A discoursive rehearsal of certain
incidents of modern life will show the organic relation
of the anthropomorphic cults to the barbarian culture
and temperament. It will likewise serve to show
how the survival and efficacy of the cults and he
prevalence of their schedule of devout observances
are related to the institution of a leisure class and
to the springs of action underlying that institution.
Without any intention to commend or to deprecate the
practices to be spoken of under the head of devout
observances, or the spiritual and intellectual traits
of which these observances are the expression, the
everyday phenomena of current anthropomorphic cults
may be taken up from the point of view of the interest
which they have for economic theory. What can
properly be spoken of here are the tangible, external
features of devout observances. The moral, as
well as the devotional value of the life of faith
lies outside of the scope of the present inquiry.
Of course no question is here entertained as to the
truth or beauty of the creeds on which the cults proceed.
And even their remoter economic bearing can not be
taken up here; the subject is too recondite and of
too grave import to find a place in so slight a sketch.
Something has been said in an earlier
chapter as to the influence which pecuniary standards
of value exert upon the processes of valuation carried
out on other bases, not related to the pecuniary interest.
The relation is not altogether one-sided. The
economic standards or canons of valuation are in their
turn influenced by extra-economic standards of value.
Our judgments of the economic bearing of facts are
to some extent shaped by the dominant presence of
these weightier interests. There is a point of
view, indeed, from which the economic interest is of
weight only as being ancillary to these higher, non-economic
interests. For the present purpose, therefore,
some thought must be taken to isolate the economic
interest or the economic hearing of these phenomena
of anthropomorphic cults. It takes some effort
to divest oneself of the more serious point of view,
and to reach an economic appreciation of these facts,
with as little as may be of the bias due to higher
interests extraneous to economic theory. In the
discussion of the sporting temperament, it has appeared
that the sense of an animistic propensity in material
things and events is what affords the spiritual basis
of the sporting man’s gambling habit. For
the economic purpose, this sense of propensity is
substantially the same psychological element as expresses
itself, under a variety of forms, in animistic beliefs
and anthropomorphic creeds. So far as concerns
those tangible psychological features with which economic
theory has to deal, the gambling spirit which pervades
the sporting element shades off by insensible gradations
into that frame of mind which finds gratification in
devout observances. As seen from the point of
view of economic theory, the sporting character shades
off into the character of a religious devotee.
Where the betting man’s animistic sense is helped
out by a somewhat consistent tradition, it has developed
into a more or less articulate belief in a preternatural
or hyperphysical agency, with something of an anthropomorphic
content. And where this is the case, there is
commonly a perceptible inclination to make terms with
the preternatural agency by some approved method of
approach and conciliation. This element of propitiation
and cajoling has much in common with the crasser
forms of worship if not in historical derivation,
at least in actual psychological content. It
obviously shades off in unbroken continuity into what
is recognized as superstitious practice and belief,
and so asserts its claim to kinship with the grosser
anthropomorphic cults.
The sporting or gambling temperament,
then, comprises some of the substantial psychological
elements that go to make a believer in creeds and
an observer of devout forms, the chief point of coincidence
being the belief in an inscrutable propensity or a
preternatural interposition in the sequence of events.
For the purpose of the gambling practice the belief
in preternatural agency may be, and ordinarily is,
less closely formulated, especially as regards the
habits of thought and the scheme of life imputed to
the preternatural agent; or, in other words, as regards
his moral character and his purposes in interfering
in events. With respect to the individuality
or personality of the agency whose presence as luck,
or chance, or hoodoo, or mascot, etc., he feels
and sometimes dreads and endeavors to evade, the sporting
man’s views are also less specific, less integrated
and differentiated. The basis of his gambling
activity is, in great measure, simply an instinctive
sense of the presence of a pervasive extraphysical
and arbitrary force or propensity in things or situations,
which is scarcely recognized as a personal agent.
The betting man is not infrequently both a believer
in luck, in this naïve sense, and at the same time
a pretty staunch adherent of some form of accepted
creed. He is especially prone to accept so much
of the creed as concerts the inscrutable power and
the arbitrary habits of the divinity which has won
his confidence. In such a case he is possessed
of two, or sometimes more than two, distinguishable
phases of animism. Indeed, the complete series
of successive phases of animistic belief is to be
found unbroken in the spiritual furniture of any sporting
community. Such a chain of animistic conceptions
will comprise the most elementary form of an instinctive
sense of luck and chance and fortuitous necessity
at one end of the series, together with the perfectly
developed anthropomorphic divinity at the other end,
with all intervening stages of integration. Coupled
with these beliefs in preternatural agency goes an
instinctive shaping of conduct to conform with the
surmised requirements of the lucky chance on the one
hand, and a more or less devout submission to the
inscrutable decrees of the divinity on the other hand.
There is a relationship in this respect
between the sporting temperament and the temperament
of the delinquent classes; and the two are related
to the temperament which inclines to an anthropomorphic
cult. Both the delinquent and the sporting man
are on the average more apt to be adherents of some
accredited creed, and are also rather more inclined
to devout observances, than the general average of
the community. It is also noticeable that unbelieving
members of these classes show more of a proclivity
to become prosélytes to some accredited faith
than the average of unbelievers. This fact of
observation is avowed by the spokesmen of sports,
especially in apologizing for the more naively predatory
athletic sports. Indeed, it is somewhat insistently
claimed as a meritorious feature of sporting life
that the habitual participants in athletic games are
in some degree peculiarly given to devout practices.
And it is observable that the cult to which sporting
men and the predaceous delinquent classes adhere,
or to which prosélytes from these classes commonly
attach themselves, is ordinarily not one of the so-called
higher faiths, but a cult which has to do with a thoroughly
anthropomorphic divinity. Archaic, predatory human
nature is not satisfied with abstruse conceptions
of a dissolving personality that shades off into the
concept of quantitative causal sequence, such as the
speculative, esoteric creeds of Christendom impute
to the First Cause, Universal Intelligence, World
Soul, or Spiritual Aspect. As an instance of
a cult of the character which the habits of mind of
the athlete and the delinquent require, may be cited
that branch of the church militant known as the Salvation
Army. This is to some extent recruited from the
lower-class delinquents, and it appears to comprise
also, among its officers especially, a larger proportion
of men with a sporting record than the proportion
of such men in the aggregate population of the community.
