surely correct,
therefore, in labeling monasticism “a false Christianity” given
virtually free reign until the Protestant Reformation (pp.
82-83).
In what is surely one of the most valuable features of the book,
Kelley outlines the provenance of ecclesiocentrism, the notion that
the institutional church should govern and dominate all of life.
Like others before him, he recognizes that the idea of the church
in the West was patterned largely after imperial Rome and that,
therefore, its origin is not Biblical but pagan (p. 116). In
addition, however, Kelley discloses that this imperial
institutionalization of the church is essentially an ideology of
power. The architects of patristic and medieval ecclesiocentrism
were interested in employing the church as an instrument in giving
meaning to life. Not so much God and the Bible, but the
institutional church itself, furnished life’s meaning. God and His
Word were remote and proximate, while the church was near and
immediate. Kelley declares that to use the language of church-state
conflict to describe the great medieval clash of religious powers
is anachronistic:
The dichotomy of church and state belongs to a later period of
history. It is out of place in the medieval view of things. Instead
the dispute was over which side, clerical or laical, of the
Ecclesia Universalis [church universal] had been granted the Divine
right legally, morally, even politically, to regiment the life and
behavior of each and every member, and to decide upon the uses to
be made of every institutional arrangement of that society. (p.
119)
The great conflict, therefore, was not between church and state,
but between which part of the church (for the emperor was surely
its leading lay member) would control all of Christian society.
Like Rushdoony, Kelley perceives that this medieval
ecclesiocentrism errs on the side of the “one” in the age-old
problem of the one and the many: the important thing in medieval
life was unity, with no room for diversity as a harmonizing
counterpart to that unity. Likewise, Kelley implicitly manifests
Abraham Kuyper’s understanding of sphere sovereignty, which was
almost totally obscure in medieval ecclesiocentrism (p. 122).
Kelley’s explanation of how the early church gradually degenerated
into such an ecclesiocentric state, including its transformation
from a Hebraic understanding to an Hellenic understanding, is
choice (pp. 128-130). Furthermore, the author observes the irony of
much of the Latin church in its treatment of the Old Testament: it
retained or perpetuated the structure of the Aaronic and Levitical
priesthood, which were designed to be replaced by the universal
priesthood of the New Testament era, while the church abandoned the
moral and judicial dimensions of the Mosaic law which were never
set aside by the New Testament. In other words, the Roman church
retained the part of the Old Testament that was designed to be
abandoned, and abandoned that part which was designed to be
retained (pp. 136-137).
Next, Kelley exposes and criticizes scholasticism, the chief
academic expression of the synthesis between Biblical Christianity
and classical culture. The scholastics attempted to maintain and
defend historic Christianity within an Aristotelian framework and
epistemology, but this synthesis pushed this version of
Christianity almost to a breaking point:
This created enormous tension, for Christianity and this pagan
culture were deeply at odds, not simply due to the fact that this
classical world of thought was a product of the old polytheism and
Christianity was monotheistic, but because they had contradicting
explanations on just about everything, most especially the claims
to possess the solution to the problem of human existence. (p.
159)
There were therefore no distinctly Christian schools, only
humanistic schools with heavy doses of Christianity tacked on for
good measure. This was possible in the Aristotelian scheme of
things, and from this Thomas Aquinas hammered out his famed (and
lethal) nature-grace distinction: that in most matters of human
life and understanding, man can rely on his own innate resources,
but in certain “higher” matters (the doctrine of the Trinity,
personal salvation, etc.), he must rely on the special revelation
of the Bible. This epistemological dualism eventually undercut
Christianity altogether, in the Italian Renaissance and,
especially, the European Enlightenment (p. 169). If Christianity
and Biblical revelation are not necessary for a correct
understanding of many areas of life and thought, why should they be
necessary for any at all?
In his chapters dealing successively with the Renaissance, the
Enlightenment, and Romanticism, Kelley addresses the “new
paganism,” the revival of ancient, pagan Greek ideas. Contrary to a
great deal of scholarly opinion, the author correctly observes that
the Renaissance was not merely instrumental, that is, it was not
merely about the recovery of ancient texts, cogent rhetoric, and
new methods of scholarly investigation (contra McGrath). Rather,
its impulse was deeply pagan, and, in particular, its program was
driven by a lust for elitist political power. Kelley thus holds
that the modern age did not begin with the modern European
Enlightenment, but with the Italian Renaissance and its distinctly
anti-Christian character (p. 197). Here he states how greatly
medievalism failed the Faith. For, “when men were ready to break
definitively from their [monastic and hierarchical] mold, no real
Christian-Biblical alternative was available to direct the Western
civilization to more genuinely Christian pathways. This void
allowed men to turn back enthusiastically to the ideas of ancient
pagan Greece and Rome, almost emptying the developing culture of
anything discernibly Christian” (p. 197-198).
