When America Got Sick

It was in the years following the Civil War, America was hard on the path to “becoming great.” The industrial revolution had moved into full swing, railroads criss-crossed the country, immigration was gaining speed, and wealth was accumulating at a rate never seen before. We were slowly moving from our original agrarian economy towards life as an industrial nation. The middle-class was growing, education was increasing, and the life of management was the aspiration of many. We were also getting sick in new ways.

In 1868, the first article on the term neurasthenia was published. Though the word had been around some thirty years, it was making its debut as a more wide-spread diagnosis. The symptoms associated with it were: fatigue, anxiety, headache, heart palpitations, high blood pressure, neuralgia, and depressed mood. If all of that sounds familiar, it’s because it never went away. We simply call it by different names now. And, speaking of names, William James (Varieties of Religious Experience), called it “Americanitis.”

This “disease” was blamed on a variety of causes. Many of them had to do with the modern lifestyle and more generalized circumstances of our existence. America, in the late 1800’s was already “losing its religion.” There was some vague sense that the religious ideas of earlier times (America’s earlier times) were inadequate. There were many new denominations (results of the various revivals of the 19th century). There were also a large wave of cult-like movements (Jehovah’s Witnesses, Seventh Day Adventists, Christian Science, etc.). Pentecostalism had much of its birth during this same period. Of little note to some was the rise of Anglo-Catholicism in this period, a movement within mainline Anglican thought that looked back to times prior to the Reformation for its inspiration. A number of leading figures in things like the Arts and Crafts Movement came from this religious background. They were looking for an older spiritual model (and an economic model) to treat the disease that modernity had unleashed.

It has to be acknowledged, I think, that many of us today are inheritors of the same interior sense that “something is wrong.” Early in the 20th century, writers such as GK Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc offered crititicisms of “modernity” drawn from a traditional, Catholic worldview. Serious thinkers have continued that same narrative (not all of them Christian) ever since. And so we have Modern Man in Search of a Soul (Jung, 1933), Man’s Search for Meaning (Frankl, 1946), and other such major works, decade by decade, fumbling towards a way of speaking about the emptiness of modern life. The modern liberation movements, as well as the youth movements of the 60’s should be read in this same light even though their critiques, in time, were themselves to become symptomatic of modernity.

A tragic attempt to address the malaise of modern neurasthenia was a sense that American men were growing too soft and unmanly towards the end of the 19th century. There were conversations that spoke of the need for a “good war” and of a “great cause” to regenerate what had become lacking. Such sentiments certainly played a large role in the Spanish-American War, the unabashed launch of America’s soft colonialism. The themes of that time have been replayed in every subsequent conflict. Whether we have been “making the world safe for democracy” or simply uninstalling various hostile regimes, variations of the same explanations and marketing have accompanied our efforts. Such explanations were plausible in World War II, but have rung increasingly hollow ever since.

Having largely lost our religion(s), modernity has seen fit to create new ones. If we wonder what constitutes a modern religion (or efforts to create one) we need look no further than our public liturgies. Various months of the year are now designated as holy seasons set-aside to honor various oppressed groups or causes. It is an effort to liturgize the nation as the bringer and guardian of justice in the world, an effort that seeks to renew our sense of mission and to portray our nation as something that we believe in. It must be noted that as a nation, we have not been content to be one among many. We have found it necessary to “believe” in our country. It is a symptom of religious bankruptcy. As often as not, major sports events (Super Bowls) are pressed into duty as bearers of significance and meaning. The pious liturgies that surround them have become pathetic as they try ever-harder to say things that simply are not true or do not matter. This game is not important – it’s just a game.

The difficulty with engineered religions, or causes that serve as substitutes, is that they fail to transcend. Regardless of how great many moments or ideas might be, they easily die a thousand deaths as their many non-transcendent failures come to mind. In the late 1960’s, the singer Peggy Lee registered a hit single, “Is that all there is?” It is a song with the lilt of a French chanson, à la Edith Piaf. It moves through the great moments of life, including love and even death itself, but offers its sad refrain:

Is that all there is, is that all there is?
If that’s all there is my friends, then let’s keep dancing
Let’s break out the booze and have a ball
If that’s all there is

This is our context, the world of modernity. It is also our sickness, an empty lassitude whose hunger invites never-ending experiments of conferring meaning on our world. The “better world” that modernity pursues shifts relentlessly and changes as though it were directed by Paris fashionistas. At the same time, it is met with increasing anger and frustration, a predictable response to what are essentially imposed religious views.