College athletics afford a case in
point. It is contended by exponents of the devout
element in college life and there seems
to be no ground for disputing the claim that
the desirable athletic material afforded by any student
body in this country is at the same time predominantly
religious; or that it is at least given to devout observances
to a greater degree than the average of those students
whose interest in athletics and other college sports
is less. This is what might be expected on theoretical
grounds. It may be remarked, by the way, that
from one point of view this is felt to reflect credit
on the college sporting life, on athletic games, and
on those persons who occupy themselves with these
matters. It happens not frequently that college
sporting men devote themselves to religious propaganda,
either as a vocation or as a by-occupation; and it
is observable that when this happens they are likely
to become propagandists of some one of the more anthropomorphic
cults. In their teaching they are apt to insist
chiefly on the personal relation of status which subsists
between an anthropomorphic divinity and the human
subject.
This intimate relation between athletics
and devout observance among college men is a fact
of sufficient notoriety; but it has a special feature
to which attention has not been called, although it
is obvious enough. The religious zeal which pervades
much of the college sporting element is especially
prone to express itself in an unquestioning devoutness
and a naïve and complacent submission to an inscrutable
Providence. It therefore by preference seeks affiliation
with some one of those lay religious organizations
which occupy themselves with the spread of the exoteric
forms of faith as, e.g., the Young
Men’s Christian Association or the Young People’s
Society for Christian Endeavor. These lay bodies
are organized to further “practical” religion;
and as if to enforce the argument and firmly establish
the close relationship between the sporting temperament
and the archaic devoutness, these lay religious bodies
commonly devote some appreciable portion of their
energies to the furtherance of athletic contests and
similar games of chance and skill. It might even
be said that sports of this kind are apprehended to
have some efficacy as a means of grace. They
are apparently useful as a means of proselyting, and
as a means of sustaining the devout attitude in converts
once made. That is to say, the games which give
exercise to the animistic sense and to the emulative
propensity help to form and to conserve that habit
of mind to which the more exoteric cults are congenial.
Hence, in the hands of the lay organizations, these
sporting activities come to do duty as a novitiate
or a means of induction into that fuller unfolding
of the life of spiritual status which is the privilege
of the full communicant along.
That the exercise of the emulative
and lower animistic proclivities are substantially
useful for the devout purpose seems to be placed beyond
question by the fact that the priesthood of many denominations
is following the lead of the lay organizations in
this respect. Those ecclesiastical organizations
especially which stand nearest the lay organizations
in their insistence on practical religion have gone
some way towards adopting these or analogous practices
in connection with the traditional devout observances.
So there are “boys’ brigades,” and
other organizations, under clerical sanction, acting
to develop the emulative proclivity and the sense
of status in the youthful members of the congregation.
These pseudo-military organizations tend to elaborate
and accentuate the proclivity to emulation and invidious
comparison, and so strengthen the native facility
for discerning and approving the relation of personal
mastery and subservience. And a believer is eminently
a person who knows how to obey and accept chastisement
with good grace. But the habits of thought which
these practices foster and conserve make up but one
half of the substance of the anthropomorphic cults.
The other, complementary element of devout life the
animistic habit of mind is recruited and
conserved by a second range of practices organized
under clerical sanction. These are the class of
gambling practices of which the church bazaar or raffle
may be taken as the type. As indicating the degree
of legitimacy of these practices in connection with
devout observances proper, it is to be remarked that
these raffles, and the like trivial opportunities
for gambling, seem to appeal with more effect to the
common run of the members of religious organizations
than they do to persons of a less devout habit of mind.
All this seems to argue, on the one
hand, that the same temperament inclines people to
sports as inclines them to the anthropomorphic cults,
and on the other hand that the habituation to sports,
perhaps especially to athletic sports, acts to develop
the propensities which find satisfaction in devout
observances. Conversely; it also appears that
habituation to these observances favors the growth
of a proclivity for athletic sports and for all games
that give play to the habit of invidious comparison
and of the appeal to luck. Substantially the same
range of propensities finds expression in both these
directions of the spiritual life. That barbarian
human nature in which the predatory instinct and the
animistic standpoint predominate is normally prone
to both. The predatory habit of mind involves
an accentuated sense of personal dignity and of the
relative standing of individuals. The social
structure in which the predatory habit has been the
dominant factor in the shaping of institutions is
a structure based on status. The pervading norm
in the predatory community’s scheme of life is
the relation of superior and inferior, noble and base,
dominant and subservient persons and classes, master
and slave. The anthropomorphic cults have come
down from that stage of industrial development and
have been shaped by the same scheme of economic differentiation a
differentiation into consumer and producer and
they are pervaded by the same dominant principle of
mastery and subservience. The cults impute to
their divinity the habits of thought answering to the
stage of economic differentiation at which the cults
took shape. The anthropomorphic divinity is conceived
to be punctilious in all questions of precedence and
is prone to an assertion of mastery and an arbitrary
exercise of power an habitual resort to
force as the final arbiter.
In the later and maturer formulations
of the anthropomorphic creed this imputed habit of
dominance on the part of a divinity of awful presence
and inscrutable power is chastened into “the
fatherhood of God.” The spiritual attitude
and the aptitudes imputed to the preternatural agent
are still such as belong under the regime of status,
but they now assume the patriarchal cast characteristic
of the quasi-peaceable stage of culture. Still
it is to be noted that even in this advanced phase
of the cult the observances in which devoutness finds
expression consistently aim to propitiate the divinity
by extolling his greatness and glory and by professing
subservience and fealty. The act of propitiation
or of worship is designed to appeal to a sense of
status imputed to the inscrutable power that is thus
approached. The propitiatory formulas most in
vogue are still such as carry or imply an invidious
comparison. A loyal attachment to the person
of an anthropomorphic divinity endowed with such an
archaic human nature implies the like archaic propensities
in the devotee. For the purposes of economic theory,
the relation of fealty, whether to a physical or to
an extraphysical person, is to be taken as a variant
of that personal subservience which makes up so large
a share of the predatory and the quasi-peaceable scheme
of life.
