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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 03, 2010
Ivan Illich
Since Christmas is probably still fresh in everyone's minds, I thought I'd post an old book review of mine about the lasting and, in this case, corrupted legacy of Christianity.

I begin with a question.

Ever wondered why the world, especially our Western world, is so aggressive, so sure of itself, and yet so utterly confused and seemingly hopeless? Well, according to the late Ivan Illich, controversial and excommunicated Catholic priest and author, it’s due to a corruption or perversion of Christian values.

In The Rivers North of the Future: The Testament of Ivan Illich as told to David Cayley (Anansi, 2005) CBC broadcaster and said author David Cayley interviews Illich and explores his theories, which center on the idea that “the corruption of the best is the worst,” meaning Christ’s message of the primacy of Love was perverted by the Church into the historical horror show we’re all familiar with. In still another way, you can’t have something as Evil as the Church until you have something as Good as Jesus' message.

Plain examples of Church hypocrisy are The Crusades, The Inquisition and The Witch Trials, but Illich’s argument is not about that. Instead he shows how the spectacular mismanagement of the New Testament led to Western secularization, liberal individualism, and finally to post-modern disorientation.

Whatever your opinion is of religion it’s impossible to deny the historical influence of Christianity. But is it possible, as so many of us assume, that we live in a mostly secular, post-Christian society? Have we really shaken off the burdens of arbitrary Church power and organized religion? Or has Christian cultural dominance merely changed form? Illich would say Yes, and we’re left with a perverted, corrupted, and downright confused version of Christ’s intended message, informing every part of Western culture’s institutions, law, art, literature, medicine, technology, citizenship, bureaucracy, family, friendship, even language itself.

Illich insists that in encouraging compassion for each other, as opposed to following what our society expects us to follow, Christ was preaching a totally new, completely revolutionary idea about the personal freedom to choose who to love. This is best understood through the parable of the Good Samaritan.

The Samaritan, a traditional enemy of Jews, helped the beaten up Jew in the ditch out of compassion for another human face, while the Jew’s own brethren, the priest and the Levite on the way to the Temple, passed him by because they had more “important,” socially-ordained business to deal with. See? Love over law. Or more precisely, the spirit of the law over the strict letter of the law. As Christ said, according to Matthew 5:17, "Think not that I have come to abolish the law and the prophets; I have come not to abolish them but to fulfil them."

However, as Illich points out, the Church’s attempt to again make into law what is fundamentally a personal relationship—love—was impossible by definition because you can’t make compassion for another human being into a rule to be obeyed. After all, it was the priest and Levite – not the Samaritan – who were “following the rules.” So, Illich says, the Samaritan is acting according to an “ought,” but not one that conforms to a social norm or rule; rather, he acts according to his own internal, moral instinct.

Today we think of the “Good Samaritan” as someone who is merely a nice, helpful person. But this misses the point entirely. The Samaritan did precisely what he wasn’t supposed to do, which was help his enemy. Illich says to fully grasp this radical concept we must imagine a Palestinian today coming to the aid of a wounded Jew. Our failure to see the extreme position of the Samaritan is but one sign of our modern, moral confusion, and the persistent, pervasive, perverted Christian ethic.

By introducing this new type of personal freedom to humanity through Christ, says Illich, God also created a new type of personal betrayal, a new low for evil known as sin. Just as we think of the Good Samaritan as a “nice guy,” we think of a “sin” as “breaking a rule,” when it originally meant the opposite: to sin was to betray another human face in following a rule, like the priest and Levite who pass by the injured Jew.

The basic mistake of the Church was to institutionalize what was fundamentally, for lack of an existing word, uninstitutionalizable: love and compassion. Take the example of charity, which Illich says was—as practiced by early Christians—a personal act: “it was customary...to have an extra mattress, a bit of candle, and some dry bread in case the Lord Jesus should knock at the door in the form of a stranger without a roof.”

