The incarnation calls us to the things of this world. So when we consider the following quotes about the liberal arts we must begin and end there:
What has Athens to do with Jerusalem?– Tertullian
“What has Ingeld to do with Christ”?– Alcuin (when catching some monks reading Beowulf)
What has Horace to do with the Psalter? Or Virgil with the Gospel? Or Cicero the Apostle?– Jerome
Just as the Logos, God Himself, became flesh, and just as God’s words and wisdom were penned by human hands in particular times and places, Christians, as embodied beings, are called to be in the world. We are called to a healthy, robust terrestriality, without compromising our calling. Engagement with the world–in all of its God–imbued glory intertwined with human wretchedness–requires wisdom from God, a wisdom that assists us to be faithful. Just as the incarnation was ultimately about redemption, it is the task of the Christian to redeem all that can be redeemed. Paul tells the very worldly Corinthians to “take captive every thought for Jesus Christ”. We can do this by imitating the enfleshed Word of God and by dwelling in God’s Words while we live in God’s world.
It is grand news indeed that we are not alone. There have been many who have been faithful in this endeavor for thousands of years. Remember the examples of John of Salisbury and what he did with his Metalogicon, or Hugh of Saint Victor’s Didascalicon, or Dorothy Sayers’s The Lost Tools of Learning. The shape, tone, contours, and content of the liberal arts in the West has been thoroughly developed by the Christian worldview. It is the Bible, more than any other writing, that informs the great intellectual liberal arts tradition to such a degree that ignorance of the Bible makes apprehension of our humane past nearly impossible. Indeed the Bible was institutionalized in the Western intellectual tradition until the modern world, and the modern world’s reaction to the Bible can be seen as persistent mass rebellion against that tradition.
The liberal arts have been in decline for a number of decades and the attacks on this tradition come from various fronts. There are those who have called for all education to be “immediately practical” and “eminently usable”, who have called for the end of these “irrelevant studies” that “waste our time on fruitless” intellectual endeavors. These utilitarians are the modern day equivalent of the ancient slave owners. All considerations about the issue of what it means to be human are framed in terms of “man as worker” who is best educated when pragmatism governs the work week and consumption is the chief end.
Not all the enemies of liberal learning are managers of middle class America. There are those in the Academy, who have been “educated” in modern day “wisdom” to have a posture of disdain toward the Great Tradition. In fact, much of the attack begins there. We should recognize these enemies of the permanent things as anti-traditionalists. I once had an exchange with an individual who claimed there was no great tradition or western intellectual heritage. I assured him that the Great Tradition is as real as Narnia and my birth city of Rochester, NY. All real in different ways, but real nonetheless. These are all places we can inhabit and that, in turn, inhabit us. Unfortunately, there are those who would state that since they have never been to Rochester or Narnia they do not exist. This is modern narcissistic folly.
Much like Christianity in twenty-first century America, liberal learning has fallen to the wayside due more to sheer apathy than overt attacks. The masses care little about anything that happened fifteen minutes ago, let alone fifteen-hundred years ago. This apathetic posture has done tremendous damage. And the people in the academy have come to passionately embrace it. Instead of the good, the true, and the beautiful, one can now major in the relative, the mundane, and the insipid.
Possibly the worst enemy, omnipresent in the academy and pervasive throughout society, is an extraordinary level of ignorance about the liberal arts. Shortly after I received my PhD in Humanities, a well-intentioned but astonishingly ignorant fellow asked me in the most sincere tone, “Why would a Christian get a PhD in humanism since humanism is opposed to God?” After several minutes of trying to explain to him that I did not spend years pursuing a degree in Humanism, but in the Humanities, I yielded to him and said, “I’m not sure.” Willful ignorance trumps learning and persuasion almost every time. Within the academy, I gave up years ago trying to explain the value of the study of the Humanities to my colleagues in the “Hard and Social Sciences.” As they have boldly declared in various ways, “we know how things really work in the world with the aid of our disciplines.” I have decided that there are certain treasures that ought not to be placed before certain critters where mud-like ignorance is the grime of their habitation.
There are things many humans desire toward a different end than merely knowing those things. Most college students now attend college, not to learn for the sake of learning, but to acquire the skills necessary for gainful employment. Times have indeed changed. Not many decades ago, the primary motivation for attaining a college education turned toward the immediate end of earning wages. Oddly, we are at a moment when many, if not most, graduate with neither.
To paraphrase scripture, “what does it profit a person to go to college for four years?” It seems the answer now is to establish the beginning of twenty-five years of student loans and a certificate of achievement, still called a diploma. The sad fact is that the college diploma has become synonymous with the elementary school award, “Everyone Is A Winner.”
In the best and highest sense, a liberal arts education is a liberation from something and for something. It is liberation from the kind of narrow training that restricts one to a single trade, or skill, and a myopic vision of all that is good, true, and beautiful. Humane learning is that which moves us toward a life of happiness beyond labor, feeding, and rest. When a human soul has been expanded and ennobled by liberal learning, he is able to recognize, and desires to embrace, that which makes him distinctly human.