The barbarian conception of the divinity,
as a warlike chieftain inclined to an overbearing
manner of government, has been greatly softened through
the milder manners and the soberer habits of life that
characterize those cultural phases which lie between
the early predatory stage and the present. But
even after this chastening of the devout fancy, and
the consequent mitigation of the harsher traits of
conduct and character that are currently imputed to
the divinity, there still remains in the popular apprehension
of the divine nature and temperament a very substantial
residue of the barbarian conception. So it comes
about, for instance, that in characterizing the divinity
and his relations to the process of human life, speakers
and writers are still able to make effective use of
similes borrowed from the vocabulary of war and of
the predatory manner of life, as well as of locutions
which involve an invidious comparison. Figures
of speech of this import are used with good effect
even in addressing the less warlike modern audiences,
made up of adherents of the blander variants of the
creed. This effective use of barbarian epithets
and terms of comparison by popular speakers argues
that the modern generation has retained a lively appreciation
of the dignity and merit of the barbarian virtues;
and it argues also that there is a degree of congruity
between the devout attitude and the predatory habit
of mind. It is only on second thought, if at
all, that the devout fancy of modern worshippers revolts
at the imputation of ferocious and vengeful emotions
and actions to the object of their adoration.
It is a matter of common observation that sanguinary
epithets applied to the divinity have a high aesthetic
and honorific value in the popular apprehension.
That is to say, suggestions which these epithets carry
are very acceptable to our unreflecting apprehension.
Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming
of the Lord:
He is trampling out the vintage where
the grapes of wrath are stored;
He hath loosed the fateful lightning of
his terrible swift sword;
His truth is marching on.
The guiding habits of thought of a
devout person move on the plane of an archaic scheme
of life which has outlived much of its usefulness for
the economic exigencies of the collective life of
today. In so far as the economic organization
fits the exigencies of the collective life of today,
it has outlived the regime of status, and has no use
and no place for a relation of personal subserviency.
So far as concerns the economic efficiency of the
community, the sentiment of personal fealty, and the
general habit of mind of which that sentiment is an
expression, are survivals which cumber the ground
and hinder an adequate adjustment of human institutions
to the existing situation. The habit of mind which
best lends itself to the purposes of a peaceable, industrial
community, is that matter-of-fact temper which recognizes
the value of material facts simply as opaque items
in the mechanical sequence. It is that frame
of mind which does not instinctively impute an animistic
propensity to things, nor resort to preternatural intervention
as an explanation of perplexing phenomena, nor depend
on an unseen hand to shape the course of events to
human use. To meet the requirements of the highest
economic efficiency under modern conditions, the world
process must habitually be apprehended in terms of
quantitative, dispassionate force and sequence.
As seen from the point of view of
the later economic exigencies, devoutness is, perhaps
in all cases, to be looked upon as a survival from
an earlier phase of associated life a mark
of arrested spiritual development. Of course
it remains true that in a community where the economic
structure is still substantially a system of status;
where the attitude of the average of persons in the
community is consequently shaped by and adapted to
the relation of personal dominance and personal subservience;
or where for any other reason of tradition
or of inherited aptitude the population
as a whole is strongly inclined to devout observances;
there a devout habit of mind in any individual, not
in excess of the average of the community, must be
taken simply as a detail of the prevalent habit of
life. In this light, a devout individual in a
devout community can not be called a case of reversion,
since he is abreast of the average of the community.
But as seen from the point of view of the modern industrial
situation, exceptional devoutness devotional
zeal that rises appreciably above the average pitch
of devoutness in the community may safely
be set down as in all cases an atavistic trait.
It is, of course, equally legitimate
to consider these phenomena from a different point
of view. They may be appreciated for a different
purpose, and the characterization here offered may
be turned about. In speaking from the point of
view of the devotional interest, or the interest of
devout taste, it may, with equal cogency, be said that
the spiritual attitude bred in men by the modern industrial
life is unfavorable to a free development of the life
of faith. It might fairly be objected to the
later development of the industrial process that its
discipline tends to “materialism,” to the
elimination of filial piety. From the aesthetic
point of view, again, something to a similar purport
might be said. But, however legitimate and valuable
these and the like reflections may be for their purpose,
they would not be in place in the present inquiry,
which is exclusively concerned with the valuation of
these phenomena from the economic point of view.
The grave economic significance of
the anthropomorphic habit of mind and of the addiction
to devout observances must serve as apology for speaking
further on a topic which it can not but be distasteful
to discuss at all as an economic phenomenon in a community
so devout as ours. Devout observances are of
economic importance as an index of a concomitant variation
of temperament, accompanying the predatory habit of
mind and so indicating the presence of industrially
disserviceable traits. They indicate the presence
of a mental attitude which has a certain economic
value of its own by virtue of its influence upon the
industrial serviceability of the individual. But
they are also of importance more directly, in modifying
the economic activities of the community, especially
as regards the distribution and consumption of goods.
The most obvious economic bearing
of these observances is seen in the devout consumption
of goods and services. The consumption of ceremonial
paraphernalia required by any cult, in the way of shrines,
temples, churches, vestments, sacrifices, sacraments,
holiday attire, etc., serves no immediate material
end. All this material apparatus may, therefore,
without implying deprecation, be broadly characterized
as items of conspicuous waste. The like is true
in a general way of the personal service consumed
under this head; such as priestly education, priestly
service, pilgrimages, fasts, holidays, household devotions,
and the like. At the same time the observances
in the execution of which this consumption takes place
serve to extend and protract the vogue of those habits
of thought on which an anthropomorphic cult rests.
That is to say, they further the habits of thought
characteristic of the regime of status. They
are in so far an obstruction to the most effective
organization of industry under modern circumstances;
and are, in the first instance, antagonistic to the
development of economic institutions in the direction
required by the situation of today. For the present
purpose, the indirect as well as the direct effects
of this consumption are of the nature of a curtailment
of the community’s economic efficiency.
