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ON RELIGION SPEECHES TO ITS CULTURED DESPISERS

ON RELIGION SPEECHES TO ITS CULTURED DESPISERS. THE POWERPOINT! SPEECHES ONE AND TWO. INTRODUCTION. Schleiermacher often described as the father of modern Christian theology Arguably most influential 19 th C. Christian theologian Compared in stature to Augustine, Aquinas, Calvin

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ON RELIGION SPEECHES TO ITS CULTURED DESPISERS

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  1. ON RELIGIONSPEECHES TO ITS CULTURED DESPISERS THE POWERPOINT! SPEECHES ONE AND TWO

  2. INTRODUCTION • Schleiermacher often described as the father of modern Christian theology • Arguably most influential 19th C. Christian theologian • Compared in stature to Augustine, Aquinas, Calvin • Mirrored Kant’s Copernican revolution in philosophy by placing subject at center of religious experience • Religious experience has its origin in the transcendental conditions of subjectivity itself

  3. INTRODUCTION • Heavily influenced by Kant & Spinoza • Kant: all objective knowledge leads back • to investigating the conditions of the knowing subject • Thus, the nature of the subject & transcendental conditions of knowledge at forefront of philosophical inquiry • Schleiermacher placed the subject at theology’s forefront • Like Kant, Schleiermacher’s God is not anthropomorphic • Unlike Kant, Schleiermacher posits an immanent God • not a transcendent God • just as Spinoza did

  4. BIOGRAPHY • Born the son of a Prussian Army chaplain in 1768 • Educated by the Moravian Brethren • an unorthodox German pietest church community • Rapidly rose through school & attended seminary • At seminary, formed a secret club with other students • to study Kant, Goethe & other philosophers/radical thinkers

  5. BIOGRAPHY • Heavily influenced by Moravian Brethren • Moravians were a kind of pietist sect • they advocated a heartfelt, emotional religion • But notbased on inward turn to experience, like other pietists • Moravians based their “heart” religion on looking outward to Christ’s suffering • and not simply inward to themselves • S.’s move is to merge his “heart” religion with Spinozism and phenomenological experience

  6. BIOGRAPHY • Graduated with degree in theology (minoring in philosophy & philology) from University of Halle in 1790 (age 22) • 1790-93 (age 22-25) • Upon graduation, served as tutor to aristocracy • 1794-96 (age 26-28) • Pastor in Landsberg, Germany • 1796-1804 (age 28-36) • passed second round of theological exams • appointed to prestigious hospital chaplaincy in Berlin

  7. BIOGRAPHY • It was during this period that S. joined Berlin’s intellectual and cultural elite • Largely in the salon of “emancipated” Jews, Markus & HenrietteHerz • Henrietteprivately teaches S. Italian • rumors of a forbidden love affair • Here, S. was introduced to many leading cultural & literary figures • including the Schlegel brothers & the poet Novalis • NOTE: Look to Novalis’ poetry to better understand S.’s emotional piety • S. helps edit Das Athenäeum, the Schlegels’ literary journal • Also translated Plato & other Greek philosophers • But the literary figures with whom he interacted had issues with S.’s Christianity • In response, he wrote On Religion anonymously in 1799 (age 30-31)

  8. BIOGRAPHY • With rising cultural clout, S. helps establish the University of Berlin in 1810 (age 41) where he is appointed professor of Theology • Writes theology treatise The Christian Faith in 1821 (age 53) • spends rest of career until he dies at in 1834 (age 66) • Schopenhauer was an early student of S. (1811) • Schopenhauer mocked Schleiermacher’s assertion that philosophy was impossible without religion • Schop. thought a religious person had no need for philosophy • Schopenhauer also thought S. didn’t truly understand Kant • In addition to theology, S. also wrote on philosophical subjects • Critically, hermeneutics

  9. BIOGRAPHY • S. spent his remaining years advocating for German unification, political reform, & jousting with Hegel • In 1816, S. helps appoint Hegel to University of Berlin faculty • mostly to head off appointment of an academic rival • Hegel was a rising academic star at the time • a quick rivalry developed • S. blocked Hegel from Berlin Academy of the Sciences • Both S. and Hegel wanted to retrieve religion from Kant • But they had sharp theological differences • Over role of reason (Hegel) vs. feeling (Schleiermacher) • Over role of church in society

