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Secularisation and Human Identity in Christ

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

J Lawson*
Affiliation:
South Canonry, 71 The Close, Salisbury, SP1 2ER
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Abstract

The ability of Christian discourse to give people a sense of their identity sustains the concrete church. The cultural revolt of the 1960s which suddenly weakened the power of discursive Christianity in Britain may be partially explained in terms of the deterritorializing power of capitalism. In the context of this deterritorialization the formation of self-identity becomes more difficult and strong religious identities have a new appeal. Post liberal theologians have endorsed the identity-forming power of the church. But Christian identity must still be worked out in relation to what lies beyond the borders of the church. Christians rediscover their own foundational story in the acts and deeds of others. Theological formation should involve not only an immersion in the Christian tradition but also the search for what recognisably shares in the same project that the gospel defines. The history of personalism suggests what this search might look like in practice.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The author 2008. Journal compilation © The Dominican Council/Blackwell Publishing Ltd. 2008

I. Secularisation and the Dynamics of Identity

Augustine preached a series of sermons in the great basilicas of Carthage to congregations who were dismayed by the sack of Rome and the questions of cultured pagan refugees. They could no longer boast of the “Christian Era.” He responded by giving them a sense of identity. He told them where they belonged and to what they must be loyal. Amidst the pagans they are a distinct people. They belong to “the ancient City of God.”Footnote 1

The ability of Christian discourse to give men and women a sense of their identity sustains the concrete church. Secularisation happens when Christian discourse ceases to be a means by which they can construct their identities and their sense of self. Michel Foucault argued that religious discourses govern the self through a series of techniques which permit individuals to change their bodies and souls, thoughts and conduct, and so to attain happiness, purity and supernatural power. This argument informs Callum Brown's understanding of “the death of Christian Britain”. He defines what constitutes Christian religiosity as a subscription to protocols of personal identity derived from Christian discourse. Protocols are rituals, customs or behaviour collectively promulgated by clergy, the media, communities, families and individuals as necessary for Christian identity. Behaviour such as going to church on a Sunday or saying grace before meals manifests subscription to these protocols. They can also be discerned in the voices of the people. From 1800 to 1960 the voices of autobiography, oral history, and speech reported by contemporaries all testify to the reflexivity of personal identities to discursive Christianity. People draw on Christian discourse to tell their own life stories. Secularisation could not happen until this discursive identity lost its power. Brown argues that it did so only in the cultural revolt of the 1960s, challenged most influentially by a reconstruction of feminine identity. He contests the conventional secularisation story of long, inevitable religious decline. He presents secularisation instead as a remarkably sudden and culturally violent event.Footnote 2

The cultural revolt of the 1960s which suddenly weakened the power of discursive Christianity may in turn be partially explained in terms of the deterritorializing power of capitalism. Commentators on the events of May 1968 have identified a Hegelian ruse of reason. Those involved in the cultural revolt of the 1960s made history but they did not understand the history they were making. The struggle of the enrages and their intellectual allies against constraints upon individual freedom contributed to the disappearance of the last constraints upon the commodification of the whole social field. May 1968 was the cradle of the new bourgeois society. Regis Debray saluted the Columbuses of modernity who thought they were discovering China in Paris, when they were in fact landing in California. May 1968 was, “a gust of madness, which was only the economy giving a common-sense lesson to society, the enforced submission of the old to the new.”Footnote 3