In economic theory, then, and considered in its proximate
consequences, the consumption of goods and effort in
the service of an anthropomorphic divinity means a
lowering of the vitality of the community. What
may be the remoter, indirect, moral effects of this
class of consumption does not admit of a succinct answer,
and it is a question which can not be taken up here.
It will be to the point, however,
to note the general economic character of devout consumption,
in comparison with consumption for other purposes.
An indication of the range of motives and purposes
from which devout consumption of goods proceeds will
help toward an appreciation of the value both of this
consumption itself and of the general habit of mind
to which it is congenial. There is a striking
parallelism, if not rather a substantial identity
of motive, between the consumption which goes to the
service of an anthropomorphic divinity and that which
goes to the service of a gentleman of leisure chieftain
or patriarch in the upper class of society
during the barbarian culture. Both in the case
of the chieftain and in that of the divinity there
are expensive edifices set apart for the behoof of
the person served. These edifices, as well as
the properties which supplement them in the service,
must not be common in kind or grade; they always show
a large element of conspicuous waste. It may
also be noted that the devout edifices are invariably
of an archaic cast in their structure and fittings.
So also the servants, both of the chieftain and of
the divinity, must appear in the presence clothed
in garments of a special, ornate character. The
characteristic economic feature of this apparel is
a more than ordinarily accentuated conspicuous waste,
together with the secondary feature more
accentuated in the case of the priestly servants than
in that of the servants or courtiers of the barbarian
potentate that this court dress must always
be in some degree of an archaic fashion. Also
the garments worn by the lay members of the community
when they come into the presence, should be of a more
expensive kind than their everyday apparel. Here,
again, the parallelism between the usage of the chieftain’s
audience hall and that of the sanctuary is fairly
well marked. In this respect there is required
a certain ceremonial “cleanness” of attire,
the essential feature of which, in the economic respect,
is that the garments worn on these occasions should
carry as little suggestion as may be of any industrial
occupation or of any habitual addiction to such employments
as are of material use.
This requirement of conspicuous waste
and of ceremonial cleanness from the traces of industry
extends also to the apparel, and in a less degree
to the food, which is consumed on sacred holidays;
that is to say, on days set apart tabu for
the divinity or for some member of the lower ranks
of the preternatural leisure class. In economic
theory, sacred holidays are obviously to be construed
as a season of vicarious leisure performed for the
divinity or saint in whose name the tabu is imposed
and to whose good repute the abstention from useful
effort on these days is conceived to inure. The
characteristic feature of all such seasons of devout
vicarious leisure is a more or less rigid tabu on all
activity that is of human use. In the case of
fast-days the conspicuous abstention from gainful
occupations and from all pursuits that (materially)
further human life is further accentuated by compulsory
abstinence from such consumption as would conduce to
the comfort or the fullness of life of the consumer.
It may be remarked, parenthetically,
that secular holidays are of the same origin, by slightly
remoter derivation. They shade off by degrees
from the genuinely sacred days, through an intermediate
class of semi-sacred birthdays of kings and great
men who have been in some measure canonized, to the
deliberately invented holiday set apart to further
the good repute of some notable event or some striking
fact, to which it is intended to do honor, or the
good fame of which is felt to be in need of repair.
The remoter refinement in the employment of vicarious
leisure as a means of augmenting the good repute of
a phenomenon or datum is seen at its best in its very
latest application. A day of vicarious leisure
has in some communities been set apart as Labor Day.
This observance is designed to augment the prestige
of the fact of labor, by the archaic, predatory method
of a compulsory abstention from useful effort.
To this datum of labor-in-general is imputed the good
repute attributable to the pecuniary strength put
in evidence by abstaining from labor. Sacred holidays,
and holidays generally, are of the nature of a tribute
levied on the body of the people. The tribute
is paid in vicarious leisure, and the honorific effect
which emerges is imputed to the person or the fact
for whose good repute the holiday has been instituted.
Such a tithe of vicarious leisure is a perquisite
of all members of the preternatural leisure class
and is indispensable to their good fame. Un saint
qu’on ne chôme pas is indeed
a saint fallen on evil days.
Besides this tithe of vicarious leisure
levied on the laity, there are also special classes
of persons the various grades of priests
and hierodules whose time is wholly set
apart for a similar service. It is not only incumbent
on the priestly class to abstain from vulgar labor,
especially so far as it is lucrative or is apprehended
to contribute to the temporal well-being of mankind.
The tabu in the case of the priestly class goes farther
and adds a refinement in the form of an injunction
against their seeking worldly gain even where it may
be had without debasing application to industry.
It is felt to be unworthy of the servant of the divinity,
or rather unworthy the dignity of the divinity whose
servant he is, that he should seek material gain or
take thought for temporal matters. “Of
all contemptible things a man who pretends to be a
priest of God and is a priest to his own comforts and
ambitions is the most contemptible.” There
is a line of discrimination, which a cultivated taste
in matters of devout observance finds little difficulty
in drawing, between such actions and conduct as conduce
to the fullness of human life and such as conduce
to the good fame of the anthropomorphic divinity;
and the activity of the priestly class, in the ideal
barbarian scheme, falls wholly on the hither side of
this line. What falls within the range of economics
falls below the proper level of solicitude of the
priesthood in its best estate. Such apparent
exceptions to this rule as are afforded, for instance,
by some of the medieval orders of monks (the members
of which actually labored to some useful end), scarcely
impugn the rule. These outlying orders of the
priestly class are not a sacerdotal element in the
full sense of the term. And it is noticeable
also that these doubtfully sacerdotal orders, which
countenanced their members in earning a living, fell
into disrepute through offending the sense of propriety
in the communities where they existed.
The priest should not put his hand
to mechanically productive work; but he should consume
in large measure. But even as regards his consumption
it is to be noted that it should take such forms as
do not obviously conduce to his own comfort or fullness
of life; it should conform to the rules governing
vicarious consumption, as explained under that head
in an earlier chapter. It is not ordinarily in
good form for the priestly class to appear well fed
or in hilarious spirits. Indeed, in many of the
more elaborate cults the injunction against other than
vicarious consumption by this class frequently goes
so far as to enjoin mortification of the flesh.