  10. BIOGRAPHY • S. more interested in theology as related to the individual • Hegel more interested in merging religion with the State to re-create something like a Greek polis • Schleiermacher’s theology rooted in feeling • reflected his early Moravian pietism • Hegel emphasized the role of reason in understanding God

  11. BIOGRAPHY • Hegel on Schleiermacher’s Christianity: • “If religion grounds itself in a person only on the basis of feeling, then . . . a dog would be the best Christian, for it carries this feeling more intensely within itself and lives principally satisfied by a bone.”

  12. SUMMARIZING ON RELIGION • Doctrinal Christianity & Kantian religion are both flawed for similar reasons • Both treat religion as a concept to be understood • Systematic thinking about religion will always fail • Religion unnecessary to gain morality • Religion is in fact a separate sphere of existence • accessed through a feeling of merger with the infinite

  13. SUMMARIZING ON RELIGION • With On Religion’s First Speech (better translates as Over Religion), Schleiermacher is addressing the educated elite of Berlin • The “cultured despisers” of religion rejected the dogmatics of traditional Christianity in one of two ways • They have moved to a different kind of particular positivism • by despising religion and rejecting all forms of positive religious belief • This really becomes its own kind of belief system • Alternatively, they fall for natural religion • the way of Kant, or Locke, Voltaire & the other Deists • But doing so, they give up any sense of immediacy or religious satisfaction.

  14. SUMMARIZING ON RELIGION • On Religion is an appeal to atheists of the day that there is a false choice between positive religion and natural religion. • First Speech: All people struggle to harmonize two opposing forces: universality and particularity (the one): • Particularity is represented by positive religions • E.g., traditional doctrine and dogmatics • Universality is represented by natural religions • E.g., Locke, Voltaire, or Kant

  15. SUMMARIZING ON RELIGION • In the Second Speech, Schleiermacher describes religion as 1 of 3 necessary spheres of human activity: • Knowing – scientific knowledge • Acting – morality • Religion – feeling of connection to the infinite • But • no personal God & • no immortality as traditionally conceived • Neither scriptural nor church authority should dictate religion • All individuals & cultures should have their own religious sense

  16. RHETORICAL STRUCTURE OF THE TWO SPEECHES* *Adapted & modifed from Richard Crouter in Friedrich Schleiermacher: Between Enlightenment and Romanticism (2005)

  17. HEIDEGGER ON SCHLEIERMACHER • One needs a phenomenological attitude toward religious experience • You can understand religion only if you observe it within yourself • S. made religion both: • a new way of observing the world but also a new way of acting • a special way of comporting oneself, of reflecting inwardly • in other words, a practical phenomenon • Phenomenological reduction isolates your individual teleology  • Religion’s purpose to determine each person’s place within the whole • Don’t place God in the sphere of knowledge • as the ground of knowing & known • that is not the same as the pious way to have God & to know about him

  18. HEIDEGGER ON SCHLEIERMACHER • Observation[Betrachtung] is essential to religion • “not closed-off stupidity” (i.e., doctrine or dogmatics) • Sense & taste for the infinite • Infinite being—with that it is impossible notto imply God • Foreign teleology is eliminated • & particularly any dangerously confusing theoretical teleology • Instead, let your consciousness “eavesdrop” on this state of the living moment for yourself • You should notice the becoming of your consciousness • rather than reflecting on a consciousness that has already become

  19. HEIDEGGER ON SCHLEIERMACHER • You must uncover an original performance of a feeling • in which religion alone realizes itself as a certain form of experience • The Universe enters you as an uninterrupted flow • In which you see yourself as a part of the whole • Religion is the specifically intentional & emotional reference • to each content of experience; to an infinite whole • Devotion is getting excited at the “streaming in” of this fullness without restraint • Religious life is the constant renewal of this act • integrating experience into the inner unity of life