The European Enlightenment carried forward the Renaissance program
by increasingly locating ultimate authority of arbitration in human
reason. While, the author asserts, modern science and all of its
benefits would have been impossible apart from Christian
presuppositions, the early modern scientists quickly abandoned any
genuinely Biblical approach to their discipline:
Everything that could not be objectively measured or numbered was
viewed as an intrusion from an alien sphere. In his quest for
knowledge, man must eliminate all that is subjective and
non-material. This included God, for God is not someone or
something that comes within the realm of tangible observation. The
only place God retained in the thought of modern scientific man,
and this lasted until the rise of evolution in the nineteenth
century, was the hypothetical place He was thought to occupy in the
necessary order of cause and effect.” (p. 228) God was simply a
“limiting concept.
The startling technological and scientific achievement of the
Enlightenment led its intellectual elite to presume that the same
successes accomplished on what were thought to be purely
rationalistic grounds would serve as a pattern for social
engineering:
[K]nowledge not only meant power over the forces (a Newtonian term)
of nature, but power over men and society. Even as man can engineer
the workings of nature to benefit his life, so, too, he can
superintend the workings of society to create better order and
harmony between human beings. Indeed, in the new Enlightenment
faith, the two were viewed as being necessarily interrelated.
Baconian optimism allowed modern man to think that he could erect a
culture and civilization from a blueprint discovered in nature by
an infallible method of reasoning. (p. 259)
Human society, like the material universe, is one great
machine.
Then came the revolt in the form of Romanticism. For if nature were
effectively reduced to a methodical, mechanized system whose
structure was immediately grasped by human reason, and if man
himself participates in this nature as an agent in reordering this
vast machine for human purposes, how can the human mind itself be
anything other than part of this machine? Late eighteenth and
nineteenth century Romanticism constituted a reaction against the
Enlightenment’s rationalistic mechanization f life. While the
Enlightenment exalted reason, Romanticism exalted intuition,
feelings, emotions, the mystical, the bizarre, the monstrous, and
even the occultic. Like the Enlightenment, Romanticism had its own
form of elitism, but the Romantic elite was the truly romantic
individual, the man of great mystical insight, emotion, and
passion. A prime example, Kelley notes, is the messianic
artist:
In the Romantic world, the artist was a man above men, a veritable
messiah-type. Romantics saw in the artist the light of the world,
the salt of the earth, the image of divinity, the reveler [sic] of
the secrets of God, the interpreter of nature, prophet, priest, and
king. All the symbols of the religious past, as re-worked in the
Romantic mind coalesced in the soul of the artistic genius. (p.
286)
Kelley correctly contends that one factor contributing to the rise
of Romanticism was the medieval “pietism” which shifted attention
from the victorious redemptive work of Christ to the emotions of
His suffering (p. 274); much Christianity became emotionally rather
than theologically oriented as a result, and it is this pietistic
strand that later contributed to a humanistic romanticism.
While nascent Romanticism stressed inhibited freedom, it soon swung
to the opposite extreme and embraced political totalitarianism.
This transformation was effected by the Romantics’ assessment of
the supposed depersonalizing effects of capitalism and the
industrial revolution on society. The Romantic ideal became
socialistic: the early romantic utopia of all men living together
in bliss and peace, sharing all resources, eschewing private
property, and so on. While Enlightenment man wanted to accomplish
his rationally oriented society by education, the Romantics were
committed to violence and revolution. In this sense, all modern
political revolutions are Romantic.
Kelley concludes by arguing that each of these phases, ancient
Greek, medieval monastic, medieval scholastic, medieval
ecclesiocentric, Renaissance, Enlightenment, and Romanticism,
constitute a decisive deviation from Biblical Christianity, and the
only hope for establishing Christian culture lies not in restoring
some version of a discredited pagan or synthetic culture of the
past, but in building our culture squarely on the written Word of
God, the Bible. Man is an inherently dominion being, and therefore
the dominion commission is inescapable. The only question is
whether man will exercise dominion in terms of the Bible, or in
terms of his own depraved ideas. Thus far, “it was possible to
conclude that man’s impulse to power, i.e., the urge to form
culture, has given shape to a cultural product that bears more the
stamp of man, the covenant-breaker, than man, the covenant-keeper”
(p. 309). Man’s only hope for cultural reclamation is explicitly
Biblical Christian culture.
This is a reverent, learned, profound, and penetrating work that
probably will not get the widespread recognition it deserves. The
evangelicals and fundamentalists are too anti-intellectual to take
it seriously. The Roman Catholics and Eastern Orthodox are too
ecclesiocentric not to be offended by its full-Biblical foundation.
Even the Reformed, from whom it should get nothing but praise, may
ignore it since it would require of them a greater responsibility
than they are willing to undertake. But it is a great book
nonetheless, and it deserves wide reading. One recommendation: I
wish the author had brought the work up to the present period by
addressing the issue of postmodernism, the leading ideology of
today’s Western elite.
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