And even in those modern denominations which have
been organized under the latest formulations of the
creed, in a modern industrial community, it is felt
that all levity and avowed zest in the enjoyment of
the good things of this world is alien to the true
clerical decorum. Whatever suggests that these
servants of an invisible master are living a life,
not of devotion to their master’s good fame,
but of application to their own ends, jars harshly
on our sensibilities as something fundamentally and
eternally wrong. They are a servant class, although,
being servants of a very exalted master, they rank
high in the social scale by virtue of this borrowed
light. Their consumption is vicarious consumption;
and since, in the advanced cults, their master has
no need of material gain, their occupation is vicarious
leisure in the full sense. “Whether therefore
ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the
glory of God.” It may be added that so far
as the laity is assimilated to the priesthood in the
respect that they are conceived to be servants of
the divinity. So far this imputed vicarious character
attaches also to the layman’s life. The
range of application of this corollary is somewhat
wide. It applies especially to such movements
for the reform or rehabilitation of the religious life
as are of an austere, pietistic, ascetic cast where
the human subject is conceived to hold his life by
a direct servile tenure from his spiritual sovereign.
That is to say, where the institution of the priesthood
lapses, or where there is an exceptionally lively sense
of the immediate and masterful presence of the divinity
in the affairs of life, there the layman is conceived
to stand in an immediate servile relation to the divinity,
and his life is construed to be a performance of vicarious
leisure directed to the enhancement of his master’s
repute. In such cases of reversion there is a
return to the unmediated relation of subservience,
as the dominant fact of the devout attitude. The
emphasis is thereby throw on an austere and discomforting
vicarious leisure, to the neglect of conspicuous consumption
as a means of grace.
A doubt will present itself as to
the full legitimacy of this characterization of the
sacerdotal scheme of life, on the ground that a considerable
proportion of the modern priesthood departs from the
scheme in many details. The scheme does not hold
good for the clergy of those denominations which have
in some measure diverged from the old established
schedule of beliefs or observances. These take
thought, at least ostensibly or permissively, for
the temporal welfare of the laity, as well as for
their own. Their manner of life, not only in the
privacy of their own household, but often even before
the public, does not differ in an extreme degree from
that of secular-minded persons, either in its ostensible
austerity or in the archaism of its apparatus.
This is truest for those denominations that have wandered
the farthest. To this objection it is to be said
that we have here to do not with a discrepancy in
the theory of sacerdotal life, but with an imperfect
conformity to the scheme on the part of this body of
clergy. They are but a partial and imperfect
representative of the priesthood, and must not be
taken as exhibiting the sacerdotal scheme of life in
an authentic and competent manner. The clergy
of the sects and denominations might be characterized
as a half-caste priesthood, or a priesthood in process
of becoming or of reconstitution. Such a priesthood
may be expected to show the characteristics of the
sacerdotal office only as blended and obscured with
alien motives and traditions, due to the disturbing
presence of other factors than those of animism and
status in the purposes of the organizations to which
this non-conforming fraction of the priesthood belongs.
Appeal may be taken direct to the
taste of any person with a discriminating and cultivated
sense of the sacerdotal proprieties, or to the prevalent
sense of what constitutes clerical decorum in any
community at all accustomed to think or to pass criticism
on what a clergyman may or may not do without blame.
Even in the most extremely secularized denominations,
there is some sense of a distinction that should be
observed between the sacerdotal and the lay scheme
of life. There is no person of sensibility but
feels that where the members of this denominational
or sectarian clergy depart from traditional usage,
in the direction of a less austere or less archaic
demeanor and apparel, they are departing from the
ideal of priestly decorum. There is probably
no community and no sect within the range of the Western
culture in which the bounds of permissible indulgence
are not drawn appreciably closer for the incumbent
of the priestly office than for the common layman.
If the priest’s own sense of sacerdotal propriety
does not effectually impose a limit, the prevalent
sense of the proprieties on the part of the community
will commonly assert itself so obtrusively as to lead
to his conformity or his retirement from office.
Few if any members of any body of
clergy, it may be added, would avowedly seek an increase
of salary for gain’s sake; and if such avowal
were openly made by a clergyman, it would be found
obnoxious to the sense of propriety among his congregation.
It may also be noted in this connection that no one
but the scoffers and the very obtuse are not instinctively
grieved inwardly at a jest from the pulpit; and that
there are none whose respect for their pastor does
not suffer through any mark of levity on his part
in any conjuncture of life, except it be levity of
a palpably histrionic kind a constrained
unbending of dignity. The diction proper to the
sanctuary and to the priestly office should also carry
little if any suggestion of effective everyday life,
and should not draw upon the vocabulary of modern
trade or industry. Likewise, one’s sense
of the proprieties is readily offended by too detailed
and intimate a handling of industrial and other purely
human questions at the hands of the clergy. There
is a certain level of generality below which a cultivated
sense of the proprieties in homiletical discourse
will not permit a well-bred clergyman to decline in
his discussion of temporal interests. These matters
that are of human and secular consequence simply,
should properly be handled with such a degree of generality
and aloofness as may imply that the speaker represents
a master whose interest in secular affairs goes only
so far as to permissively countenance them.
It is further to be noticed that the
non-conforming sects and variants whose priesthood
is here under discussion, vary among themselves in
the degree of their conformity to the ideal scheme
of sacerdotal life. In a general way it will
be found that the divergence in this respect is widest
in the case of the relatively young denominations,
and especially in the case of such of the newer denominations
as have chiefly a lower middle-class constituency.
They commonly show a large admixture of humanitarian,
philanthropic, or other motives which can not be classed
as expressions of the devotional attitude; such as
the desire of learning or of conviviality, which enter
largely into the effective interest shown by members
of these organizations. The non-conforming or
sectarian movements have commonly proceeded from a
mixture of motives, some of which are at variance
with that sense of status on which the priestly office
rests. Sometimes, indeed, the motive has been
in good part a revulsion against a system of status.
Where this is the case the institution of the priesthood
has broken down in the transition, at least partially.