  20. HEIDEGGER ON SCHLEIERMACHER • Religion is a mysterious moment of unstructured unity of intuition & feeling • Any positive claim about being is gone • nothing is decided about anything • the fullness of experience stands in a certain neutrality • no object takes precedence over any other • a specific infinity of religious experience is thus given • Live your life with religion not from religion • Religion should accompany all doings of life, like a holy music

  21. FIRST SPEECH: APOLOGY

  22. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • Why would anyone from the educated classes pay attention to someone talking about religion? • Poetry & philosophy are more popular • Manners, art, & science are of more interest • There is no room left for faith today

  23. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • You particularly distrust Priests nowadays • In any other field, you would trust the advice of experts who have devoted their lives to the subject • Why not trust experts in religion? • But since you asked, I’m happy to advise • for [being anonymous] I don’t worry about how my fellow priests will respond

  24. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • God made his work divisible into 2 opposing forces • physical world vs. the spirit • The physical world itself consists of opposing forces • But so does the spirit: particularity & universality • Your spirit wants to assert itself as an individual • it wants to accomplish goals & acquire things • But it also wants to absorb itself into all of Creation • These are humanity’s two ontological pressures

  25. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • 1st aspect of spirit: all you feel & do—Particularity • 2nd aspect of sprit: focusing on other people outside of you • Universality: Your comportment to law, order & morality • Appeasing the 1st aspect leads to endless pleasure-seeking • Such people can never know Being or the nature of humanity • But appeasing the 2nd aspect means you dissipate yourself into a futile game with empty notions • Everything simply becomes a means • Nothing becomes an end

  26. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • People who never seek either spiritual aspect (neither self-regard nor common morality) are worse: • They become dull mediocrities • They lead neither to human achievement nor morality • But the younger generation is mistakenly encouraged to do just this

  27. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • God always blesses some individuals • they become interpreters of Him & his works: • either through natural inclination • or after severe & complete self-training • They are ambassadors of God, simply by existing • They show ordinary people how to change anxious restless self-love into a love of the highest & eternal

  28. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • This true priest brings divinity to those of us who are used to the finite & the trivial • Doing so, he awakens a slumbering germ of a better humanity • This higher priesthood announces the inner meaning of all spiritual secrets& is the source of all • visions & prophecies • sacred art & speeches

  29. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • Someday, hopefully, we’ll be taught this piety directly by God • Until then, only a few individuals have this insight & piety • I [“Anonymous”] am one of these individuals • My piety helped me as I outgrew childish [anthropomorphic] notions of God & immortality

  30. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • My piety guided my active life without any planning • Through it alone I understood friendship & love • This true religion is rare • only those who have felt it themselves will discuss it • Such religion is not to be found in the Bible • To those who haven’t experienced this religion • it would seem mere annoyance & foolishness

  31. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • Only Germans can be taught this religion • Only Germans can get this religion within today’s coarse barbarism • But even then, only upper-class, educated Germans • [Note the flattery toward audience, & the Romantic-era Germanic nationalism]

  32. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • The German lower classes cannot understand this more refined religion • Do you really think people constantly stressed about day-to-day problems can focus on the big picture? • I will show you — and only you — from what human tendency religion proceeds • The English & the French have too many cultural hang-ups to truly understand religion

  33. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • It was once considered a virtue to reject old Christian dogma • But those days [of Martin Luther?] are long gone • Piety itself is now no more to be talked about • But if you’re going to be contemptuous of religion, • at least be well-informed & consistent about your contempt

  34. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • You reject all notions miracles & immortality • You may consider this the crux of all religions • But what if you base religion upon an innerfeeling • & notupon miracles & immortality? • If you only judge religion by its dogmas • you’ll never understand its inner core

  35. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • You’re already familiar with Christianity’s history • ranging from silly old myths of human sacrifice • to today’s refined Deism, which is just Kantian ethics • You find no rhyme or reason to either one • & I don’t blame you! • There’s a problem with both: • mythological, doctrinal Christianity • refined Deism • they both strive for a calculating understanding

