THE HUMAN STAIN
Europeans and indigenous Americans being judged at the court of Nature for modifying their bodies, from the frontispiece to John Bulwer’s Anthropometamorphosiss, London, 1656. |
Indigenous religions around the world collectively recognize taboos
Cannibalism, Brazil. Engraving by Theodor de Bry for Hans Staden's account of his 1557 captivity. |
The cleansing rites of religions point to moral unworthiness
Woman's Bath, 1496, by Albrecht Dürer |
The Bible assumes this sense of defilement and uncleaness before God and addresses it through the sacrificial system in which the sinner's guilt is transferred to a sacrificial animal
Zurbarán Lamb of God, Prado Museum, c. 1635-1640. |
Today's culture denies humans are good or evil, denies defilement, and attributes shame and guilt to socialization and evolution
Pablo Picasso, Portrait of Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, 1910, Art Institute of Chicago |
Things of course are more complicated in our post-Christian, increasingly secular culture. At the risk of overgeneralizing, contemporary culture holds together uneasily a few contrasting secular views of the sense of morality and the spiritual realm. Hard-core naturalists believe that there is no moral or spiritual order at all. The sense that there is one is simply a result of evolutionary adaptation; believing that there are “transcendent” values promotes solidarity and cooperation, so it has helped humans survive. Humans are neither good nor evil; they just are. Humanists hold some additional values, affirming some sense of human goodness and arguing for the self’s rights to self-expression and self-realization, that may trump biological norms, hence the celebration of gay marriage, which produces no children. Officially skeptical of the modern self, postmodernists uphold the diverse values of selves-in-communities, but end up affirming most of the same values as the humanists, with a generally greater appreciation of their social situatedness. As we have seen, in this late-modern sociocultural context, without a truly transcendent standard, the Self has become the implicit, religious center of our culture. Consequently, modern, secular culture teaches that humans are either morally neutral or innately good, in either case, without evil or alienation from God, and this has led, in turn, to the relative absence of a conscious awareness of a sense of defilement. Most Western intellectuals understand shame and guilt feelings to be the result of ancient evolutionary dynamics and contemporary socialization, and therefore have no ontological truth-value, other than promoting healthy social relations.
Humans become depressed or anxious, feel shame and guilt, and experience disorders
Eve covers herself and lowers her head in shame in Rodin's Eve after the Fall. Éve, bronze, Auguste Rodin, 1881-ca.1899, Jardin des Tuilleries, Paris |
Our negative reaction to valid criticism indicates unresolved shame and alienation
The Dunce (1886) by Harold Copping (1863–1932). |
The Implicit Religious Agenda of Modern Psychiatry and Psychology
Dr. Philippe Pinel at the Salpêtrière, 1795 by Tony Robert-Fleury. Pinel ordering the removal of chains from patients at the Paris Asylum for insane women. |
Source: Johnson, Eric L. God and Soul Care: The Therapeutic Resources of the Christian Faith. Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, manuscript submitted for publication, chapter 8 on Sin.
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