Capitalism is almost co-terminous with the process of secularisation.Footnote 4 At the heart of capitalist modernity has been a process of endless enclosure,Footnote 5“a revolution of the rich against the poor.” Natural and human resources are cut off from common use. This appropriation and accumulation is also a secularisation. Capitalism seized both lands and people who had previously been considered to have identities of religious as well as merely economic significance. It is rooted in the continual disembedding of basic elements of the species' life-world from the matrix of social relations. The ways that the alleged commodity “labour power” is used affect the human being who happens to be the bearer of this peculiar commodity. In Deleuze's terminology, the capitalist machine deterritorialises desire. It overruns all previous social formations and releases the flows of desire that these formations had organized and regulated. The reflexivity of personal identities to discursive Christianity is among these formations. “All that is solid melts in the air, all that is holy is profaned.” Capitalism then reterritorializes desire by subjecting it to the axioms of the market.Footnote 6 The capitalist market, with its imperatives of continuous growth, attacks tradition. Capitalism places large sectors of social reproduction in the hands of markets for products and labour. Markets operate without regard to pre-established identities and forms of behaviour, which for the most part represent obstacles to the creation of unfettered exchange. Capitalist enterprise increasingly seeks to determine consumption as well as to monopolise the conditions of production. From the beginning, markets promote individualism in the sense that they stress individual rights and responsibilities. At first this mainly concerns the freedom of contract and mobility intrinsic to capitalist employment. Later, however, individualism becomes extended to the sphere of consumption, the designation of individual wants becoming basic to the continuity of the system. Market governed freedom of individual choice becomes the enveloping framework of individual self-expression. The corruption of the notion of “lifestyle”, reflexively drawn into the sphere of advertising, epitomises these processes. Advertisers orient themselves to sociological classifications of consumer categories. To a greater or lesser degree, the construction of identity becomes translated into one of possession of desired goods and the pursuit of artificially framed styles of life.Footnote 7

“Believing without belonging” issues from this deterritorialisation. Institutional religion is deregulated. Belief is individualized. Religious traditions increasingly serve as symbolic repositories of meaning, available for individual consumers subjectively to use and reuse in different ways.Footnote 8 British society seems polarised between the bleak utilitarian rationalism of the public realm and an increasingly exotic private paganism.

The weakening power of discursive religion contributes to a crisis of identity. In capitalist modernity the formation of self-identity becomes more difficult. Even those untroubled by anxieties about their own identity will inevitably be compelled to make choices about their appearance, relationships, beliefs and occupation. Earlier societies offered protocols of personal identity. Disembedded from these protocols, we must reflexively work out our identities for ourselves. When this project of the self is commodified by being assimilated to the consumption of arbitrarily differentiated, “personalised”, mass produced goods meaning itself becomes a scarce commodity. And when the rapid flow of mass-mediated images, scripts, and sensations is juxtaposed with mass migrations in an emergent postnational order we have a new order of instability in the production of modern subjectivities.Footnote 9

In this context the protocols of strong religious identity have a new appeal. Amartya Sen recognises this as the “solitarist” view. Many people identify themselves according to a single pre-eminent religious identity. Sen is bewildered by this cultivation of singularity in a world of obviously plural affiliations.Footnote 10 Violence for him issues from mere intellectual error and the imposition of singular and belligerent identities on gullible people. The best recruits of revolutionary Islam, for example, have been refugees from secular modernity who have suffered the full force of consumerism.Footnote 11 Sen's “solitarism” is better explained by Manuel Castells's concept of “resistance identity.”Footnote 12 He argues that identity politics must be situated historically. Identity is people's source of meaning and experience. “Legitimizing identity” is introduced by the institutions that dominate a society to extend and rationalise the established order in a civil society. This construction of identity is called into question with this order by globalization: Castells' account elucidates Brown's narrative of the diminishing reflexivity of personal identity to Christian discourse in Britain. Societies able to control their populations with a variety of managerial skills and economic adjustments do not need the legitimization of “values”; they do not need myth, religion or morality.Footnote 13 But resistance identity forms enclaves or communities where prevailing social trends are resisted on behalf of autonomous social meanings. These communities offer defensive identities that function as refuge and solidarity. Their defensive reactions become sources of meaning and identity by constructing new cultural codes out of existing historical materials. This involves the exclusion of the excluders by the excluded; the building of a defensive identity in terms of the dominant institutions and ideologies, reversing the value judgement while reinforcing the boundary. Such “resistance identities” include those offered by Islamic and American Christian fundamentalism, as well as by the “imagined communities” of nationalism, and by ethnic and territorial identities.Footnote 14 Resistance identity may be the most important form of identity-building when, robbed of the protective covering of cultural institutions, human beings are in danger of perishing from the effects of social exposure. Castells classifies a third form of identity building, as “project identity,” when social agents, for example feminists, on the basis of the cultural material available to them, build a new identity that redefines their position in society and by so doing, seek the transformation of the entire social structure. In contemporary society he asserts that project identity can only develop from communal resistance. New subjects may emerge from the communes of resistance identity to construct public meaning around a project identity, but communalism may instead close the circle of its latent fundamentalism and remain within its own boundaries.

