As Richard M. Weaver famously said, 'Ideas have consequences'. Thank God there are still educators playing the 'long game', teaching from within the Classical tradition.
By Glenn Arbery
the speaker (unnamed because of the
Chatham House Rule) emphasized three major points: first, that ideas are
more important than politicians, since political figures do what they
do because of what they think; second, that the culture and the dominant
ideas that inform those politicians are upstream from politics; and
third, that universities and colleges are upstream from culture. In
other words, the real center of interest for those concerned about the
future of civilization ought to be higher education, not what’s going on
in Washington. In his view, the troubles of our day come from the fact
that many contemporary universities have been dominated by variations of
Marxist ideology for generations; both students and faculty
do everything they can to protect themselves from real exchanges of
ideas.[*]
Wyoming Catholic College exists
precisely to foster such exchanges, to raise the real and abiding
questions, to make real demands and offer real occasions of risk, not to
manure the sensitive little rosebuds of our cultural moment. The
redoubtable Samuel Johnson writes that “great things cannot have escaped
former observation,” but many a mandate these days is for supposed
rights that have altogether escaped the assiduous observation of all
mankind. The rights advocates at many American and European institutions
of higher education invent ever-subtler forms of racism or sexism.
Novelties of victimization are the order of the day.
What goes on at “woke” places like
Middlebury also happens all over Europe. In fact, it’s worse, because
the religious decline has been precipitous, and (surely related) the
classical tradition has been largely lost. In an article last week, the
English biographer A.N. Wilson wrote that “In the year 1948, 2000
Frenchmen were ordained to the priesthood. Now, there are fewer than 100
per year. . . . A mere 4.5% of the French population regularly attend
Mass. This phenomenon is repeated throughout what was once Catholic
Europe.” How much the loss of a sense of national sovereignty to the EU
has to do with this loss of faith would be an interesting study. Even
more related, however, is the departure of classical education from
European experience; the current running through the tradition is
essentially Catholic, and any real experience of the works of antiquity,
the Middle Ages, and the Renaissance helps dispose those who study them
to understand the centrality of Christ in history. Europe would not be
Europe without this current out of Athens, Jerusalem, and Rome. It makes
perfect sense, then, that in rejecting its tradition, Europe has also
forgotten its own raison d’etre.
In one of the sessions I attended at the
Vanenberg Conference, a noted Oxford-educated Canadian scholar,
speaking on the future of Classics, pointed out how completely they seem
to have disappeared from the curricula of the colleges and universities
in England. He lamented even more their instrumental use—for example,
by companies that cheapen the nature of them for purposes of superficial
appeal: “Learn the Classics to improve your vocabulary.” In the
question-and-answer session after his talk, I commented that what he was
describing as the real loss of the classical tradition in England and
Continental Europe is being strongly reversed by K-12 classical
academies and Great Books-themed colleges in the United States. One
participant argued that such places (including WCC) remain
“marginal”—and perhaps that’s true, but in a sense that’s the whole
point of what we do. Besides, I appeal to the great Catholic
anthropologist, Victor Turner, who writes that “marginals” tend to be
“highly conscious and self-conscious people and may produce from their
ranks a disproportionately high number of writers, artists, and
philosophers.”
When I first took this office several
years ago, I made the point that we are playing “the long game” in what
we do. The immediate effects of this education are not manifest,
perhaps, but without doing what we are doing, the culture itself would
be ceded to those who wish to shape it for a radically different secular
agenda, perhaps even a posthuman one. We affirm the service of God, the
life of faith and reason and poetic knowledge, the rediscovery of
nature and its limits, participation in communities of civic association
and friendship, and the full challenges and joys of traditional
families. What our students know—and their ideas are thought through,
tested, repeatedly put up for discussion, defended and refined—flow from
the classical tradition, and they will flow down from our students to
their families, parishes, and cities, and thus into the culture such
ideas help sustain.
I was reminded over the weekend that
incoming freshmen were once expected to know Greek and Latin before they
entered college in their mid-teens. One entrance exam of the day
required that they translate from the original Latin into English three
of Cicero’s Orations and the first three books of Virgil’s Aeneid, and then translate the first ten chapters of the Gospel of John from Greek into Latin.
That’s what was upstream of culture in
those days. As Brad Birzer puts it, “Such an education was a norm for
the American Founders. Should it surprise us that they gave us the
Constitutional Republic that they did?”
Republished with gracious permission from Wyoming Catholic College‘s weekly newsletter.
Notes:
* Legutko, Ryszard. “The Demon in Middlebury.” First Things, August 1, 2019.
Editor’s Note: The featured image is “Cours de philosophie à Paris Grandes chroniques de France,” courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
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