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An Age In Thrall To Enthusiasm Print E-mail
Opinion - Guest Columns
Peter Sellick   
Sunday, 15 June 2008 18:00
An age in thrall to enthusiasm.
Subiaco, WA, Australia. There is something within us that signals that we are in the presence of an enthusiast. I had that feeling while watching Andrew Denton interview Jeff Kennett. After stalling question after question Jeff launched into a promo about depression and the organisation Beyond Blue (depression initiative).
 
This kind of behaviour is embarrassing because it breaks the norms of conversation. This is why we quickly move away from someone we meet at a party who displays enthusiast tendencies, there is no room for conversation, let alone a quiet critical discussion, you are there only to receive the message.
 
The historian John Pocock, in an article on Enlightenment England, refers to a gravestone said to record that a certain clergyman “served his Maker for forty years without the smallest sign of enthusiasm”. Admittedly, he also says that this may be a piece of historian’s folklore since he has never seen the said grave stone or possesses any reference to it or authentication.
 
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Still, it is an interesting inscription that sounds odd in our day. For our response on reading it is that this was a slur on a lazy and careless clergyman and we wonder who would be so uncharitable as to place such a slur on his headstone. The explanation is that “enthusiasm” in 17th and 18th century England was “the belief in personal inspiration, in the infusion, in-pouring or inbreathing of the Holy Spirit to the psyche of the individual”. This movement was thought to be a danger to religion and to society. Hence the inscription was not a slur but praise for resisting this noxious idea that threatened to overthrow church and society.
 
There had been outbreaks of enthusiasm on the continent after the reformation that wrought havoc to the civil society. Closer to home, the period of the Protectorate under Cromwell, which followed the regicide of Charles I and during which the power of the bishops was cancelled, saw a hotbed of gathered communities and sects that, in the absence of Episcopal authority claimed to be energised by the Spirit of God.
 
Pocock surmises that the Enlightenment in England was in part a response to the lawlessness so produced and that that movement produced a highly intellectual religious culture in which God could be imputed but never encountered. The result was the laicisation of English life as referred to in a previous article on Jane Austin and the substitution of the above encounter with theistically sanctioned morality complete with the threat of punishment in the afterlife.
 
Pocock states that “It is this self deification of the auto-intoxicated mind that gives enthusiasm its terrible power; while enthusiasm lasts, says Hume, the normal operations of history are suspended.”
 
It is clear that much of the present day antipathy towards religion of all stripes, especially since 9-11, is directed against this kind of religiosity. Fundamentalist Christians in America can believe in angels, disbelieve the theory of evolution, long for the end of the world and trust in faith healing. Enthusiasm is “the worship of the godhead in the ideas that the human mind formed concerning it, and then disastrously supposed to be the godhead itself, working within the mind, inspiring and possessing it.”
 
So enthusiasm is not merely intense emotion, although it may be accompanied by that, it is essentially an intellectual phenomenon.
 
Abraham Heschel reminds us that the Greeks understood enthusiasm as a “divine seizure”, as the state of being filled with the god, enthusias, in the original sense of the word enthos: having god in oneself.
 
The problem for church and society in this is the problem of discernment, which is the same problem that writers had in the Old Testament discerning true from false prophets. It is also the phenomenon that makes selection of candidates for Christian ministry a minefield, not to mention the selection of candidates for public life. Enthusiasm often masks ability.
 
Enthusiasm has a long history in religion from the Greek bacchanalian cults, to the societies of prophets recorded in the Old Testament, to post reformation anabaptists and in our day the charismatic movement. Indeed the new mega-churches pitch their worship with the calculated intent of producing an ecstatic experience for those who attend. The deadly mix occurs when enthusiasm mixes with passion.
 
Enthusiasm was deemed dangerous in the religious realm because it promised a short cut to the divine, that is, a short cut that ignored the doctrines of the Church and the benefit of clergy. This movement is an outcome of antidogmatism that was discussed on these pages two months ago. Civil and church authorities rightly saw that it is a dangerous thing, get it wrong and you could find yourself and your children drinking the Kool Aid laced with cyanide. Get it wrong and you could find your life making no sense at all or flying a plane into the world trade center.
 
The insistence on orthodoxy and the punishment of heretics in previous times was motivated by a desire to protect both the individual and society from getting it wrong. Our understanding that religion is a matter of individual choice would have been incomprehensible in a previous age because it opened the way to heterodox belief that was an actual danger to the believer and society. This is because heresy (from the Greek root for choice) was understood to be a corruption of the truthful vision of the world represented by orthodoxy.
 
