One obvious thread that follows through the whole book is how man thinks of himself. With a Christian base, we know that we are the image-sons of God. We are His special creation. We did not happen by chance, and we are not machines. We are recipients of His grace and love. Following history through post Roman times, this idea becomes less and less. Today, people reject it all together. When did it happen, though? It certainly didn't happen over night, but how did we get from point A to point B? In this post, I hope to give a very light overview of how this happened. In each paragraph, I will be addressing different time periods. Please don't get the idea, however, that because they're in different paragraphs, they have nothing to do with each other. History builds on itself. This essay also builds on a past article I wrote about Art and History.
The Middle Ages - After the breakdown of the Roman empire, many technical things about art were forgotten. The art in catacombs was very simplistic, yet it portrayed real people in a real world. By the mid-sixth century, realism was abandoned, and artists had a preference for the fantastic and unreal. This art became characterized by symbolic mosaics and icons. One good thing about this was that the artists made their mosaics and icons as a witness to the observer and strove for more spiritual values in their art. The bad thing was that in this form of art, nature and humanity were completely set apart. This art had beauty, but in its zeal to express spiritual ideas, it missed the fact that real people in a real world which God had made were important things. Finally, a humanistic element was added. The authority of the church started taking place over the Bible. Depicted in art, we see that man is able to merit the merit of Christ. Later in the Middle Ages, the Catholic church did start using this idea to their advantage. Towards the end of the Middle Ages, philosophers, such as Thomas Aquinas, started to turn man's thinking to become even more humanistic. Thomas Aquinas relied heavily on Aristotle for his ideas. Pope Urban IV had forbidden the study of Aristotle in universities in the year of 1263, but Aquinas managed to have him once more accepted. There was a result of this acceptance. Look at Raphael's The School of Athens.
Plato, Aristotle's teacher, is the one with his finger pointed upwards. This represents how he pointed towards absolutes or ideals. Aristotle, on the other hand, is the man in the middle with his hand spread out towards the earth. This represents his emphases on particulars. Aquinas brought this emphases on individual things into the late Middle Ages' philosophy, and it set the stage for the Renaissance. Starting with man alone (as in looking only at particulars), there is a huge problem with trying to explain the meaning and ultimate meaning for these particulars. Humanism has never found a way to arrive at universals or absolutes that gives meaning to morals and even existence itself. There was some good that came from Aquinas's teaching. Before, there was little or no emphasis on the normal, everyday world. These things do have importance because they were created by God. However, his emphases on autonomous particulars did have a big effect, and it set the stage for the Renaissance.
The Renaissance - Aquinas's thinking was soon felt in art. Art had been flat and without depth. Mary and Christ were not portrayed realistically. However, there came a change. Giotto (1267-1337) started giving man and nature a place. Then humanism struck again. A strong liking for everything ancient, especially from Greece and Rome, came about, and it became clear that the human autonomy that many of the Renaissance humanists had in mind referred exclusively to the non-Christian, Greco-Roman world. Renaissance humanism steadily went toward modern humanism in that man is totally autonomous and independent. Man was placed at the center of all things. Many advances in art were made during this time as man and nature were placed higher. Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci made huge strives in the field and were both quite successful. Man was portrayed as being perfect, and his humanistic features were capitalized on. Man was proud. Man was confident. Man was independent. Eventually, there came a shift toward Plato’s ideas of universals. Leonardo da Vinci tried desperately to paint these universals, but on his humanistic base and with trying to find his universals by observing particulars, he never was able to. To sum up the Renaissance, we could say that the main thrust was confidence in man and the seeking of what could give meaning to life and what universals could give morals and life itself meaning.
The Reformation - Before starting, I must remind everyone that the Renaissance and Reformation were happening at the same time. As the Renaissance was happening in southern Europe, Reformation ideas formed in the north, but they were at the same time. The Reformation dealt with the same basic problems as the Renaissance, but the Reformation thinking gave drastically different answers. John Huss’s keeping with the true teachings of the Bible taught that man could not be independent. Man could not earn his salvation either. With a Renaissance frame of mind, Aquinas stated that man’s will was fallen but not his mind, resulting in people thinking that they could simply "think out" all problems and come to a conclusion. With the Reformed view, however, the Bible is the only final authority. I am not stating that the Reformation was perfect. It had its problems, but with its Biblical base, it had no problem explaining the meaning of individual things because it had its universals. The Renaissance taught an autonomous man, but the Reformation taught there was an infinite-personal God who cared about them. With its teaching of man’s centrality of all things, the Renaissance could come up with no meaning for life or for particulars. With a Biblical base, man has dignity because he is the image-son of God. He is not programmed. Along with man, all life had dignity, and with this teaching, all people were made equal and were all equally guilty because of the fall. Because all were equal, anyone could come to God through Christ. The Reformation both understood the greatness of man and the cruelty of man. These ideas came out in art also. Ordinary people and ordinary events were seen as being great, so artists started painting people and nature. Rembrandt was an important artist of the time. One of his paintings, Raising of the Cross (see below), shows his thoughts.