William James offered the interesting observation that war is a “sacrament” of the nation state. He had in mind the larger conflicts of his time. War grants a unity and a sense of purpose and participation to the country that is almost unrivaled. In our time, the response to the attack of 911 comes the closest to that sacramental purpose. However, with conflicts that dragged on for two decades, it began to wane in its effectiveness. It remains a touchstone at present, an event to which others are compared in efforts to foster another occasion of sacramental war. All of these sacramental efforts and the public liturgies that surround them, however, fail to serve any transcendent purpose. The nation state and modernity itself (which is primarily a form of economic activity) simply do not and cannot rise to the level of eternal significance. Indeed, their ultimate banality mocks us.

I am often asked, when writing on this topic, what response Christians should make. What do we do about the state? How do we respond to modernity? For the state – quit “believing” in it. We are commanded in Scripture to pray for those in authority. We are not commanded to make the state better or participate in its projects. We are commanded to serve our neighbors as we fulfill the law of God. However, I think it is important to work at “clearing the fog” of modern propaganda regarding the place of the nation state in the scheme of things. I would frame a response to modernity in this manner: we are not responsible for foreign religions. Though Christian language and carefully selected ideas are often employed in the selling of modernity’s many projects, it is a mistake to honor its false claims. Make no mistake, modernity will offer no credit, in the end, to Christ, the Church, or to people of faith. Its interests lie elsewhere.

The proper response to these things will seem modest. Live the life of the Church. The cure of modernity’s neurasthenia is found not in yet one more successful project, but in the long work of salvation set in our midst in Christ’s death and resurrection. Our faith is not a chaplaincy to the culture, or a mere artifact of an older world. The Church is the Body of Christ into which all things will be gathered, both in heaven and on earth. It is the Way of Life as well as a way of life. It is not given to us to control how we are seen by the world, or whether the world thinks us useful. It is for us to be swallowed up by Christ and to manifest His salvation to the world. We were told from the very beginning that we should be patient, just as we were promised from the beginning that we would suffer with Christ.

I think the sickness that haunts our culture is that we fail to know and see what is good and to give thanks for the grace that permeates all things. When that is forgotten, nothing will satisfy, nothing will transcend. There is no better world to be built, nor are there great wars to be won. There is today, and that is enough.

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a retired Archpriest of the Orthodox Church in America. He is also author of Everywhere Present: Christianity in a One-Storey Universe, and Face to Face: Knowing God Beyond Our Shame, as well as the Glory to God podcast series on Ancient Faith Radio.



Posted

in

, ,

by

Comments

21 responses to “When America Got Sick”

  1. ColumbaInTN Avatar
    ColumbaInTN

    Well Father, you have outdone yourself again! Whenever I think you cannot become more pointed and profound I am reminded to just wait…

    Your posts have been one of the constants in my steady migration away from the religion of this world toward the glory of participation in the Orthodox Church. I don’t comment as as often as I should. Sincere thanks Father Stephen for your diligence to continue to lead us in our walks.

  2. Michelle Gerzevske Avatar
    Michelle Gerzevske

    Here is a link to an article about the “conversation” between Seraphim Rose and Thomas Merton. I think you will find it interesting, as it seems to be what you are talking about in your article here. Some of your readers may find it interesting too. Any wisdom you have to further impart on Seraphim Rose’s superior understanding of “Christ in society” via us Christians on earth, as compared to Merton would, of course, be great. Father bless!

    https://fatherdavidbirdosb.blogspot.com/2012/01/peace-on-earth-iv-thomas-merton-and-fr.html?m=1

  3. Linda Wells Avatar
    Linda Wells

    Thank you

  4. Roy Bowman Avatar
    Roy Bowman

    Tot borrow from talk radio; “Long time lurker, first time commenter here”
    I have read your blog off and on for at least 5 years, and I must say this is a excellent summation of today’s world . I bought and read your book “Everywhere Present” a couple years ago. I’m not Orthodox, I have attended a Pentacostal congregation for a few years, and I see the modernity throughout every church I attend.

  5. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Roy,
    I should probably write an article (sometime in the future) entitled, “America is a failed religion.” There are many aspects of the American political/cultural experiment that are deeply conflated with American Christianity – and they sort of feed one another. I suspect that the so-called “nones” (“no religious preference”) are themselves part of this larger phenomenon – one which they don’t like but don’t know why – and would like to do something else but don’t know what.

    One aspect of Orthodox Christianity that has been very helpful to me is its deep roots in antiquity – and even in parts of the world that America cannot locate on a map. Knowing and being friends with other Christians for whom English is not their first language (Greek, Russian, Romanian, Serbian, etc.) also brings certain insights. Orthodoxy is beginning to put down roots in America (it’s growing) and has new challenges as a result of that.

    No doubt, as the early Church grew across the Roman Empire, it had to find ways to adjust or to incarnate the gospel. For the first few centuries, that process involved a lot of martyrs. We are not so blessed.

    It does us good (the Orthodox) to worship “in an ancient key.” To hear words and music of long-ago centuries. God give us all grace!

