From The Imaginative Conservative
By Glenn Arbery
When I went into the kitchen yesterday morning to get some coffee, my wife Wall Street Journal, and she just read me one sentence: “Beijing has declared that any attempted reincarnation must ‘comply with Chinese laws.’ ” I laughed out loud. The struggles of Tibet aside, the question of whether the Dalai Lama is actually “an emanation of the bodhisattva of compassion” even farther aside, it struck me as another comical example of state overreach (not that there’s anything funny about China’s ambitions). Solemn Beijing was entirely at odds with what our freshmen have just undergone in their 21-day backpacking expedition, which was a full-bore encounter with realities outside their control.
looked up from the sofa and said, “You have to listen to this.” It was an op-ed piece about the Dalai Lama by Walter Russell Mead in Tuesday’s
To declare what the Chinese declared is a
little like Wyoming Catholic College saying that, from now on, the
timing of storms, the placement of boulders after landslides in the
mountains, and the behavior of wild animals must “comply with the rules
of Wyoming Catholic College.” If the Romans in Jerusalem had just been
as savvy as the Chinese, they would have insisted that the triumph over
death in the Resurrection comply with Roman law.
It’s almost impossible to keep from
coming back to the theme of power over God and nature, because it seems
so distinctively modern in the pejorative sense of that word—that is,
modern in thinking that the complex-of-things-formerly- known-as-Creation is merely “standing reserve,” as Martin Heidegger put it, for the technological unfolding of the human will.
“We relate to man-made environments as
gods to our creation, as masters to our slave,” writes Dr. Jeremy
Holmes, explaining the rationale behind our Outdoor Leadership Program.
On Monday, as part of their orientation to WCC, the freshmen read Dr.
Holmes’s addendum to the Philosophical Vision Statement and are divided
into four seminar groups to discuss this text that distinguishes between
the manmade world and the natural one. Dr. Holmes emphasizes the stark
difference. “Those who live all of their lives in the posture of gods
may understandably come to think of themselves as lords of all,
unaccountable to anyone and free to dispose of the world as they will.
What man has made is, by that very fact, lower than man and subject to
him.” The natural world, on the other hand, cannot be ascribed to human
making. The Grand Tetons sublimely touch upon the mystery of being
itself; so does the intricate architecture of a dragonfly’s wing.
Strangely, the question at large these
days in secular culture is whether God and nature are themselves
man-made. The flat assumption of Beijing is that any religion is merely
an ideology, a mode of power; it makes perfect sense within such
atheistic thinking to insist that future reincarnations of the Dalai
Lama comply with Chinese law. Beijing’s attitude toward the Catholic
Church follows the same logic. As an article in the South China Morning Post put
it last year, “President Xi Jinping has launched a sweeping campaign to
‘sinicise religion,’ which demands all religious groups practice their
faith in a Chinese way.” Enough said.
With high technological rigor, the
Chinese are attempting the kind of total indoctrination—erasing any
distinction between state aims and personal desire—whose possibility has
fascinated and appalled Western thinkers from Plato to Orwell. As
Walter Russell Mead puts it in his commentary on the Dalai Lama, “The
technology of surveillance, including biometrics, has given Chinese
authorities unprecedented hard power in places ranging from Beijing to
the Han Chinese heartland. China’s rulers are in a position to know more
about what their subjects do, where they go, and what they think than
any rulers in the history of the world.” It’s reasonable to ask why. It
does not bode well.
In this country, we are still a few
removes from the total surveillance state that China has already
achieved, though there are other kinds of unnerving developments going
on here—for example, what Jordan Peterson experienced recently.[*] (Our
technology policy at WCC looks wiser than ever.) But many in our society
hold underlying modern assumptions in common with Beijing: they
consider religion merely an instrument of power, and they believe that
the “correction” of inherited beliefs and practices can be forced upon
the unwilling.
There’s an enormous difference between
people who choose the real common good and people forced to submit to a
state ideology. In a famous passage of Paradise Lost, Milton’s
God acknowledges that He could have created Adam and Eve without
freedom. But what would there be to praise? “Not free, what proof could
they have given sincere / Of true allegiance, constant faith or love, /
Where only what they needs must do appeared, / Not what they would?”
True communities like ours are built upon trust of each other and love
of God. We are grateful here at Wyoming Catholic College to provide an
education that acknowledges, first and last, that reality has never been
ours to invent. That recognition itself, as Dr. Holmes says in his
piece on the outdoor program, opens us to wonder, which is not available
to those who think they made the world.
Republished with gracious permission from Wyoming Catholic College‘s weekly newsletter.
* Peterson, Jordan. “I Didn’t Say That.” Jordan B. Peterson, 22 August 2019.
Editor’s Note: The featured image is “Der-Auferstandene” (1558) by Lucas Cranach (1472-1553), courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments are subject to deletion if they are not germane. I have no problem with a bit of colourful language, but blasphemy or depraved profanity will not be allowed. Attacks on the Catholic Faith will not be tolerated. Comments will be deleted that are republican (Yanks! Note the lower case 'r'!), attacks on the legitimacy of Pope Francis as the Vicar of Christ (I know he's a material heretic and a Protector of Perverts, and I definitely want him gone yesterday! However, he is Pope, and I pray for him every day.), the legitimacy of the House of Windsor or of the claims of the Elder Line of the House of France, or attacks on the legitimacy of any of the currently ruling Houses of Europe.