Notice the man in the middle who is raising the cross. This is Rembrandt himself. A self portrait of who he saw himself being. He is noble, but he is also cruel. He too raised the cross of Christ, along with all of us. Rembrandt’s paintings are lofty, but they are also down to earth. Of course, the Reformation didn’t bring about social or political perfection, but it did bring about a vast and unique improvement to society. Because of their views on man being fallen, they realized that government needed checks and balances. This brought opportunity for freedom in society without chaos. Look at Paul Robert’s Justice Lifts the Nations below.
This mural shows how Paul Roberts realized that man was fallen and that he needed absolutes to live by. Justice lifts the nations. Lex Rex. The law is king. This thought change of the Reformation was in northern Europe. Meanwhile, the Renaissance ideas in southern Europe were not going too well.
The Enlightenment - Coming off of Renaissance ideas, France, looking across the channel at England, saw this change that took place in England. To be quite frank, they were very impressed. They saw the problems in their society, and they saw how England had changed without little or no bloodshed. They wanted to do the same. Voltaire, a famous French philosopher, saw this "Bloodless Revolution" and wanted to model their own revolution off of it. France tried hard to reproduce the same conditions as England ended up with, but with Voltaire’s humanistic Enlightenment base, their revolution resulted only in bloodshed and chaos. France declined so much that the authoritarian rule of Napoleon Bonaparte resulted. The Enlightenment started with man absolutely, and it ended in chaos. The Enlightenment taught that man and society were perfectible. Deism was their religion. To them, God had indeed created the world, but He no longer had contact with them. With this world view, they started looking back to pre-Christian times to find meaning and value.
Modern Science Takes Off - I must pause to say that the rise of modern science was also happening at the same time as both the Reformation and the Renaissance. Early Christian scientists believed that science did not conflict with the Bible and that because of the rationality of God, every occurrence could be traced back to its antecedent. The world was created by a reasonable God.
Modern Times - First, I must be sure that everyone reading this understands that if there are no absolutes, particulars have no meaning. I am not just talking about absolutes in morals or values, I am also saying this about existence. Without absolutes, particulars become very fragmented. Modern thinking started with questioning how we know anything. Epistemology, the theory of how we know what we know, was the result. Before modern times, all non-Christian philosophers had several things in common. First of all, they believed that man was rational and could gather enough information about particulars to make universals. They also rejected all knowledge outside of man. Second, they took reason very seriously. They accepted the validity of reason and believed that with the mind, one could decide what is true and what is not. And finally, they were very optimistic. They thought that they could establish by reason what reality is, but if they failed to find it, someone later would. Coming into modern times, a new shift took place to make modern man what he is. Science shifted to everything being in a machine. This pushed God the edges of their system, and it also equally left no place for man. Man as man disappeared, and instead, a form of determined, behavioristic machine took its place. Cause and effect was applied to all science. In this closed system, there was no place for morals, and man became part of this machinery. Life became pointless and without meaning. This all set the stage for Darwinism which stated that nature was all about survival to the fittest. Ideas about reason leading to pessimism also came about during this time. Thus, a mad scramble to find optimistic answers to meaning and value outside of reason was started. Kierkegaard (1813-1855) stated that non-reason is equal to faith and optimism in the same way that reason is equal to pessimism. Modern man became a man of dichotomy, and there came a separation of meaning and values. If man is a machine, there is no longer any place for a loving, personal God, freedom, or significance. However, man, still being created in the image of God, cannot possibly live like machines. They must go against reason to come to a conclusion that says they can. Jean-Paul Sartre (1905-1980) stated that in reason, everything is absurd. The will can act in any direction, so one should authenticate oneself by will in this purposeless world. In other words, one should do something to distinguish themselves from the world. This could be going as far as committing murder, or it could be volunteering at a nursing home. Reason is not involved with this, and nothing can show which direction the will should take. However, Jean-Paul Sartre could not even live with these values. He signed the Algerian Manifest which declared the Algerian War to be dirty, thus assigning a moral value to an event. He made a value judgment, not a leap of non-reason. He also later came to the conclusion that an individual may have a "final experience" that encourages them to think life has meaning. This final experience