II. Resistance Identity in a Diaspora Church

George Lindbeck predicts that the church must sustain the construction of something like Castells' “resistance identity” if it is to survive in a secularised society.Footnote 15 He seeks to present an ecumenical alternative to divisive, fundamentalist forms of that identity, to sustain a “Christian internationale”. He too sees the weakening of traditional legitimation systems in the life of the individual and the society at large, issuing in a crisis of identity. He foresees that pluralistic secular societies will privatize religion, excluding it from the public domain. Secularisation will reduce Christian presence to small minorities, a “diaspora” church, sociologically sectarian even in traditionally Christian countries. Any such “deviant enclave” whose distinctiveness is imperilled by accommodation to secular thought and culture must ultimately become sectarian in order to preserve its identity. Having lost their mass membership, the communities of the diaspora church must strive to become a close-knit fellowship of the genuinely committed who mutually support each other in the difficult task of maintaining what in the eyes of society as a whole are increasingly strange ways of thinking and acting.

For Joseph Ratzinger too, it is precisely an age in which Christianity is quantitatively reduced that can bring this more conscious Christianity to a new vitality.Footnote 16 The first necessity is that of forming people who keep their eyes upon God. It is only through people who have been touched by God that God can return among men and women.Footnote 17

How should the gospel be preached to this dechristianised world? Lindbeck acknowledges the “deterritorialization” of religion. He identifies the danger of reducing faith to a commodity marketed to atomistic selves who turn to religious traditions as symbolic repositories of meaning. Their self-identification will be experienced as a given rather than a gift or an achievement. It will be something sought by exploring their inner depths rather than in communally responsible action in the public world. He proposes a “postliberal” way of presenting the gospel message to those who no longer understand the traditional words. Instead of translating these words into what is currently fashionable and immediately accessible this way resembles the method of ancient catechesis. Instead of redescribing the faith with alien concepts, it would seek to teach the language and practice of the religion to potential adherents. Intratextual theology redescribes reality within the scriptural framework rather than translating scripture into extrascriptural categories. Meaning is constituted by the uses of a specific language rather than being distinguishable from it. Intelligibility is a skill. Christians should live within the Christian text, to interpret the world in terms of the biblical story. To become religious involves becoming skilled in the language, the symbol-system of a given religion. To become a Christian involves learning the story of Israel and Jesus well enough to interpret and experience oneself and one's world in its terms. Only after ancient catechumens had acquired proficiency in the alien Christian language and form of life were they deemed able intelligently and responsibly to profess the faith, to be baptised. The minorities of the diasporic church should strive to cultivate and teach their native tongue.Footnote 18

Stanley Hauerwas's account of the church as a countercultural polis develops Lindbeck's presentation of this ecumenical “resistance identity”. He seeks to endorse the identity-forming power of the church. If an identity cannot exist without an array of opposites, negatives and oppositions, Hauerwas's polemic against those he accuses of confusing liberalism with Christianity strongly defines that identity. The philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre creates the space for the theology of John Howard Yoder in his work. MacIntyre contends that implicit in every ethic is a corresponding form of community and practice. Yoder's work allows Hauerwas to maintain that the distinctive Christian ethic rests on its distinctive community and corresponding practices. For Hauerwas the church is the place where character and narrative meet. The community is shaped by the Christian story, and in turn it shapes the character of its members. It does so particularly by their performance of its story, notably in worship, but also in other distinctive practices such as peacemaking and disciplined forgiving.Footnote 19 The church for Hauerwas is a colony, an island of one culture in the middle of another. Christians are “resident aliens”. The church in America must either accept this new “resistance identity” or go the way of all compromised forms of the faith.Footnote 20 But a recovery of this identity might be the beginning of the end of the church's long eclipse in the west, the public emergence of the Messiah's people, the unveiling of Christ's ekklesia, “fair as the moon, bright as the sun, terrible” in the otherness of her own distinctive life “as an army with banners”.Footnote 21