This would be like trying to design an airplane without knowledge of aerodynamics. Orthodoxy was the road map of life along which the believer could safely travel. Enthusiasm was seen as a threat to this order ordained by God for man’s own good.
 
It might not surprise the reader that enthusiasm is not the exclusive domain of the religious.
 
The latest crop of Christian persecutors display all of the marks of enthusiasm as Edmund Burke noted: “These atheist fathers have a bigotry of their own and they have learned to write against monks with the spirit of a monk.”
 
Dawkins et al steadfastly refuse to have conversations with professional theologians in order to preserve their distorted view of the faith. They have a mission, to expose all religion as ignorance and superstition. They qualify as enthusiasts because they are motivated by this one idea and are deaf to any discussion about whether this idea fits all religious phenomena.
 
The inscription on that gravestone flagged something that is increasingly prevalent in our own time, not only in religious services but in the mainstream of our public life. It seems that our society privileges those individuals who demonstrate enthusiasm, perhaps mistaken for passion. You will often hear in the media that someone has a passion for such and such or you will hear individuals pronounce that they have a passion for a certain public good. This is the language of enthusiasm wedded with emotion. We are only given credibility if we are emotionally involved in promoting our particular cause.
 
This can be the road to celebrity as Steven Irwin must have known at some level of consciousness. We love the enthusiast, we love that they are passionate, it is even better than that other weasel word of Don Watson’s “commitment” because it comes from somewhere that we can trust, the gut.
 
So beware of the person in public life, or the salesmen who boast of their passion or enthusiasm. Why, we ask, would they need to do that? What does it mask? The English enlightenment may have been a response to enthusiasm but modernity has produced its own secular version embodied in the myth of eternal progress and eternal improvement.
 
We will hear about “agents for change”, of men and women “making a difference”. Strategic plans will be laced with the latest buzz words: excellence, innovation, best practice, bench mark, international, ground breaking. To what do these words refer? Is this not just the language of enthusiasm used to make us all feel powerful?
NotePeter Sellick exchanged comments on an earlier version of this article:

Romany:

Peter — Don't you consider perhaps that with this article you run the risk of being accused of conflating the etymology and common usage of a word in a rather confusing manner?

While the derivation of words is a subject about which I am, personally, extremely "enthusiastic" I doubt one person in ten would thereby assume I was filled with the rapture of the Holy Spirit. In fact no-one who knew me personally would consider the thought at all.

Yes, I agree word histories are fascinating but, by the same token, one could entitle an article "Beware of nice people" and only a handful of persons would have any idea of why on earth they should be.

Just as fascinating, I consider, is the emergence of new words or the changing of word meaning within our own lifetimes. In this particular case, I think that a study of the word "hype" would get the point across in a manner that would be inclusive to all.

Personally, I encourage enthusiasm — in the commonly accepted meaning of the word — as an antidote to the increasing apathy that holds so many in thrall. It would indeed protect the apathetic from falling victim to the kind of hype which you are discussing, don't you think?

Peter Sellick:

Romany — Of course you are right about “conflating the etymology and common usage of a word in a rather confusing manner?” is just what I have done. That might be why I had so much trouble writing the article and my dissatisfaction with the result. I seem to remember James Barr writing something about the mistake of taking old meanings of words and transferring them to present day usage. Given this criticism I do find it useful at times to make these comparisons (I did it twice in the one article) because some light is shed on how far we have come. I think that is why the gravestone is so interesting. Enthusiasm used to be a pejorative but now it is the reverse.

I have been reminded through reading Charles Taylor’s new book, A Secular Age, that most philosophies through the ages had a dim view of the passions, seeing them as illusory, over against the cold light of reason. But then you have the danger of that cold light that has led us into horrors. The history of the West has been, to some extent, getting the balance right, a rationality that is balanced with compassion. But I still see the late modern obsession with passion or enthusiasm a bit of a worry.
 

Peter Sellick

Peter Sellick is a Senior Research Officer ( Physiology), at The University of Western Australia and Deacon Associate at St Andrew's Anglican Church (Subiaco, WA, AUS). Sellick's signed articles contain his own opinions and do not necessarily convey an official position of TS-Si, its partners, or affiliates.

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Last Updated on Sunday, 28 June 2009 20:15