The Church, however, in its attempt to make this Christian practice into law removed the deeply personal element—the face-to-faceness of it—and turned charity into a social service provided by poorhouses and not people. Charity went from compassion for an individual human face to a distant social tool, something that could be politically organized as a means to combat poverty, or in Illich’s words, an “institutionalization of neighbourliness.” He says that by “assigning the duty to behave in this way to an institution, Christians would lose the habit of reserving a bed and having a piece of bread ready in every home, and their households would cease to be Christian homes.”

It’s not all bad news, however. As my title hints, The good news is that, contrary to received wisdom, Christianity is largely responsible for what's considered to be the most tolerant and progressive aspects of our society. I know it seems counterintuitive - if not downright sacrilegious (so to speak) to modern, liberal sensibilities - to say that, of all things, the Church is responsible for modern permissiveness, so I’ll use an extreme example to illustrate: sexual equality.

One doesn’t usually think of “Christianity” and “sexual equality” without a “not” in there somewhere. But Illich shows how Church doctrine set the legal basis, at least in theory, for women and men to be treated as equals in spirit and mind. He says, “the Fourth Lateran Council ...enjoins the duty of confession on women just as much as on men” which, Illich claims, is “the first important statement of the legal equality of women with men. This equality is also reflected in the Council’s new definition of marriage as a contract which is entered freely and knowingly by a man and a woman, rather than being dictated by their families or their milieu.” After all, what else, if not Christianity - that dominant institutional beast - is there to account for “permissive” modern society?

As for global Western aggression, it’s not hard to see the historical connection: missionaries and colonialists made great bedfellows, and George W. Bush is, after all, Born Again. But even secular forms of imperialism, like Western economic and foreign policy, are, according to Illich, also rooted in the Church’s insistence on converting others to a superior system for their own salvation. This corrupted Christian psychology runs not only through our entire system of institutions, but through our personal lives as well, in our everyday alienation from people of other classes and cultures.

So why, then, are we all perverted Christians? Well, we live in a society descended from Christianity and use a Christian language, and so it’s built in to our very speech. It informs almost everything around us. We’re like fish who can’t see the Christian water. That’s not to say we are automatons, rigidly determined by our environment, upbringing, or heritage. The big paradox I’m getting at here is that without recognizing history as a dimension of our own identity, we can hardly go beyond whatever limits such a past puts on us—both socially and individually. Might we today need to reflect on our collective Christian heritage, if only to see where we’ve been, how we got here, and how to get out of it?


A negligibly different version of this article first appeared in The Republic of East Vancouver, issue 167, July 5 to July 18, 2007.
ChawlieFresh

ChawlieFresh

2008-12-31 03:52:45

To go waaay back, like up there, pointing UP (to your question) ..

I'd say we're a bunch of mingling animals walking around, and around for years, and years with catastrophic blind folds with the comfortable feeling of knowing we belong in our dainty heaven. And when the world shakes us up we look to our cuticles for some nibbling support or the next pair of hands, being whether its a human face or a dog face. Companians are the key. GOD is the key...and we keep thinking we're going to find the big red door and the needy little lock for this goddamn key. For example, goargey boy was sticking his key in all the wrong places, the samaritan thought he had the right key, and well, for our perverted christians they all know they have a key. We all have these unique little keys with key chains that collect weird little object over the centuries, but theres always going to be that same old key trying to find that proper lock that might just open... to two girls shitting in one cup. But it's there right? Its there for the taking, and we're here for the day we break down the door...

We'd rather open up to nightmre land than stay in slumberland. shucks.
REPLIES: Hogan

Hogan

Hogan

2008-12-31 04:35:13

Replying to ChawlieFresh:
What you say, Chawlie, in the weirdest of all possible ways, reminds me of what I studied in Humanities 101 this term, and touches on what I think the flaw in Illich's thinking is.