The spokesman of such an organization is at the outset
a servant and representative of the organization, rather
than a member of a special priestly class and the
spokesman of a divine master. And it is only
by a process of gradual specialization that, in succeeding
generations, this spokesman regains the position of
priest, with a full investiture of sacerdotal authority,
and with its accompanying austere, archaic and vicarious
manner of life. The like is true of the breakdown
and redintegration of devout ritual after such a revulsion.
The priestly office, the scheme of sacerdotal life,
and the schedule of devout observances are rehabilitated
only gradually, insensibly, and with more or less
variation in details, as a persistent human sense of
devout propriety reasserts its primacy in questions
touching the interest in the preternatural and
it may be added, as the organization increases in
wealth, and so acquires more of the point of view and
the habits of thought of a leisure class.
Beyond the priestly class, and ranged
in an ascending hierarchy, ordinarily comes a superhuman
vicarious leisure class of saints, angels, etc. or
their equivalents in the ethnic cults. These rise
in grade, one above another, according to elaborate
system of status. The principle of status runs
through the entire hierarchical system, both visible
and invisible. The good fame of these several
orders of the supernatural hierarchy also commonly
requires a certain tribute of vicarious consumption
and vicarious leisure. In many cases they accordingly
have devoted to their service sub-orders of attendants
or dependents who perform a vicarious leisure for
them, after much the same fashion as was found in
an earlier chapter to be true of the dependent leisure
class under the patriarchal system.
It may not appear without reflection
how these devout observances and the peculiarity of
temperament which they imply, or the consumption of
goods and services which is comprised in the cult,
stand related to the leisure class of a modern community,
or to the economic motives of which that class is
the exponent in the modern scheme of life to this end
a summary review of certain facts bearing on this
relation will be useful. It appears from an earlier
passage in this discussion that for the purpose of
the collective life of today, especially so far as
concerns the industrial efficiency of the modern community,
the characteristic traits of the devout temperament
are a hindrance rather than a help. It should
accordingly be found that the modern industrial life
tends selectively to eliminate these traits of human
nature from the spiritual constitution of the classes
that are immediately engaged in the industrial process.
It should hold true, approximately, that devoutness
is declining or tending to obsolescence among the members
of what may be called the effective industrial community.
At the same time it should appear that this aptitude
or habit survives in appreciably greater vigor among
those classes which do not immediately or primarily
enter into the community’s life process as an
industrial factor.
It has already been pointed out that
these latter classes, which live by, rather than in,
the industrial process, are roughly comprised under
two categories (1) the leisure class proper, which
is shielded from the stress of the economic situation;
and (2) the indigent classes, including the lower-class
delinquents, which are unduly exposed to the stress.
In the case of the former class an archaic habit of
mind persists because no effectual economic pressure
constrains this class to an adaptation of its habits
of thought to the changing situation; while in the
latter the reason for a failure to adjust their habits
of thought to the altered requirements of industrial
efficiency is innutrition, absence of such surplus
of energy as is needed in order to make the adjustment
with facility, together with a lack of opportunity
to acquire and become habituated to the modern point
of view. The trend of the selective process runs
in much the same direction in both cases.
From the point of view which the modern
industrial life inculcates, phenomena are habitually
subsumed under the quantitative relation of mechanical
sequence. The indigent classes not only fall short
of the modicum of leisure necessary in order to appropriate
and assimilate the more recent generalizations of
science which this point of view involves, but they
also ordinarily stand in such a relation of personal
dependence or subservience to their pecuniary superiors
as materially to retard their emancipation from habits
of thought proper to the regime of status. The
result is that these classes in some measure retain
that general habit of mind the chief expression of
which is a strong sense of personal status, and of
which devoutness is one feature.
In the older communities of the European
culture, the hereditary leisure class, together with
the mass of the indigent population, are given to
devout observances in an appreciably higher degree
than the average of the industrious middle class,
wherever a considerable class of the latter character
exists. But in some of these countries, the two
categories of conservative humanity named above comprise
virtually the whole population. Where these two
classes greatly preponderate, their bent shapes popular
sentiment to such an extent as to bear down any possible
divergent tendency in the inconsiderable middle class,
and imposes a devout attitude upon the whole community.
This must, of course, not be construed
to say that such communities or such classes as are
exceptionally prone to devout observances tend to
conform in any exceptional degree to the specifications
of any code of morals that we may be accustomed to
associate with this or that confession of faith.
A large measure of the devout habit of mind need not
carry with it a strict observance of the injunctions
of the Decalogue or of the common law. Indeed,
it is becoming somewhat of a commonplace with observers
of criminal life in European communities that the
criminal and dissolute classes are, if anything, rather
more devout, and more naively so, than the average
of the population. It is among those who constitute
the pecuniary middle class and the body of law-abiding
citizens that a relative exemption from the devotional
attitude is to be looked for. Those who best appreciate
the merits of the higher creeds and observances would
object to all this and say that the devoutness of
the low-class delinquents is a spurious, or at the
best a superstitious devoutness; and the point is no
doubt well taken and goes directly and cogently to
the purpose intended. But for the purpose of
the present inquiry these extra-economic, extra-psychological
distinctions must perforce be neglected, however valid
and however decisive they may be for the purpose for
which they are made.
What has actually taken place with
regard to class emancipation from the habit of devout
observance is shown by the latter-day complaint of
the clergy that the churches are losing
the sympathy of the artisan classes, and are losing
their hold upon them. At the same time it is
currently believed that the middle class, commonly
so called, is also falling away in the cordiality
of its support of the church, especially so far as
regards the adult male portion of that class.
These are currently recognized phenomena, and it might
seem that a simple reference to these facts should
sufficiently substantiate the general position outlined.
Such an appeal to the general phenomena of popular
church attendance and church membership may be sufficiently
convincing for the proposition here advanced.
But it will still be to the purpose to trace in some
detail the course of events and the particular forces
which have wrought this change in the spiritual attitude
of the more advanced industrial communities of today.
It will serve to illustrate the manner in which economic
causes work towards a secularization of men’s
habits of thought. In this respect the American
community should afford an exceptionally convincing
illustration, since this community has been the least
trammelled by external circumstances of any equally
important industrial aggregate.
After making due allowance for exceptions
and sporadic departures from the normal, the situation
here at the present time may be summarized quite briefly.
