Emerson's
Shadow: It's time for Unitarian Universalists to step
out of the shadow cast by this original thinker.
Forrest
Church
featured
in the March/April 2003 UUWorld
Ralph Waldo Emerson
memorably said, "Every institution is the lengthened
shadow of one man." Unitarian Universalism is too
multidimensional to fit neatly within a single shadow,
but if any reflection were protean enough to encompass
us it would certainly be Emersons. Free-spirited,
iconoclastic and self-actualizing, the sage of Concordfar
more than the Boston Unitarians of his own dayis
the natural father of our faith.
Two hundred years have
passed since Waldo was born into the family of a prominent
Unitarian minister. After following his father into
the ministry for a brief tenure at Bostons Second
Church, in quick succession he left first his pastorate
then preaching and finally the church altogether (only
to return in his dotage). Yet today, having completely
recovered from Emersons rejection, Unitarian
Universalism positively basks in his reflected aura.
Roof to pillar, all manner of things Unitarian Universalistfrom
churches to elite "big bucks" patronage circlesboast
his name. Theologically as well, Emerson continues
to shape and enliven the faith he once so eloquently
scorned. As do many of our ministers, I turn to him
often for theological guidance and spiritual illumination.
Beyond the ironies
implicit here, there is (in a different sense than
his dictum was coined to suggest) a shadow side to
Emerson's influence. With respect to our institutions,
to whatever extent Unitarian Universalism represents
"the lengthened shadow of one man," it languishes
in that shadow. Emerson's shadow blocks us from becoming
whom we might be, should we ever decide to grow up.
Emerson was the quintessential
adolescent sage. I dont mean that pejoratively.
Adolescence, the passage from childish dependence
to maturity, is no less necessary a stage for a nation
or a faith than for an individual. Coming of age together,
Emerson, the United States, and the Unitarian movement
shared the same adolescent passage. Newly liberated
from England, the nation itself was a child when he
was born in 1803. The American Unitarian Association
formed in 1825. Quickly thereafter, freethinkers in
the movement began to challenge every lingering assumption
tying young Unitarianism to its Christian parentage.
Bondage, in the form
of slavery, also characterized Americas most
pressing moral crisis. As eloquent as anyone in addressing
the evils of slavery, Emerson chafed at every form
of servitude. He dedicated his full intellectual energy
to the liberation of American letters from outworn
and derivative old-world models. "Our day of dependence,
our long apprenticeship to the learning of other lands,
draws to a close," he wrote in his personal declaration
of independence, "The American Scholar." From the
publication of Nature in 1836 until his death
in 1882, no figurepolitical, literary or religiousbetter
kindled the adolescent spirit necessary for a young
people to stand on their own feet and chart a course
independent from that of their elders.
To be functional, adolescence
must be age-appropriate. If Emersons philosophy
spoke to his own times, one might hope that our nation
and faith had matured. In developmental theory the
progression goes as follows: dependence, independence,
interdependence. In an age of bondlessness, Emersons
scriptsovereign individualism and self-reliancedoesnt
address todays need for interdependence. This
holds true for nation and denomination both. If we
are ever to grow up, the anti-institutionalists who
gravitate to our institutions must take a little of
their precious Emersonian freedom and invest it more
generously. Only then will we bond together in redemptive
community. Grown ups who spout an adolescent philosophy
are guilty of arrested development. Until we, as Unitarian
Universalists, come out from under Emersons
shadow, we will not mature as a movement.
To build an institution
on a foundation laid by an anti-institutionalist is
a little like hiring a demolition expert to be ones
architect. Emerson left his parish over a disagreement
with the entire standing committee of Second Church
over his refusal to perform the sacrament of communion.
To a majority of modern Unitarian Universalists, this
confirms his reputation as a prophet. But Emersons
rebellion against the church went much deeper. To
begin with, his shyness and aversion to intimacy made
him temperamentally unsuited to the pastorate. "It
has many duties for which I am feebly qualified,"
he confessed to his congregation. More importantly,
he came to view the church as a mausoleum. "I like
the silent church before the service begins, better
than any preaching," Emerson said. Even then he must
have felt uncomfortable. After all, it was filled
with people.
If one were to coin
a word to describe Ralph Waldo Emerson, it would be
"counterdependent." "Friend, client, child, sickness,
fear, want, charity, all knock at once at thy closet
door and say, Come out to us," he complained.
"But keep thy state; come not into their confusion."
Believing that people "descend to meet" and that "nothing
can bring you peace but yourself," this gentle Platonist
was adamantine in his diffidence. Lacking empathetic
imagination, he believed all "sympathy [to be] base."
"No man can come near me but through my act," he said.
All these quotes are
from Emersons most abidingly influential essay,
"Self-reliance," a relentless screed against every
manner of conformity to the "profane" expectations
of society. "Self-help" (a term that he was among
the first to employ) was Emersons watchword.
As reported by his grandson, Emerson often admitted,
"My strength and my doom is to be solitary." He reveled
in his strength and doom. "Leave me alone and I should
relish every hour and what it brought me," he wrote
in "Experience." But in the same essay he also was
pensive about this. "I grieve that grief can teach
me nothing."
Profane was Emersons
favorite epithet. He applied it to his own person,
if not to his essential self. In 1841, he confided
in his Journal, "These hands, this body, this history
are profane and wearisome, but I, I descend not to
mix myself with that or with any man." In those rare
moments of self-assessment that punctuate his litanies
of divine elevation, Emerson lamented his emotional
austerity, especially the toll it took on those closest
to him. Accounting truth "handsomer than the affection
of love," he nonetheless appears to have craved the
affection he spurned in subordination to his higher
goal. But never for long. "The great man," he reminded
himself in "Compensation," "must always outrun that
sympathy which gives him such satisfaction. . . .