Hauerwas testifies that he was also prepared for his encounter with the theology of Yoder by the work of Dietrich Bonhoeffer. For Hauerwas, this work prefigures his own attempt to imagine a post-Constantinian church; from beginning to end it was an attempt to reclaim the visibility of the Church as the necessary condition for the proclamation of the gospel in a world that no longer privileged Christianity.Footnote 22

III. Human Identity in Christ

But the questioning response of Rowan Williams to these accounts of resistance identity in a diaspora church also draws upon Bonhoeffer.Footnote 23 Williams is concerned that these accounts suggest an inadequate grasp of the nature of Christian believing as a set of provisional historical projects, and of the way Christian identity is worked out in relation to what lies beyond its borders. Williams agrees with Lindbeck about the need to revive and preserve a scriptural imagination to interpret the world. He is however perturbed by the territorial cast of the imagery he uses, by his talk of redescribing reality within the scriptural “framework”. For Williams the way the scripturally informed imagination works is more complex. It sits less easily with the commitment of a diaspora church to the cultivation of scriptural speech and culture within its own territory. The “world of scripture” is not a clear and readily definable territory. It is an historical world in which meanings are discovered and recovered in action and encounter. Lindbeck offers only two choices to the interpreter of scripture: either redescribe reality within the scriptural framework with the postliberals, or continue to translate scripture into extrascriptural, alien concepts with the liberals. Williams refuses these alternatives. The church may find out what scripture itself is saying in her confrontations with the world. The Christian community may be enlarged in understanding and even in some sense evangelized in such encounters with those beyond the theological mainstream. It can be like the pattern of loss and recovery of self involved in listening to a parable.Footnote 24 Listening to Nathan, David forgets himself so far as to be shocked into recognising himself. In the same way the war poetry of Wilfred Owen, for example, uses the imagery of Genesis chapter 22 to indict the failure of Christendom. The church can find out what she herself is saying, in absorbing this scriptural exegesis from its own margins. And this will be a critical self-discovery in which the church as well as the world is judged.

So for Williams the Christian claim is bound always to be something evolving and acquiring definition in the conversations of history. It is a “long revolution”. It offers a direction for the historical construction of human meaning, but it does not offer to end history. Theology should equip Christians to discern what is parabolic in the world. They should be reluctant to force the language and behaviour of others into Christian categories prematurely, remembering that their understanding of these categories is still growing and changing. Williams cites Bonhoeffer's verdict on the Kirchenkampf:“Our church, which has been fighting in these years only for its self-preservation, as though that were an end in itself, is incapable of taking the word or reconciliation and redemption to mankind and the world. Our earlier words are bound to lose their force and cease.”Footnote 25 This is not, pace John Robinson, a demand for better translations into modish secularity, but a recognition that the right to be heard speaking about God must be earned. The urgency of Christians to communicate the good news must sometimes be channelled into listening and waiting, and into the expansion of the Christian imagination itself into something that can cope with the seriousness of the world. Theological formation should involve an immersion in the Christian tradition as Lindbeck proposes. But it should also involve an exposure to the world that allows Christians to rediscover their own foundational story in the acts and deeds of others. They should search not for equivalent words to traditional terms but for what recognizably – however imperfectly – shares in the same project that the gospel defines. Their formation needs to be an induction into hearing as well as mediating judgement.

Williams warns that the enclaves of the diaspora church could collude with the dominant consumer pluralism and be trivialised into a lifestyle preference once more unless they make certain claims on the possibility of a global community, and act accordingly. In Castells' terms, resistance identity must also become project identity. Particular identity must seek a universal identity. Williams presents Cornelius Ernst's argument that the meaning of the world in Christ could only be articulated in a continuing search for a “total human culture, the progressive discovery of a single human identity in Christ”.Footnote 26 The form of this search was quite simply any and every process of human self-definition in response to mass culture, the threat of a “totalizing” society of technological manipulation and control. “There is at least a single discernable adversary”.Footnote 27 If the essence of the church is missionary, this is precisely the search and the struggle to which the church is committed.