As a general rule the classes that are low in economic
efficiency, or in intelligence, or both, are peculiarly
devout as, for instance, the Negro population
of the South, much of the lower-class foreign population,
much of the rural population, especially in those
sections which are backward in education, in the stage
of development of their industry, or in respect of
their industrial contact with the rest of the community.
So also such fragments as we possess of a specialized
or hereditary indigent class, or of a segregated criminal
or dissolute class; although among these latter the
devout habit of mind is apt to take the form of a
naïve animistic belief in luck and in the efficacy
of shamanistic practices perhaps more frequently than
it takes the form of a formal adherence to any accredited
creed. The artisan class, on the other hand,
is notoriously falling away from the accredited anthropomorphic
creeds and from all devout observances. This class
is in an especial degree exposed to the characteristic
intellectual and spiritual stress of modern organized
industry, which requires a constant recognition of
the undisguised phenomena of impersonal, matter-of-fact
sequence and an unreserved conformity to the law of
cause and effect. This class is at the same time
not underfed nor over-worked to such an extent as
to leave no margin of energy for the work of adaptation.
The case of the lower or doubtful
leisure class in America the middle class
commonly so called is somewhat peculiar.
It differs in respect of its devotional life from
its European counterpart, but it differs in degree
and method rather than in substance. The churches
still have the pecuniary support of this class; although
the creeds to which the class adheres with the greatest
facility are relatively poor in anthropomorphic content.
At the same time the effective middle-class congregation
tends, in many cases, more or less remotely perhaps,
to become a congregation of women and minors.
There is an appreciable lack of devotional fervor
among the adult males of the middle class, although
to a considerable extent there survives among them
a certain complacent, reputable assent to the outlines
of the accredited creed under which they were born.
Their everyday life is carried on in a more or less
close contact with the industrial process.
This peculiar sexual differentiation,
which tends to delegate devout observances to the
women and their children, is due, at least in part,
to the fact that the middle-class women are in great
measure a (vicarious) leisure class. The same
is true in a less degree of the women of the lower,
artisan classes. They live under a regime of status
handed down from an earlier stage of industrial development,
and thereby they preserve a frame of mind and habits
of thought which incline them to an archaic view of
things generally. At the same time they stand
in no such direct organic relation to the industrial
process at large as would tend strongly to break down
those habits of thought which, for the modern industrial
purpose, are obsolete. That is to say, the peculiar
devoutness of women is a particular expression of that
conservatism which the women of civilized communities
owe, in great measure, to their economic position.
For the modern man the patriarchal relation of status
is by no means the dominant feature of life; but for
the women on the other hand, and for the upper middle-class
women especially, confined as they are by prescription
and by economic circumstances to their “domestic
sphere,” this relation is the most real and most
formative factor of life. Hence a habit of mind
favorable to devout observances and to the interpretation
of the facts of life generally in terms of personal
status. The logic, and the logical processes,
of her everyday domestic life are carried over into
the realm of the supernatural, and the woman finds
herself at home and content in a range of ideas which
to the man are in great measure alien and imbecile.
Still the men of this class are also
not devoid of piety, although it is commonly not piety
of an aggressive or exuberant kind. The men of
the upper middle class commonly take a more complacent
attitude towards devout observances than the men of
the artisan class. This may perhaps be explained
in part by saying that what is true of the women of
the class is true to a less extent also of the men.
They are to an appreciable extent a sheltered class;
and the patriarchal relation of status which still
persists in their conjugal life and in their habitual
use of servants, may also act to conserve an archaic
habit of mind and may exercise a retarding influence
upon the process of secularization which their habits
of thought are undergoing. The relations of the
American middle-class man to the economic community,
however, are usually pretty close and exacting; although
it may be remarked, by the way and in qualification,
that their economic activity frequently also partakes
in some degree of the patriarchal or quasi-predatory
character. The occupations which are in good
repute among this class and which have most to do
with shaping the class habits of thought, are the pecuniary
occupations which have been spoken of in a similar
connection in an earlier chapter. There is a
good deal of the relation of arbitrary command and
submission, and not a little of shrewd practice, remotely
akin to predatory fraud. All this belongs on the
plane of life of the predatory barbarian, to whom
a devotional attitude is habitual. And in addition
to this, the devout observances also commend themselves
to this class on the ground of reputability.
But this latter incentive to piety deserves treatment
by itself and will be spoken of presently. There
is no hereditary leisure class of any consequence in
the American community, except in the South.
This Southern leisure class is somewhat given to devout
observances; more so than any class of corresponding
pecuniary standing in other parts of the country.
It is also well known that the creeds of the South
are of a more old-fashioned cast than their counterparts
in the North. Corresponding to this more archaic
devotional life of the South is the lower industrial
development of that section. The industrial organization
of the South is at present, and especially it has
been until quite recently, of a more primitive character
than that of the American community taken as a whole.
It approaches nearer to handicraft, in the paucity
and rudeness of its mechanical appliances, and there
is more of the element of mastery and subservience.
It may also be noted that, owing to the peculiar economic
circumstances of this section, the greater devoutness
of the Southern population, both white and black,
is correlated with a scheme of life which in many ways
recalls the barbarian stages of industrial development.
Among this population offenses of an archaic character
also are and have been relatively more prevalent and
are less deprecated than they are elsewhere; as, for
example, duels, brawls, feuds, drunkenness, horse-racing,
cock-fighting, gambling, male sexual incontinence
(evidenced by the considerable number of mulattoes).
There is also a livelier sense of honor an
expression of sportsmanship and a derivative of predatory
life.
As regards the wealthier class of
the North, the American leisure class in the best
sense of the term, it is, to begin with, scarcely possible
to speak of an hereditary devotional attitude.
This class is of too recent growth to be possessed
of a well-formed transmitted habit in this respect,
or even of a special home-grown tradition. Still,
it may be noted in passing that there is a perceptible
tendency among this class to give in at least a nominal,
and apparently something of a real, adherence to some
one of the accredited creeds. Also, weddings,
funerals, and the like honorific events among this
class are pretty uniformly solemnized with some especial
degree of religious circumstance. It is impossible
to say how far this adherence to a creed is a bona
fide reversion to a devout habit of mind, and how far
it is to be classed as a case of protective mimicry
assumed for the purpose of an outward assimilation
to canons of reputability borrowed from foreign ideals.
