Fr Longenecker looks at the false philosophical anthropology behind the Pachamama Sin-od.
By Fr Dwight Longenecker
The recent Amazonian synod in Rome revealed what might be called “The Return of the Native” or perhaps “The Return of the Noble Savage.”
The myth of the noble
savage has an interesting five-hundred-year-old history. As the new
world was discovered and explored, wherever they went, the Europeans
discovered indigenous peoples.
Their reactions varied.
The Catholics embarked on
courageous missionary endeavors, regarding the native people as pagans
in need of the gospel. Most of the Calvinist settlers of New England, on
the other hand, did not evangelize the Indians. It was pointless, in
their opinion, because the savages could not possibly be members of the
elect because they did not have souls. Reports from the early explorers
to Africa echoed that opinion. They regarded the tribal Africans to be a
somewhat higher form of the chimpanzees and gorillas they had also
discovered.
Regarding the indigenous
people as a sub species excused the atrocities committed by the colonial
powers. Indigenous people were wiped out with massacres, their
populations were decimated by diseases transferred from the Europeans
against which they had no immunity, they were enslaved, deported, driven
from their land, and eliminated if they were deemed to be in the way.
The intellectual response
to the atrocities was to go to the other extreme. The myth of the noble
savage began to sprout in the fertile soil of anti-religious,
enlightenment France. The indigenous people were not savages, but
innocent, unspoiled children of Adam and Eve still living in Eden. It
was the Europeans who were the true barbarians.
During the late 16th and
17th centuries, the figure of the “good savage” was held up as a
reproach to European civilization, then in the throes of the French Wars
of Religion and Thirty Years’ War. In his famous essay Of Cannibals, Michel
de Montaigne—himself a Catholic—reported that the Tupinambá people of
Brazil ceremoniously ate the bodies of their dead enemies as a matter of
honor.
However, he reminded his readers that Europeans behave even more
barbarously when they burn each other alive for disagreeing about
religion.
In English the phrase “noble savage” first appeared in John Dryden’s 1672 play The Conquest of Granada:
I am as free as nature first made man,
Ere the base laws of servitude began,
When wild in woods the noble savage ran.
The noble, low born person
had been a stock character in drama from classical times. In the 18th
century the noble savage joined the Virtuous Milkmaid, the
Servant-More-Clever-than-the-Master, and other humbly born, but shrewd
or noble characters to highlight natural virtue and expose hypocrisy.
Meanwhile, in the
nineteenth century art world, the impressionists romanticized the
prostitutes, showgirls, circus artistes, and peasant farm workers. The
post impressionist Paul Gaugin took the dream of the noble savage to its
logical end by moving from France to Tahiti to live among those he
deemed to be innocent children of Eden.
Thus the idea of the noble
savage has echoed down to our present age. In our day it is the
eco-warriors who are inclined to fall for the notion of the noble
savage. The orthodoxy of the eco-warriors is infused with a sentimental
enthusiasm for indigenous people and their culture. As it was with the
dawn of the concept of the noble savage, this enthusiasm is always the
flip side of a condemnation of modern Western culture.
Today’s version of the myth
is that we who enjoy the benefits of modern technology and an ordered
society are the true barbarians because we are destroying the natural
world with our consumerism and greed. The indigenous people show us the
way. They are the ones who are living in harmony with Pachamama—Mother Earth. In their Edenic innocence they live in a beautiful integration with the natural world.
But of course, this wasn’t
true in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries nor is it true now.
While some tribes were peaceful hunter gatherers, most indigenous
peoples followed dark belief systems and horrendous customs.
The human sacrifices of the
Mayas and Aztecs contradict any notion of the savages being either
simple or admirable. The Jesuit missionaries to North America offer
another resounding correction to the myth of the noble savage. St John
de Brébeuf and his companions kept detailed records of their lives among
the Iroquois and Huron tribes. Their diaries reveal truly horrific
conditions among bloodthirsty savages who were locked in superstition,
violence, and fear.
The noble savage is always
set up in contrast to what, in our day might be called “the urban
savage.” As Montaigne pointed to the European barbarians in his day, so
for us it is the modern urban, supposedly civilized person who is the
true savage. Just beneath the veneer of his good manners and ordered
life the bloodthirsty savage lurks. Given the right conditions we too
would revert to primitive tribalism. This concept was brought to life
brilliantly in the film The Wicker Man and William Golding’s novel The Lord of the Flies—in which a group of English schoolboys, stranded on an island soon turn into bloodthirsty barbarians.
But of course, both
ideas—the noble savage and the urban savage—are simplistic generalities,
and like all generalities, they express a truth and a lie at the same
time. The fact of the matter is both the human in the jungle and the
human in the city are pretty much alike, and it is only a traditional
Christian anthropology that can make sense of the conundrum.
The error in the concept of
the noble savage is excessive optimism. The idea of the noble savage is
based in the assumption that human beings are essentially good. The
error in the concept of the urban savage is that human beings are
essentially bad.
Christian theology affirms
that human beings were created good because they were created in the
image of God and God cannot make anything bad. The human in the Amazon
and the human in Manhattan are both eternal beings who are therefore
essentially good. However, both the savage in the jungle and the savage
in the city have fallen from that goodness and are, in their natural
condition, unredeemed and in bondage to sin and in slavery to darker
forces.
As such, both characters
are noble and ignoble. Both are sinners. Both could be saints. It is
only the Christian faith that establishes this reality and offers the
necessary redemption.
The essential error of the
modernist theologians who pushed their agenda at the Amazonian synod is
that they have fallen for the myth of the noble savage. Infected with
the false optimism of universalism combined with a naive sentimentalism,
they imagine that we in the developed world are the true savages, while
the innocent Amazonian peoples are in no need of conversion.
Ironically, this attitude
is patronizing and racist in itself. They do not grant the indigenous
peoples the true dignity of being complex human personalities as
understood by Christian theology. Instead the notion of the noble savage
encourages their admirers to treat the indigenous people like cultural
curiosities—museum exhibits that one should marvel at and admire . . .
before moving on.
It is not racist,
colonialist, or imperialist to suggest that the indigenous people of
Amazonia are sinners who need to be converted, have faith in Jesus
Christ, and be baptized.
They need to hear the good
news of the gospel, respond with joyful faith, and find redemption and
the path to holiness and wholeness. . . . just like their brothers and
sisters in Metropolis.
The featured image is “Wi-jún-jon, The Light Going To and Returning From Washington” by George Carlin, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
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