Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010
Oscar Wilde was easily one of the finest brains ever to grace the British Isles. Not only was his mastery of the English language supreme, but his clarity of thought and ability to gauge the ‘reasons behind the reasons’ was second to none.
Of course I cannot agree with Wilde’s conclusions, that no external source could be the basis for the authority of the individual, “But whether it be faith or agnosticism, it must be nothing external to me. Its symbols must be of my own creating.” These words point (as put perfectly by Imogen Black) “to an existentialist crisis, a man coming to realise that he has nothing but his own perceptions for truth who has made a god of himself.” Yet at the same time, despite this relativising of truth, which the Christian worldview cannot abide, I’m not sure that Wilde’s preferred vision of religion was so far removed from the kind of religion that Christ actually produced. Today I came upon this gem:
When I think of religion at all, I feel as if I would like to found an order for those who cannot believe: the Confraternity of the Faithless, one might call it, where on an altar, on which no taper burned, a priest, in whose heart peace had no dwelling, might celebrate with unblessed bread and a chalice empty of wine. Everything to be true must become a religion. And agnosticism should have its ritual no less than faith. (De Profundis, letter written in 1905)
If we unpack this statement, it proves to be quite revealing. Let us examine each statement in turn and compare it to the religion imagined by Jesus
The Wildian ‘ritual of agnosticism’, born out of the general existential crisis common to all humanity, at the final analysis is simply a yearning for the kind of religion that only Jesus Christ provides.
In the end, we see that Oscar Wilde’s desired “alternative religion for the faithless” is actually describing the Christian faith. Perhaps he realised this before he died, perhaps not. The question is: do you?
Tags: Cultural Temperature, Oscar Wilde, Provocative Thoughts, Religion
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Saturday, March 14th, 2009
No one likes a snob. However, I would like to argue that in some areas – especially in the internet age – it is vital that we do become more snobbish.
I was inspired yesterday by a review of a new book (http://www.revkevindeyoung.com/2009/03/why-johnny-cant-preach-1.html). Based on the review (I have not read the book yet myself) one of the main theses appears to be that we have abandoned excellence and true culture in favour of sound bites and low culture. It is addressing the facebook generation who get excited by the gibberish (for one would scarcely call it English) that appears on their friends’ status updates or photo comments, yet have never written a real letter; the generation who have vigorous, lively and completely uninformed debates, yet do not possess either the language to articulate their arguments, nor the knowledge to insert compelling content; the generation who consider culture to be youtube knowledge yet have never read a poem or an Oscar Wilde play to be delighted truly.
I am not saying these ‘low-culture’ things should be rejected. I’m not saying this at all. But we should turn our nose up at them – ‘as we use them’ and consider them to be what they are – BENEATH US. We should not be content for the sum total of our education and culture to be the malformed ideas and brutalised language of the facebook culture.
Facebook, YouTube and the like are fantastic, useful tools – but tools they are and tools they will remain. We must use them, love them but keep them in their place… and pursue concurrently and with far greater passion and expectation the ‘higher things’.
It is no coincidence that those with things to say are also those who have maintained a healthy level of snobbishness throughout their life. And just a caveat as I close – snobbishness, in the sense it is being discussed now – in no way should be equated with pride (always an ugly thing). It is quite possible to be a humble snobb… for your snobbishness has led you to sit under the instruction of those greater, more informed, more eloquent, more holy than yourself…
Tags: Kevin DeYoung, Language, Oscar Wilde, Provocative Thoughts
Posted in Christianity | 3 Comments »
This site has two main aims:
1) To provide an outlet for Tim’s (often muddled) thoughts in the form of posts, poems, links etc
2) Winsomely and sensitively, yet also boldly, to further the cause of Jesus Christ
not in that order
My name is Tim. I am a web designer, church planter and doting husband (again, not in that order). I am currently studying for ordination into the Greek Presbyterian Church and working part-time for Prototype Design.