But the opening of the faith to others that Williams proposes in turn requires a strong sense of the self of faith, which in turn is a genuine self only insofar as it is related to the world of our times beyond itself. This dialectic of selfhood and alterity is explored in Paul Ricoeur's Oneself as Another. Footnote 28 Ricoeur argues that the self is like an elipse with two foci: the abiding referent of self-same, “idem-identity”, and those aspects of the self whose identity, “ipse-identity”, varies with the self's success or failure in relating to the others it needs to face ad alia et alios, especially the relatively other to which the self is unavoidably bound. The drama of the self plays in this bi-polar dialectic of sameness and difference. Three partial and faint witnesses to the possibility of genuine, because relational, self-identity are mentioned: the body – the non-plasticity of my own mortal body to my subjective wishes; other persons – my being bound by their rights prior to my choice to respect them or not; and conscience – for example in the difference between obligation and mere good intention. The quality of self-identity is largely a function of our ability to relate to these other than subjective moments without considering them mere pendants of our subjectivity.Footnote 29 But a strong focus of identity is still needed for a genuine relation to the other. In the same way, the selfhood of the church and her critical relationality to the non-Christian world will grow together or not at all. The power of assimilation which Newman saw as a note of genuine doctrinal development can be superceded by self-alienation. But as Lindbeck noted as an observer, the bishops at Vatican II voted for resourcement, return to the sources of the church's identity, without knowing themselves how to put this into effect, with the result that they got kinds of aggiornamento and ecumenism that they had not intended.Footnote 30 Developed selfhood allows developed relationality.

Immersion in Christian tradition can continue to sustain a non self-alienating receptivity in the communities of the diasapora church.Footnote 31 But attention to moments when Christian identity has been defined with particular decisiveness and confidence also enhances the accounts of Christian identity offered by postliberalism, and serves the formation of others in this developed identity. In this context, personalism should be attended to as one of the most significant expressions of Christian project identity in modernity.Footnote 32 Ernst proposes the search for “a total human culture, the discovery of a single human identity in Christ as the historic process of the diverse but related processes of self-discovery going on in distinct cultures all over the globe in response to the challenge and threat of uniform technological mass-culture”. The history of personalism suggests what this search might look like in practice.

Personalism was a Christian contribution to the project of an alternative modernity.Footnote 33 The editorial of the first issue of the personalist journal Esprit in 1932 announced this intention. It sought nothing less than a remaking of the Renaissance. Personalism imagined a resistance to the present “eschatology of the impersonal”,Footnote 34 and the creation of a post-capitalist and post-secular order beyond it. It was a rallying cry, a non-conformist anti-ideology, a civilizing task. It drew upon Christian doctrine to deepen understanding of the identity and absolute value of every human person.Footnote 35 It offered a pedagogy concerning communal life linked to an awakening of the person.Footnote 36 Like an insect mimicking a dead branch in order to be overlooked, a human being can become part of a devitalized, desolate world and provisionally renounce their personhood to become something that is interchangeable. The first act of personal life is an awakening in relationship and community to the consciousness of this anonymous life and a revolt against the degradation it represents.Footnote 37 One source of European personalism is the socialist, Dreyfusard and Catholic poet Charles Peguy who was killed at the battle of the Marne in 1914. He taught that the Christian mission is to “nourish the times mystically”. His disciple Emmanuel Mounier, the founding editor of Esprit, sought to marry red France with black France, the Jacobins with the priests to create an avant-garde Christianity that would change the world. Personalists were to be revolutionaries in the name of the spirit.Footnote 38 Through Mounier the legacy of Peguy went on to inspire the Christian left and liberation theology in Latin America.Footnote 39

Mounier's personalism belongs to a cultural and philosophical constellation that is no longer ours. As a system it may be exhausted. But it may still be of more than historical interest. In an essay published in Esprit on its fiftieth anniversary in January 1983 his friend Paul Ricoeur ventured the slogan: “Death to personalism; long live the person!” He concluded his essay with Mounier's own words in What is Personalism?;“We are witnessing … the first meanderings of a cyclical course where the explorations pursued to exhaustion along one path are given up only to be rediscovered farther on, enriched by this forgetting and by the discoveries for which it cleared a path.”