Illich's view of history is very teleological. History for him, as far as I can tell, is directed by God towards a certain goal, a telos. This linear view of history - history that makes "progress" - is one that we looked at critically in class. Walter Benjamin and Martin Luther King Jr., whom we read, both talked about a certain type of conception of history: not as a linear, forward-moving vehicle, like a train on an unalterable track of technological or moral progress, but as, in Benjamin's terminology, "Messianic history", meaning, roughly, that historical progress, the "real" kind, real moral progress, doesn't just happen through history just going on and on, but that people reach back into the past to redeem it, giving redemption to the oppressed people of the past and who show us the oppression of today, and how and why we should stop it. With the past acting as an example and a guide, we don't have to simply wait for history to right itself on its own, as if the passage of time itself had some sort of inherent, magical healing power; we can explode the continuum of time, to paraphrase Benjamin's words, blast out of (linear) history as create something spontaneous and better seemingly out of nowhere. Messianic history, because the Messiah can arrive to free the oppressed at any moment.

Martin Luther King Jr., similarly, wrote in his famous "Letter From Birmingham Jail" about “the myth concerning time in relation to the struggle for human freedom", saying that in this “tragic misconception of time (is) the strangely rational notion that there is something in the very flow of time that will inevitably cure all ills…Actually, time itself is neutral; it can be used either destructively or constructively. More and more I feel that the people of ill will have used time much more effectively than have the people of good will. We will have to repent in this generation not merely for the hateful words and actions of the bad people but for the appalling silence of the good people. Human progress never rolls in on the well on inevitability; it comes through the tireless efforts of men willing to be coworkers with God, and without this hard work, time itself becomes an ally of the forces of social stagnation. We must use time creatively, in the knowledge that the time is always ripe to do right. Now is the time to make real the promise of democracy and transform our pending national elegy into a creative psalm of brotherhood. Now is the time to lift our national policy from the quicksand of racial injustice to the solid rock of human dignity."

Your second last line, Chawlie, "Its there for the taking, and we're here for the day we break down the door..."; that's what reminded me of the Benjamin and King ideas on history.

ChawlieFresh

ChawlieFresh

2008-12-31 04:49:55

We may be organic robots, but i dont think its going to hit us anytime soon that this messiaaahhh is going to shine down on our starry eyes. If it does, im hoping we'll bare fruit, but it wont be the sweetest fruit around. Sure, maybe if we all held hands and closed our eyes and believed we could transform garbage into cantaloupe we might just elope. But its because of those "bad peole", that we're stuck in this time warp that sends us singing our little solos again. For those who rock halos like silent owls in a hole who turn their heads to a 90 degree and feel free to roam the night with their large eyes and wise flight, they're eating our world whole and leaving the bones for the sticks and stones. myths and tails, we're flipping human dignity in need.
REPLIES: Hogan

Hogan

Hogan

2008-12-31 05:02:36

Replying to ChawlieFresh:
You're right, Chawlie, to balk at the awkward connotations of the word "Messiah". The word can definitely mislead.

Benjamin's point, though, is that this "Messianic" history is a conscious, active human effort for collective betterment and freedom, not a passive sitting back and waiting for history to resolve the problem on its own, and not a typical waiting-for-the-Messiah-to-come-and-save-us deal. It's an active thing by and for humans. Not a passive, "religious" thing.

Or as King said, "Human progress never rolls in on the well on inevitability; it comes through the tireless efforts of men willing to be coworkers with God, and without this hard work, time itself becomes an ally of the forces of social stagnation."

It's all about conscious human action and thought, not blind, passive, magical metaphysics.

ChawlieFresh

ChawlieFresh

2008-12-31 05:36:59

sure thing chicken wing, its all about that, what really blows me away right now, is the future in five years... ok let me go sleep and rest my melon and ill come back to this in a handfull of hours. If i forget, so help me god, im sure you'll hear about it.

note to self: aliens and edward penis hands.

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