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Where Do We Go From Here?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 October 2024

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Of course others have faced this problem, and found their answer. It would be wanton, spiritual arrogance for the author in his academic seclusion to suggest otherwise. Yet sometimes, as he lays aside one or other of the various handbooks of Christian reconstruction with which the market is flooded in these days, a horrid doubt crosses his mind which passes into a nightmarish sense of unreality. We draught our charters, we hold our luncheons, we address our public meetings. We go to the world outside the conference-hall door with a smile, with a handbook, nearly always with a sense of assurance Again, we search the Scriptures not that we may have life, but that we may find a slogan for a Christian mass-movement, in which the demands ot the platform will blunt the sharpness of our truly Christian perception. Our attitude seems sometimes a curiously sorry compact of assurance and desperation. We are assured because we think we have a solution for the frightful torments of the present; we are afraid because we see the dreadful possibility that men will not listen to us, may in fact opt finally for other gods.

Is this altogether unfair? The picture is not intentionally spiteful. But there are moments when it seems hard to escape the conviction that some contemporary forms of Christian social activity are little less than highly subtle forms of escapism. They are ‘idealist’ in the sense assigned to that term by Marxist writers, for they rest on unconscious desire to escape the pressing demand to wrestle with social actualities in the here and now by passing into a world that analysis points out to be one of ideas only.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1942 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

1 Epitomised and ‘ extracted ‘ in Blackfriars for Feb, 1938, pp. 134 ff.

2 Cf. also Zundel, Our Lady of Wisdom (Sheed and Ward).

3 The past participle of this verb was used in the Sunday Express of May 3rd, 1942, p. 2.

4 In his Christian News-Letter Supplement for Feb. 11th, 1942.

5 Dr. K. E. Barlow has urged the relevance of a proper concept of Nature to the solution of our theoretical problem in his ‘Discipline of Peace’ (Faber, 1942). Unfortunately his epistemology is extremely shaky, and one’s confidence in the detail of his argument is therefore a little insecure. His book, however, demands attention.

6 Cape, 1941.