The personalism of Mounier allowed other French Catholics to define a new public identity after the papal condemnation in 1926 of the legitimist Action Francaise movement which had sought to revive the old alliance of throne and altar. Against both individualists and collectivists they could define themselves as personalists. This Catholic self-definition became more prominent during the pontificate of John Paul II. The difficult task of this identity is to preserve its values within the framework of a “qualified pluralism”.Footnote 40 Ricoeur describes it as an ecumenical identity allowing for the possibility of collaboration with Christians of different denominations and also with non-Christians. This personalism can thus be conceived in Ernst's terms as the search for “a total human culture, the discovery of a single human identity in Christ”.Footnote 41 Personalism is neither an amalgamation of various Christian tenets nor an eclectism of non-Christian sources. Encounter with Christianity allows ethical conscience to unfold its own possibilities. But the Christian is not necessarily always the initiator with others of the discovery of the world of the person. A non-Catholic or dechristianized form of thought may open up a realm of value which other Christian confessions have neglected or even screened. If personalism is a pedagogy the Christian is not necessarily the pedagogue of the non-Christian.Footnote 42 The problem is of integrating “identity” and “alterity” at numerous levels.Footnote 43

Resistance identity must also become a project identity without self-alienation. The Christian must hear as well as mediate judgement as a single human identity is discovered in Christ. For Mounier the promise of this task is the discovery that “eternity penetrates the arteries of time”.Footnote 44

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38 Compare C. Ernst op. cit. n. 27 supra 169; On the darker side of this revolution see the contested accounts of Hellman, J., Emmanuel Mounier and the New Catholic Left 1930–1950 (Toronto, 1981)Google Scholar; Sterhell, Z., Neither Right Nor Left. Fascist Ideology in France (Princeton, 1995)Google Scholar.

39 Lowy, M. and Sayre, R., Romanticism Against the Tide of Modernity (London, 2001) 169CrossRefGoogle Scholar: On the importance of Mounier for Paolo Freire see Andreola, B., “Influence de la Pensee et du Temoignage de Mounier au Brazil”, Bulletin des Amis d' Emmanuel Mounier 73/74 (1990) 4145Google Scholar.

40 P. Pombeni, “The ideology of Christian Democracy”Journal of Political Ideologies 5.3 (2000) 289–300. Pombeni describes how Christian democrats, originally inspired by personalism, were assimilated into the mainstream of European social democracy. By contrast, the insistence of the Archbishop of Paris on the Christian identity of the Institut Catholique recently issued in the resignation of its vice-chancellor Joseph Maila. Esprit 6 (2006) 91–110.

41 Mounier defines personalism in terms of “the human struggle to humanize humanity”; E. Mounier, op. cit. n.36 supra xix.

42 Ricoeur, P., “Emmanuel Mounier: A Personalist Philosopher”, History and Truth (Evanston, 1965) 133161Google Scholar; 142–143.

43 Ricoeur, P., “Reflections on a new ethos for Europe”, The Hermeneutics of Action (London, 1996) 312Google Scholar; L. Roy describes Ernst's approach as akin to Ricoeur's; dialogic and acutely aware of the fact of difference. He takes up Ricoeur's search for “a meaning of meaning” including the meaning of what it is to be human. Cornelius Ernst's Theological SeedsNew Blackfriars 85.998 (July 2004) 459470CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

44 Mounier speaks these words as a character in a magical realist novel by his Brazilian disciple Herbert de Souza (Betinho), A lista de Ailice (Sao Paulo, 1996)Google Scholar.