  6. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Fr. Stephen wrote:

    “There are many aspects of the American political/cultural experiment that are deeply conflated with American Christianity – and they sort of feed one another.”

    I´m wondering Fr. Stephen … is this kind of “mix” not also the case in Orthodox countries like Russia and Greece for example?

    I´m also thinking of the The Apotheosis of Washington in the dome of the U.S. Capitol. Doesn´t it sort of divinize George Washington? If so … a very scary and unhealthy mix of religion and politics. I´m not sure any country or branch of Christianity is immune to these sort of things sadly.

  7. Dee of St Herman Avatar
    Dee of St Herman

    Very well said, Father! I appreciate the historical context. I wish as a culture we could be more self reflective on our ways of doing and thinking rather than ego centric—we’re constantly looking for ways to fill the hole in our hearts with consumption or causes.

    Thank you so much for this.

  8. Aric Avatar
    Aric

    Hi again father, beautiful words as usual. My only counter thought is about what the kingdom of God might look like as we participate in the life of the church temporally. As we build churches, houses, community centers, as we make art, bake bread, raise children etc. we aren’t just aiming for “another successful project” in the modern paradigm you’ve articulated, we are participating in the life of the triune God himself, which has a distinctly social (and subsequently political!) dimension.

    My sense is that you’ve always been right in diagnosing a deep problem for Americans in particular: we get the secular project mixed up with and in the Divine project. We often substitute one for the other and can’t even see things rightly (I suppose this is what is called idolatry). But we haven’t lost that God-instilled desire to build, grow, create etc.; instead that desire has been distorted and detached from the life of the Church and the grace the sacraments provide.

    So I have a desire to alter your last words here, to say something like, “but there IS a better world to build, and great wars to be won, but only precisely when we see what is good and give thanks for the grace the permeates all things.”

    But I think that in a pastoral sense you’re right: today must be enough. The slow work of the kingdom is often so slow it is functionally imperceptible to us, so we must live in a manner that isn’t looking for “results” to manifest immediately, but rather trusting in what is good despite the “metrics.”

    God bless you, father!

  9. David P Avatar
    David P

    Father, thank you for this insightful article, which cuts close to things I’ve been troubled by lately. I understand and agree that we should avoid ascribing any transcendence to modernity’s projects, whether of nation-states or other entities. But speaking purely temporally, I’m wondering how we who are living in the world should approach these things. When the state causes suffering or injustice by action or inaction, does loving and serving our neighbors ever begin to look like working to improve it? Speaking as an American, recent images of terrified immigrants being treated like criminals and sent to prisons domestic or foreign have been troubling me lately, refusing to leave my conscience. What does loving our neighbors look like in these cases? Is there anything we can do besides pray?

    Also, I’d love to hear more about how you read Paul’s writings on the governing authorities in Romans 13. This passage has always confused me. How do we understand it when the governing authorities are working injustice and opposed to God–as they very much were in Paul’s day?

  10. Dee of St Herman Avatar
    Dee of St Herman

    “but there IS a better world to build, and great wars to be won, but only precisely when we see what is good and give thanks for the grace the permeates all things.”

    It seems to me that most Americans believe they already know what is good. It is such certainty and overconfidence in such a belief that has put us in the state we’re in.

  11. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Hello Aric.

    I´ll leave the rest to Fr. Stephen since you directed your comment at him.

    I´ll just say that the kingdom of God is not something we as the Church build, neither politically nor socially. It is a spiritual reality that we enter into.

    I learned that on this blog. I hope I have it right!

  12. Tom Avatar

    I have been of the opinion for a while that if American Christians recovered the perspective of the Preacher in Ecclesiastes it would do a lot of good. Everything is hebel and will fade away, but yet we continue on as if we are somehow strong enough to build something that will indeed last. It just seems to be an exercise in insanity to me.

  13. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Dee said:

    “It seems to me that most Americans believe they already know what is good. It is such certainty and overconfidence in such a belief that has put us in the state we’re in.”

    Man … now this is something to chew on …

  14. Byron Avatar
    Byron

    “It seems to me that most Americans believe they already know what is good. It is such certainty and overconfidence in such a belief that has put us in the state we’re in.”

    I very much agree with this. America, and Americans, have always believed in it’s/their own rightness. It’s the curse of our rabid individuality (“everyone follows their own truth” and other such nonsensical statements).

    I personally think that the best thing to do is not to argue, but to illustrate. The humility and groundedness of the Church is currently very much in need (and requested) by people. Americans may believe they know what is right, but they don’t believe in humility. There is much to be gained by small actions and kindnesses. It may be a good time for silence as well. Just my thoughts.