A human who has reaped the full benefits of a liberal arts education knows how to recognize the true even when swimming in a sea of propaganda. He knows the good even in an age that humorously declares there is no good. The privileged human who has received that rarest of education will know and treasure the beautiful in an age of crass consumption.
Ideally, a liberal arts education, fully informed by Christian conviction, will make students unfit for the modern world. Much of our western world, shaped by the odd marriage of Enlightenment arrogance, Romantic consciousness, and Industrial consumerism is contrary to the virtues of those who inhabit the kingdom. While there are tensions and some inconsistencies intellectually within the Great Tradition, ones that Mortimer Adler argued should be forced to speak with one another so that the truth can be heard, there is much more of compliance, agreement, and derivation to be found here.
Thinking Christianly about the liberal arts means not merely to give attention to the content, but is the very means of thinking about that content. In other words, in addition to what is analyzed, it is the process of analysis that was historically, thoroughly informed by the Christian faith. Within the history of the Christian intellectual tradition, the liberal arts have been appreciated first and foremost as pillars of wisdom and also as intrinsic goods gifted from God, even when discovered in Egypt and Babylon. The consensus among early Christian thinkers was that all truth is God’s truth and this remains consensus to this day among those who have learned from the one greater than Solomon. When faithfully adhered to, this conviction provides freedom.
A major contention of thinking Christianly about the liberal arts, implicit throughout the west until the Enlightenment, is that if the liberal arts are to survive in a meaningful manner or even thrive with new and significant scholarship, it must be among Christians–unique communities, and institutions shaped by Christian conviction. While I know and trust that there are those old school Humanists still fighting the good fight, their days are numbered. I desire to be counted among a people who recognize the eternal value of this kind of education rooted in the permanent things. It is to those people I offer encouragement: you are not alone. There is hope and help from the great cloud of witnesses to the Great Tradition. We are strengthened and aided if we have but ears to hear and eyes to see.
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The disdain for the humanities is driven into the minds of students throughout their academic pursuits. It begins in K-12. As I work toward my teaching certificate, I frequently review my particular state’s standards in my chosen subject: English. The other day I discovered one state promulgated guide for developing lesson plans in Reading for 10th grade students. More than two-thirds of the plans involved “practical” use of online material. One unit involved going to the website for Applebee’s restaurant, review what the company’s employment pages, and prepare to answer questions such as, “Where do you see yourself in five years as an Applebee’s employee.” Another unit required students to research the state’s Dept. of Motor Vehicles website and find out what is required to create a personalized license plate. These are lessons designed to provide instruction for an English class.
How can we expect college students to appreciate the Humanities when they’ve had it effectively beaten out of them by a State monopolized education system, which dumbs down material and promotes only that it deems “practical”?
This is something, when I began my education, was seldom in my thoughts and yet always with me. So many voices crying out, “Time is of essence, Get on with the practical things. Forget the theoretical.” Then came a B.S. Ed., after 9 years and 6 institutions and 155 semester hrs. During that period a famous Black Historian urged me to start doing research, and I did. By the time I began my M.A. in American Social & Intellectual History, I had 3000 5×8 notecards covering more than 250 sources. They called me my directing professor’s, “scholar in residence.” My thesis was written out of that research. Two years of teaching and 18 more hrs. toward a Ph.D., which included writing a prospectus for a doctoral dissertation in Black History at an Ivy League University (Columbia) led to seminary and two degrees with a D.Min. project on Christian Love & Race Relations without the support or backing of the Seminary and my Project Director (who said, “you ought to have known better than to pick a controversial topic like this. If that church fires you, I will be right behind them, supporting them)(Then when I did not get fired, he started nit-picking my writing of the project). Nearly a decade later, I began an M.A. in Counseling which led to being a member of a Counseling staff in a Senior High School, where my primary responsibility was Career Counseling and the pathology for which I was responsible was Incest and Pedophilia (the school had a large staff of Counselors and could parcel out the pathologies. Since I had written on Incest in my M.A. program, I got that responsibility). This last degree was due to have encountered the problem of incest in my work as a minister.
What have I learned in all of these years and schools and degrees, while serving as pastor of small Baptist Churches and a few times as chairman of historical committees for a historic association and for a Baptist State Convention? I have learned that, no matter how much you learn, there are depths of knowledge that I will never know, that if I open one door of knowledge I find that it has 10 more doors behind it that I did not even know existed. I have also found that wisdom and knowledge are two different things, that the wisest man I ever met was a lowly fixer of Buick Automobile bodies, a high school graduate, and a veteran of World War II. I also discovered that the knowledge and the little bit of wisdom I garnered through the years helped me to begin to grasp the depths of Holy Scripture, not grasp in the sense of fully understanding, but grasp in the sense of become aware of just the reality of the awful and awesome depths of biblical teachings. It is a heart stopping awareness, as if one has suddenly stumbled up to the edge of a great cliff overlooking some unimaginably great landscape lost shades of blue depths and distances. In short, I have come to appreciate the intellectual depths of the Book we call the Bible. In fact, the supreme challenge of this or any generation is to really come to grips with Scripture, to get a handle even on beginning to understand what it is telling us about the Being who inspired it. The book reflects the inspiration of omniscience, the source which it claims and has always claimed and demonstrated.