Something of a substantial devotional propensity seems
to be present, to judge especially by the somewhat
peculiar degree of ritualistic observance which is
in process of development in the upper-class cults.
There is a tendency perceptible among the upper-class
worshippers to affiliate themselves with those cults
which lay relatively great stress on ceremonial and
on the spectacular accessories of worship; and in
the churches in which an upper-class membership predominates,
there is at the same time a tendency to accentuate
the ritualistic, at the cost of the intellectual features
in the service and in the apparatus of the devout
observances. This holds true even where the church
in question belongs to a denomination with a relatively
slight general development of ritual and paraphernalia.
This peculiar development of the ritualistic element
is no doubt due in part to a predilection for conspicuously
wasteful spectacles, but it probably also in part
indicates something of the devotional attitude of the
worshippers. So far as the latter is true, it
indicates a relatively archaic form of the devotional
habit. The predominance of spectacular effects
in devout observances is noticeable in all devout communities
at a relatively primitive stage of culture and with
a slight intellectual development. It is especially
characteristic of the barbarian culture. Here
there is pretty uniformly present in the devout observances
a direct appeal to the emotions through all the avenues
of sense. And a tendency to return to this naïve,
sensational method of appeal is unmistakable in the
upper-class churches of today. It is perceptible
in a less degree in the cults which claim the allegiance
of the lower leisure class and of the middle classes.
There is a reversion to the use of colored lights
and brilliant spectacles, a freer use of symbols,
orchestral music and incense, and one may even detect
in “processionals” and “recessionals”
and in richly varied genuflexional evolutions, an
incipient reversion to so antique an accessory of worship
as the sacred dance. This reversion to spectacular
observances is not confined to the upper-class cults,
although it finds its best exemplification and its
highest accentuation in the higher pecuniary and social
altitudes. The cults of the lower-class devout
portion of the community, such as the Southern Negroes
and the backward foreign elements of the population,
of course also show a strong inclination to ritual,
symbolism, and spectacular effects; as might be expected
from the antecedents and the cultural level of those
classes. With these classes the prevalence of
ritual and anthropomorphism are not so much a matter
of reversion as of continued development out of the
past. But the use of ritual and related features
of devotion are also spreading in other directions.
In the early days of the American community the prevailing
denominations started out with a ritual and paraphernalia
of an austere simplicity; but it is a matter familiar
to every one that in the course of time these denominations
have, in a varying degree, adopted much of the spectacular
elements which they once renounced. In a general
way, this development has gone hand in hand with the
growth of the wealth and the ease of life of the worshippers
and has reached its fullest expression among those
classes which grade highest in wealth and repute.
The causes to which this pecuniary
stratification of devoutness is due have already been
indicated in a general way in speaking of class differences
in habits of thought. Class differences as regards
devoutness are but a special expression of a generic
fact. The lax allegiance of the lower middle
class, or what may broadly be called the failure of
filial piety among this class, is chiefly perceptible
among the town populations engaged in the mechanical
industries. In a general way, one does not, at
the present time, look for a blameless filial piety
among those classes whose employment approaches that
of the engineer and the mechanician. These mechanical
employments are in a degree a modern fact. The
handicraftsmen of earlier times, who served an industrial
end of a character similar to that now served by the
mechanician, were not similarly refractory under the
discipline of devoutness. The habitual activity
of the men engaged in these branches of industry has
greatly changed, as regards its intellectual discipline,
since the modern industrial processes have come into
vogue; and the discipline to which the mechanician
is exposed in his daily employment affects the methods
and standards of his thinking also on topics which
lie outside his everyday work. Familiarity with
the highly organized and highly impersonal industrial
processes of the present acts to derange the animistic
habits of thought. The workman’s office
is becoming more and more exclusively that of discretion
and supervision in a process of mechanical, dispassionate
sequences. So long as the individual is the chief
and typical prime mover in the process; so long as
the obtrusive feature of the industrial process is
the dexterity and force of the individual handicraftsman;
so long the habit of interpreting phenomena in terms
of personal motive and propensity suffers no such considerable
and consistent derangement through facts as to lead
to its elimination. But under the later developed
industrial processes, when the prime movers and the
contrivances through which they work are of an impersonal,
non-individual character, the grounds of generalization
habitually present in the workman’s mind and
the point of view from which he habitually apprehends
phenomena is an enforced cognizance of matter-of-fact
sequence. The result, so far as concerts the workman’s
life of faith, is a proclivity to undevout scepticism.
It appears, then, that the devout
habit of mind attains its best development under a
relatively archaic culture; the term “devout”
being of course here used in its anthropological sense
simply, and not as implying anything with respect
to the spiritual attitude so characterized, beyond
the fact of a proneness to devout observances.
It appears also that this devout attitude marks a type
of human nature which is more in consonance with the
predatory mode of life than with the later-developed,
more consistently and organically industrial life
process of the community. It is in large measure
an expression of the archaic habitual sense of personal
status the relation of mastery and subservience and
it therefore fits into the industrial scheme of the
predatory and the quasi-peaceable culture, but does
not fit into the industrial scheme of the present.
It also appears that this habit persists with greatest
tenacity among those classes in the modern communities
whose everyday life is most remote from the mechanical
processes of industry and which are the most conservative
also in other respects; while for those classes that
are habitually in immediate contact with modern industrial
processes, and whose habits of thought are therefore
exposed to the constraining force of technological
necessities, that animistic interpretation of phenomena
and that respect of persons on which devout observance
proceeds are in process of obsolescence. And
also as bearing especially on the present
discussion it appears that the devout habit
to some extent progressively gains in scope and elaboration
among those classes in the modern communities to whom
wealth and leisure accrue in the most pronounced degree.
In this as in other relations, the institution of a
leisure class acts to conserve, and even to rehabilitate,
that archaic type of human nature and those elements
of the archaic culture which the industrial evolution
of society in its later stages acts to eliminate.