cannot be put into words, and it goes against reason. Aldous Huxley (1894-1963) proposed that drugs be given to healthy people to help them find "answers" in their own heads. This important drug was going to be called Soma because Hindu gods took this drug to keep them contented. Later, he openly advocated the use of drugs. This emphasis on drugs brought many rock groups into being. Hinduism and Buddhism, being introduced into the Western World, were the next leap into non-reason. These Eastern religions grope for a non-rational meaning to life and values. This spread over Western culture very quickly after Huxley’s emphasis on drugs. People tried the "drug trip," but it soon turned to an Easter religious trip where one would seek truth in one’s head with no reason. A period of psychedelic rock sprung from this because people wanted to find the experience without the drugs. The word God became the word God. No content could be put into it. George Harrison, the former Beatles’ guitarist wrote "My Sweet Lord." Many people thought he had turned to Christianity, but they soon heard the word "Krishna", a Hindu name for a god, being chanted in the background. There was no content in the name God, just a religious feeling or experience. There was no distinction between good and evil. One manifestation of God in the Hindu religion is Kali, a female god with fangs and skulls around her neck. Cruelty became equal with non-cruelty. God started to be used only for manipulation. Stepping to art, we come to the Impressionists, some great ones being Monet, Renoir, Pissaro, Sisley, and Degas. They only painted what was brought to the eye, yet they questioned the light rays even hitting their eyes. Thus, their painting have a rather dreamy, hazy look. With his modern thinking, Monet came to the logical conclusion that reality becomes dreams. Post-Impressionist painters such as Paul Cezanne and Van Gough tried to solve these problems by finding a way back to reality and absolutes. They too failed.
Cezanne reduced nature to basic geometric forms to search for the universals to tie all particulars together. This gave nature a very fragmented, broken appearance. Picasso brought together the ideas of fragmentation, the noble savage, and African masks, which was becoming popular, and painting with these ideas. This marked the birth of "modern art." Marcel Duchamp’s Nude Descending a Staircase (see bellow) carried the fragmentation idea further.
In fact, the human being completely disappeared. This chance and fragmenting idea led to the absurdity of all things. Jackson Pollock (1912-1956) painted with the express purpose of showing all things to be chance. In one painting, he put a canvas horizontally on the floor and dripped paint from cans which were suspended and swinging from the ceiling.
Even this shows that he could not live by those principles. Even the swinging can of paint to create a picture by chance is going to follow universal laws of this earth. In a way, instead of this piece of art being art, it is anti-art. In the field of music, Schoenberg used his music for the vehicle of modern thought. He rejected ritual and invented the 12-tone row. There is perpetual variation, yet no resolution. In pop culture, music gave the younger generation a very fragmented view of the world. Films, seen by so many people, also showed this, especially from the ‘60s. Movies from this time show what happens when man tries to live like a machine and in non-reason. These ideas spread from mainland Europe to England and then to the United States. A generation gap took form because the older group of people from the United States still held to their old ideas of morality. However, the younger generation was being educated with this kind of philosophy. They then realized that their parents’ values were founded on nothing but dead tradition. As a Christian-dominated consensus weakened, two values were taken up: personal peace and affluence. Personal peace is the idea that you don’t want to be bothered with anything. You just want your own peace, and you don’t want to be bothered by anyone else’s problems. It does not matter whether hundreds have died in a natural disaster. You just hope it does not affect you. Affluence is just how people want more and more. They will do anything to get more. These two ideas are dominant in our society today. In the early ‘60s, many students questioned why they should be educated. They were told that they would have a better chance of making more money. They then asked why they would want to make more money? The answer? Well, so that they could send their kids to school. No wonder they revolted. To them, life was perpetual. It had no meaning. Soon, drugs were brought into the picture. Again, drugs (this time LSD) were thought of to introduce into water. The hippie movement believed that this was the answer, and off they went. They revolted against their parents’ ideas of personal peace and affluence. They wanted more to life, but drugs were not the answer. The optimism of drugs ended when key people overdosed and ended up dying. This generation ended with the same two values. Personal peace and affluence. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Homes, Jr., stated that law was based on experience. He also said that truth is just whatever the majority vote happens to be. Frederick Moore Vinson said, "Nothing is more certain in modern society than the principle that there are no absolutes." All is relative and comes from experience. There are no absolutes. These were the kinds of ideas that were at play. The only absolute allowed was the absolute insistence that there were no absolutes. They tried to create the perfect law constructed on nature, but this didn’t work either. Nature is both cruel and non-cruel. There began a group of "special people" - the elite - who would get to decide the arbitrary absolutes, and people were perfectly willing to give up their liberties step by step in order to pursue personal peace and affluence. The authoritarian state came to fill the loss of Christian principles. The idea of determinism started to become dominant. With this, people can blame anything a person does on the way the environment conditioned them. Society can bring what society wants, so all they had to do was construct the right environment to get people to "behave." The people who manipulate society have quite a bit of influence. In fact, they control what is taught in schools down to the lowest grades. Genetic engineering was brought into place to "help society." People accept the idea of manipulation because they have no absolute laws. They think that what is gives no clue to what it should be. Thus, it is quite easy to impose arbitrary absolutes on people. Arthur Koestler suggested that a chemical element be developed to bring man to tranquility. He also suggested that the community put this special chemical, along with a birth control pill in drinking water to force the community to accept it. There is a problem, however. Who is to be the one that controls all these controllers? The elite, of course. This group of elitists will be king. The law being king will become the king being law. Another way of manipulating is through subliminal influence. This is a way in which a message will be flashed so quickly you can’t see it throughout a film. By the time the film is over, all you can think about is what that message said. Though this way of manipulation is illegal, with arbitrary laws, it could become legal if it looked like society would benefit by it. The media is also a huge way for manipulation to get across the crowds. The media has a certain way of telling you only what they want you to think about a certain situation and leaving out other "non-important" facts. Overall, some are uncomfortable at best with the situation of our society, but most will not go to any trouble because they are just pursuing their personal peace and affluence. Here is a very good example out of Cornerstone Cirriculum's catologue from 1998 on how art change from the Renaissance/Reformation to modern times.
From the Renaissance and Reformation period:
From the Impressionist period:
From the Post-Impressionist period:From modern times:What Pollock might have painted:All of this has happened because of the ideas and philosophies behind it. In Francis Schaeffer’s How Should We Then Live?, there is a rendition of the twenty-third psalm that sums up what has happened in the progression of humanistic thinking throughout the ages.
They began- I am my shepherd
Then- Sheep are my shepherd
Then-Everything is my shepherd
Finally-Nothing is my shepherd
So, who are you? Are you the image-bearer of God who has something to live for, or are you one to follow humanistic thinking and to reject the fact that there is a loving God whose image we are created in? Though, all these thoughts about society can be quite depressing, we must remember to live by faith, living into who we are in Christ and remembering that He is ultimately in control.
~~~
Francis A. Schaeffer. How Should We Then Live?. Illinois: Crossway Books, 1976
6 comments:
Recently, I finished reading Francis Schaeffer's How Should We Then Live?. Though I found it to be a little depressing to realize how society is deteriorating, I also found it interesting to see how much the thoughts and philosophies of a time determine what happens.
Nice art. I doubt these paintings could be completed in 27 minutes.
Within secular society many persons have an idea of how many things work, but do not have a reasonable handle on the philosophical underpinnings and assumptions that lead to a secular worldview.
Aquinas stated that man’s will was fallen but not his mind, resulting in people thinking that they could simply "think out" all problems and come to a conclusion. With the Reformed view, however, the Bible is the only final authority. I am not stating that the Reformation was perfect.
That would be a mistake as the will works through the spirit/mind. As persons are fallen and corrupt this would include the body and spirit/mind, and therefore the will would be corrupted. In my PhD, I speculate a Reformed based chain that starts with the human nature which is now corrupted, consciousness, desires and motives leading to wilful decisions and actions. All things are willed by God and therefore God in a sense is the first cause in this human chain and influences persons as he wills. The human will makes choices and persons commit actions influenced by God within one's corrupted nature. The Holy Spirit can regenerate and influence persons to do God's will obediently as opposed to disobediently when left to the corrupted nature alone. God can also influence the unregenerate for his purposes. The human will to have any freedom at all must make choices without being forced or coerced, and I reason persons have this type of freedom.
