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What is the use of captains who …

29 Sunday Jan 2017

Posted by memoirandremains in P. T. Forsyth, P.T. Forsyth, Preaching, Uncategorized

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Captains, Entertainment, P.T. Forsyth, Positive Preaching and Modern Mind, Preaching

P.T. Forsyth, Positive Preaching and Modern Mind, “The Preacher and the Age”

Moreover, let the religious public at least have some consideration for its ministry, which it irritates and debases by trivial ethics, and the impatient demand for short sermons and long “socials.” Let it respect the dignity of the ministry. Let it cease to degrade the ministry into a competitor for public notice, a caterer for public comfort, and a mere waiter upon social convenience or religious decency. Let it make greater demands on the pulpit for power, and grasp, and range, and penetration, and reality. Let it encourage the ministry to do more justice to the mighty matter of the Bible and its burthen, and not only to its beauty, its charm, its sentiment, or its precepts. Let it come in aid to protect the pulpit from that curse of petty sentiment which grows upon the Church, which rolls up from the pew into the pulpit, and from the pulpit rolls down upon the pew in a warm and soaking mist.

There is an element in the preacher’s eloquence which only the audience can give. Let it do so by being, not less exacting but more—only, exacting on the great right things. Let it realize that for true eloquence there must be great matter, both in him who speaks and in those who hear. The greatest eloquence is not that of the man but of the theme.

There is no such supporter of a minister as the man who, he knows, studies the Bible with as much earnestness as himself, if with fewer facilities. Such supporters add immeasurably to the staying power of a Church. If our people are experts of the Bible we shah have none of the rude remarks of philanthropy about the time the minister wastes on theology.

I say that, in the present state of the Church, and certainly for the sake of its pulpit, its ministers, and its future, theology is a greater need than philanthropy. Because men do not ‘know where they are. They are only steering by dead reckoning—when anything may happen. But theology is “taking the sun.” And it is wonderful—it is dangerous—how few of our officers can use the sextant for themselves. Yet what is the use of captains who are more at home entertaining the passengers than navigating the ship?

Soren Kierkegaard: The Rotation Method, Part 3 (Either/Or)

10 Tuesday Jan 2017

Posted by memoirandremains in Kierkegaard, Philosophy, Uncategorized

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Boredom, Diversion, Either/Or, Entertainment, Kierkegaard, The Rotation Method

He next makes a few observations about idleness. Idleness is traditionally consider a grave danger, it is when one is open for morally bad conduct. Thus, in Proverbs 7, the young man  who passes aimlessly through the streets finds himself with the temptress. Thomas Brooks writes:

It was the speech of Mr Greenham, sometimes a famous and painful [very careful, painstaking, not inflicting pain] preacher of this nation, that when the devil tempted a poor soul, she came to him for advice how she might resist the temptation, and he gave her this answer: ‘Never be idle, but be always well employed, for in my own experience I have found it. When the devil came to tempt me, I told him that I was not at leisure to hearken to his temptations, and by this means I resisted all his assaults.’ Idleness is the hour of temptation, and an idle person is the devil’s tennis-ball, tossed by him at his pleasure

Thomas Brooks, The Complete Works of Thomas Brooks, ed. Alexander Balloch Grosart, vol. 2 (Edinburgh; London; Dublin: James Nichol; James Nisbet and Co.; G. Herbert, 1866), 278.

But such advice runs on the measure of what is morally good or religiously required. Recall that the aesthete in this essay cares nothing for good or bad — except in terms of entertainment or boredom. Thus, he writes

Idleness is by no means as such a root of evil; on the contrary, it is a truly divine life, provided is not himself bored.

Why do some believe otherwise? “But since some people believe that the end and aim of life is work, the disjunction idleness-work, is quite correct. I assume that it is the end of every man to enjoy himself, and hence my disjunction is no less correct.”

This observation is interesting, because the aesthete judges the other decision making along his own rule: If someone thinks work is good, it must be because such a person is avoiding boredom by means of work — even if it is justified along some other ground.

He then goes to observe that such an argument demonstrates a sort of defect in those making it. Work is not the opposite of boredom — and boredom is truly the only real enemy — therefore, such people have something wrong with them, “if they do not bore themselves, it is because they have no true conception of what boredom is; but then it can scarcely be said the they have overcome boredom.”

Now there is some truth in the importance of boredom as something to avoid. We give enormous rewards to those who relieve us of boredom (athletes, entertainers), and such diverters are often treated (and often consider themselves) to be especially valuable as human beings. In point of fact, their value chiefly lies in escaping boredom (again, this is a generalization; there is a difference between art and diversion, but that is for another time).

Interestingly, those who are most apt at diverting others by pretending are often the most boring of people in themselves.

Our essayist has another division of people even though “All men are bores.”

It may be just as well indicate a man who bores others as one who bores himself. Those who bore others are the mob, the crowd, the infinite multitude of men in general. Those who bore themselves are the elect, the aristocracy; and it is a curious fact that those who do not bore themselves usually bore others, while those who bore themselves entertain others.

 

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