  15. John Mark Lamb Avatar
    John Mark Lamb

    Father, your pen skillfully exposes our watchful dragons. You wrote, “I would frame a response to modernity in this manner: we are not responsible for foreign religions.”

    Could you unpack this statement a bit more?

  16. Salaam Avatar
    Salaam

    Over the years I have learnt a lot about America from you, Father Stephen. Thanks!

    I am not American, but an immigrant to Canada, and there are have always been hordes of us trying to get into America or Canada, “heavens on earth”! That fact, by itself, tells me that not only is America sick, but so is the whole world, as it has been since Adam.

    I say this because I think that as well as looking at yourselves, looking at the rest of the world may help you Americans better understand your sickness as part of the more universal sickness, manifested differently in different places at different times.

  17. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    The Church certainly has historically been “incarnate” in a variety of cultures. Some of those things are an important part of Orthodox self-awareness. For instance, the differences between Greek (or Hellenistic) Orthodox culture and Slavic Orthodox culture are pretty widely known within the Church. I’ve been reading a series of lectures given on Radio Free Europe back during the Soviet period, by Fr. Alexander Schmemann, who reflects on various aspects of Russian culture (as well as Orthodoxy’s place within it) and does much to describe why certain aspects of Russian Orthodoxy are as they are (or at least why there are certain tendencies).

    To note that America has some strong cultural tendencies is not to say anything unique, but to make observations that still need to be made. Our tendency for certain American ideas to be virtually religions in themselves is one of them. I should add that America’s largest export is American culture – it’s everywhere in many subtle (and not so subtle) ways. I would suggest that part of the phenomenon of evangelical Christianity’s growth outside of America is that it goes so well-in-hand with American cultural exports as well. But, that’s fodder for a separate article.

    Orthodoxy is not immune to anything.

  18. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Aric,
    “Except the Lord build the house, they labor in vain who build it.” One of the reasons I roundly reject the phrase “building up the Kingdom of God,” is that the Kingdom is not a process or a project. It is already a reality. We do not “build up the body and blood of Christ” when we celebrate the Eucharist. It is made manifest in our midst. The same is true of the Kingdom. There’s bread and wine involved – but the reality is the gift of God.

    Frankly, I do not trust anyone in modernity to take up the things God gives us and “build a better world” – and not have made themselves captive the secular modernity itself.

    What we do is the “next good thing.” Keep the commandments of Christ and quit trying to do the math – i.e. quit thinking about what it all adds up to. We have no such commandment – but instead have specific commandments against such ideas (Matt. 6:33-34). Jesus meant what He said.

  19. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    David,
    I have never said, “Just pray,” or that prayer is all that we can do. But, most people simply complain, post political opinions, and make noise (with accompanying anger and anxiety) as a substitute for “doing something.” Yes, we should and can do something. Christ is quite clear in His commandments. If we are concerned about someone needing a home – give them one. Hungry? Feed them, etc.

    Christians can even do politics – making just laws, etc. is not a bad or wrong thing. However, in our culture, politics is a religion (or borders on it over and over again). Beware – knowing that it wants to devour your soul.

    If we would carefully practice doing the next good thing, and actually practicing the commandments of Christ (and watch and read less news) we would do well.

    St. Paul saw worldly authorities as appointed by God, but did not see them as consciously obeying God. They were closer to a thunderstorm or an earthquake (which He would also have seen as working God’s will). His advice in Romans 13 is essentially, “Do good and stay out of trouble lest the governing authorities punish or kill you.” Sometimes, as He already well knew, they kill innocent Christians (and God Himself on the Cross). Jesus offered no rebellion when faced with Pilate’s threats. But He did not see Pilate as having any power other than what had been given him by God.

    Pascha is God’s last word on all of these things.

  20. christa Avatar
    christa

    Tried looking up fr. schmemann’s talks on radio liberty, as I would liketo read them: but it looks like the only way to access them is to buy them. Is that right?

  21. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Byron,
    America’s consciousness was initially forged in the fires of the English Civil War, particularly in the experience of the puritans and others like them. Oliver Cromwell thought many things – however, he never thought he was wrong.

    We do not have a cultural experience or cultural expression of repentance. It is foreign to us.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Subscribe to blog via email

Support the work

Your generous support for Glory to God for All Things will help maintain and expand the work of Fr. Stephen. This ministry continues to grow and your help is important. Thank you for your prayers and encouragement!


Latest Comments

  1. Byron, America’s consciousness was initially forged in the fires of the English Civil War, particularly in the experience of the…

  2. Tried looking up fr. schmemann’s talks on radio liberty, as I would liketo read them: but it looks like the…

  3. Matthew, The Church certainly has historically been “incarnate” in a variety of cultures. Some of those things are an important…


Read my books

Everywhere Present by Stephen Freeman

Listen to my podcast



Categories


Archives