This emphasis on drugs brought many rock groups into being.
Drugs are an unfortunate cultural aspect of rock music. One cannot likely go to a major rock concert without smelling marijuana. Even still a minority of rock musicians are very skilled. As with studying philosophy and theology, one must be able to take the good from a person or group and filter out the rest. The Beatles have had some very good music, but an appreciation of their music should not equal an appreciation of their worldview. Sadly, too many fans do not separate musical appreciation from worldview and are sucked into wrong philosophy and at times religious thought. A Christian must be mature and educated enough to filter out the negative aspects of non-Christian culture. As a fan of the Beatles later music and someone who has studied secular philosophy and liberal theology, I must state the latter would have been potentially much more damaging to me if I was not guided by God. This is because the philosophy and theology was presented in a more convincing professional way than were the Beatles amateurish ramblings.
Russ:)
I knew there was some good reason why I never liked Schoenberg--no resolution! Man...I love resolution! I also still like "Nude Descending a Staircase", even if it is a bit "absurd" :-)
Seriously Abster--nice job! This was a very good summation of a very good book. I read this a long time ago (and yes...I did finish it :-) and I remember thoroughly enjoying it. I found your essay to be right on the mark.
Although some of Schaeffer's conclusions are somewhat simplistic (he'll never be mistaken for Gordon Clark or Herman Dooyeweerd), he had a very good grasp on the nature of Man and Man' attempt to "reach" God through his own intellect and power (see Babel!). I think Schaeffer had a keen eye with regard to culture and the effects of various philosophies that transform it.
One note however: Schaeffer seems to put Aquinas in a negative light; and while theologically and philosophically there can be much to disagree with, he was a (the?) major catalyst in promoting and progressing Christian academia. He's had a very positive influence in the Christian world and its legitimate place in philosophical and scientific inquiry.
Good job!
"Within secular society many persons have an idea of how many things work, but do not have a reasonable handle on the philosophical underpinnings and assumptions that lead to a secular worldview."
And that's why I think history is boring for so many people. If history is about just memorizing a lot of facts, of course it's going to be boring. So many people don't understand how outward appearances have ideas that they come from.
Thanks for the comment.
"Seriously Abster--nice job! This was a very good summation of a very good book. I read this a long time ago (and yes...I did finish it :-) and I remember thoroughly enjoying it. I found your essay to be right on the mark."
Thanks, Jason. I realize that short answers don't always completely fill out every detail (I don't think there's any way you could not know that at our church), so things such as Aquinas doing a lot of good for the church were unfortunately left out. Thank you for bringing this up.
"Although some of Schaeffer's conclusions are somewhat simplistic (he'll never be mistaken for Gordon Clark or Herman Dooyeweerd),..."
Yeah, I've kind of come to that conclusion about him too. He is very good for reaching a generation that needs simplistic answers (exactly what he was trying to do). However, like you said, he does seem to leave out some important facts. I've been reading some of his other books, and he really emphasizes the Judeo-Christian foundation of our law system, which is important and there are huge implications from it, but he can't really seem to get past that into the fact that Christians are apart of the Kingdom of God (haha! ties in with your 4th of July post). Everything is about keeping our country Christian (which there really isn't anything wrong with) and feeling like somehow God has some obligation to bless us (which there is something wrong with).
Abbey,
That is a long article, but an exceptionally good one.
Is that article directly quoted from the book, or did you write that in your own words, after reading the book? If that was all in your own words, that is impressively amazing. But I'm guessing that some of it is in your own words, and some of it is from the book?
I like the paintings that you posted. Well, the first 3, anyway. And I really like the "happy faces" showing how art has changed from the Renaissance/Reformation to modern times. That is very creative and well-done. I'm not sure I understand the very first one, though, where the face looks like it has flower petals partially around it. I'm not sure what those "flower petals" represent.
Well, I actually took notes/made an outline while I was reading the book. I wrote the article off of that. For the most part, things are in my own words, but I'm sure I also used exact wording from the book. The concepts are definitely from the book. No way I'm smart enough to think of things like that...
I'm guessing the "flower petals" were actually supposed to look like a collar. The illustration is just supposed to be cute, so I'm not sure it has any profound meaning. I think it was just representing how man was painted how he was.
Thanks for the comment.
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