  36. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • All of these theologies endlessly argue about the beginning & the end of the World • Doing so, they miss the point of realreligion • Look to your own feelings • & you’ll understand this is not the character of religion • If you’ve only paid attention to dogmas & doctrines • then what you despise is not really religion • but the corruptionof religion

  37. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • Why won’t you despisers question more deeply? • Why do you remain voluntarily ignorant? • Why do you simply blow off religion as nonsense? • just because there are stupid Christians in the world? • Why not consider the religious life itself? • A religion divorced from dogma or doctrine • where people try to capture unreflective moments • their soul thus dissolves into the Infinite & the Eternal

  38. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • Only in such unreflective moments will religion reveal itself in its primordial & visible form • You would no longer despise that kind of religion • Only those who have considered this emotional response toward religion can understand it • But if you don’t unbind these emotions • you’ll merely analyze religion as a cold, dead thing • & you will always fail to understand its true nature

  39. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • Philosophers should not be surprised that I recommend study of the unreflective [emotional] elements of religion • Philosophy bases itself on completeness & verification • Religion can’t work that way • There are very few philosophers who both • understand the harmony of nature & spirit, and • communicate a system of that knowledge

  40. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • In fact, all systems & schools of philosophy are just houses & nurseries of the dead letter • The spirit of true religious contemplation is too fluid to be captured in systematic philosophies • Religion is as far removed from systematic thinking as philosophy is disposed toward systems • so don’t try to learn about religion from philosophers!

  41. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • Think of any of the old religious heroes, who ever brought forth any new revelation • From the person who first devised a Kingdom of God • To the current crop of “new mystics” • who may still hold some original beam of inner light • [a hint as to where his sympathies lie!] • Have any of them tried to present their religion systematically?

  42. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • I have no use for theologians of the Bible • The try to come up with new clothes for old formulas, • Or new arrangements of ingenious proofs for God • Ideas & words are useful only as necessary & inseparable outpourings of emotion • They can only be understood in context with that emotion • Doctrines are useful only to help clarify misunderstandings about those emotions

  43. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • So turn away from everything usually called religion • Instead focus only on inward emotions & dispositions • Only if you do this & continue to ridicule religion will I give up • & assume that your contempt for religion is just part of your nature • Until then, I have hope for you!

  44. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • Don’t worry, I’m not going to say religion is necessary for justice or moral order • Nor will I talk about • “all-seeing eyes,” or • humanity’s flawed nature, or • how religion enables weak-willed people to morally improve themselves • It’s hard to say which is degraded more by saying this: morality or religion

  45. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • These speeches are not to tell you what you should do for the sake of the people • It’s true that civil institutions are flawed, • & injustice still abounds in society • But religion can’t be used simply as a rhetorical device, to cajole the elite into improving civil society • Religion has to be followed for its intrinsic value • Otherwise, the oppressed would see through its hypocrisy • & abandon religion as soon as their social status improved

  46. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • Could you even base a government on religion? • Wouldn’t the best part of religion vanish if you did? • If there are problems with a just society, • then fix those problems directly! • Don’t rely on religion to fix them • Don’t disgrace mankind by saying its loftiest creation (civil society) requires religion to work

  47. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • Laws don’t require internal morality to work • but only universal consistency • But if combining religion with the law [theocracy] • allows only people skilled enough to infuse religion with the law to become statesmen • And given how rare such people are • we would soon land in evil times

  48. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • By the same token, morality doesn’t need religion • Only weak-willed people require a religious promise of the future to act morally now • Religious people already understand there is no difference between this world & the next one • Morality should base itself in the happiness it brings now, • not on some religious promise of future happiness

  49. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • But you already know why the moral law can & must work independently of religion • Religion & moral law occupy different spheres • But aside from those arguments, there is one more • That religion should have to make itself useful to be worthwhile degrades religion

  50. ON RELIGION: DEFENSE • Morality & justice are essentially means to ends: social happiness • Utilitarians do a bad job of defending religion on the grounds of supporting morality & justice • Their arguments won’t persuade people who are seeking their own individual happiness • In any event, it’s not clear religion will either • prevent evil deeds, or • produce moral action

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