He must hate father and mother, wife and child."
From all accounts,
during the ten-month separation from his family when
Emerson took his second tour of Europe in 1847, his
long-suffering wife, [Lidian], knew unaccustomed health
and joy in the chaste company of Henry David Thoreau.
Even then, she longed for her husbands withheld
affection. "You still ask me for that unwritten letter
always due, always unwritten, from year to year, by
me to you, dear Lidian," he confessed from across
the Atlantic. Unable to honor his wife's request for
a simple declaration of love, Emerson responded to
her cry for sympathy by indulging in his own pathos:
"I truly acknowledge a poverty of nature, and have
really no proud defense to set up, but ill-health,
puniness, and Stygian limitations."
Emersons aversion
to human intimacy did not prevent him from idealizing
(almost idolizing) friendship. And what friends he
had. His otherworldly wisdom, coupled with a serene
temperament, were magnates to a dozen or more brilliant
companions. Throughout much of their adult lives Thoreau,
Margaret Fuller and Bronson Alcott each sought his
friendship and approval. He was especially drawn to
insouciant young poets, Ellery Channing (his namesakes
nephew) and Jones Very among them. To Emerson, the
ideal community was a company of two like-minded spirits
walking togetherideally in silencethrough
the woods.
Emersons belief
that "Every man alone is sincere; at the entrance
of a second person, hypocrisy begins," put a strain
on even his closest relations. Due to his intolerance
of imperfection, Emersons friendships were phosphorescentspontaneously
illuminating and as quickly extinguished by his aversion
to intimacy. Poised to retreat at the slightest sign
of entanglement, he kept his friends (alternatively
ecstatic at his attentions and disappointed by their
removal) at arms length. "Why insist on rash
personal relations with your friend?" Emerson asked
in his essay on "Friendship." "Why go to his house,
or know his mother and bother and sisters? . . . Let
him be to me a spirit."
Pure in his idealism,
Emerson too met disappointment in his friendships.
"All association must be a compromise," he pined.
In his essay, "Circles," Emerson summed up his regrets
about the chosen few in whom he serially invested
and withheld intimacy. "Men cease to interest us when
we find their limitations. The only sin is limitation.
As soon as you once come up with a mans limitation,
it is all over with him."
Given his nature, it
is not surprising that Emerson stood aloofdespite
his liberal social sympathies from those who
were attempting to reform society. Describing Sunday
Schools, churches, and charitable associations as
"yokes to the neck," he was especially barbed in his
dismissal of Unitarians. In "The Sovereignty of Ethics,"
(displaying a rare flash of humor) he speculated that
"Luther would cut his hand off sooner than write theses
against the pope if he suspected that he was bringing
on with all his might the pale negations of Boston
Unitarianism." Unitarian Universalists who today might
join him, as I do, in rejecting the spiritual aridity
and constrictive rationalism early dominant in the
mother church, should not rejoice prematurely in their
kinship with Emerson. "I will go to prison if need
be," he wrote in "Self-reliance," "but your miscellaneous
popular charities; the education at college of fools;
the building of meeting houses to the vain end to
which many now stand; alms to sots, and the thousand-fold
Relief Societies; though I confess with shame I sometimes
succumb and give the dollar, it is a wicked dollar,
which by and by I shall have the manhood to withhold."
On this foundation one cannot build a church.
Emerson espoused the
Libertarian belief that self-reliance, if practiced
widely, would alone solve most of the worlds
problems. He was an early supply-sider, an advocate
of trickle-down compassion. "Let the amelioration
in our laws of property proceed from the concession
of the rich, not from the grasping of the poor," he
wrote in "Man the Reformer." Emerson embraced the
ideal of reform, but found the petulance of reformers
distasteful. His fastidious code of conduct precluded
sullying himself in the company of those who were
working to ameliorate the plight of the poor, extend
democracy, or end slavery (though here he made a brief
exception to his rule). Reform is "done profanely,
not piously; by management, by tactics and clamor,"
he primly complained in his "Lecture on the Times."
"It is a buzz in the ear. I cannot feel any pleasure
in sacrifices which display to me such partiality
of character." In the garden of his times, Emerson
was a sensitivity plant. Brush rudely up against him
and he would instantly recoil.
The closest Emerson
comes to a comprehensive self-critique is in "The
Transcendentalist," his essay on the loose school
of New England nature mystics that many credit him
with founding. Describing his fellow Transcendentalists
as "exacting children," he summed up their adolescent
limitations more succinctly than any critic. "So many
promising youths, and never a finished man," he wrote.
"They are not good citizens, not good members of society.
. . They do not willingly share in the public charities,
in the public religious rites, in the enterprises
of education, of missions foreign and domestic, in
the abolition of the slave-trade, or in the temperance
society. They do not even like to vote." In defense
of his followers scruples, Emerson explains
that all great causes seem "paltry matters" to them.
"On the part of these children it is replied that
life and their faculty seem to them gifts too rich
to be squandered on such trifles." Then, tellingly,
he changes tense and speaks in the first person. "What
am I? What but a thought of serenity and independence.
. . I do not wish to do one thing but once. . . The
path which the hero travels alone is the highway of
health. . . I will not molest myself for you. I do
not wish to be profaned. . . . I will not move until
I have the highest command." Having four adolescent
children of my own, these sentiments could not be
more familiar.
To mature as a faith,
Unitarian Universalism must remove itself from Emersons
shadow. Paradoxicallyand it is impossible to
write about Emerson without invoking paradoxonce
we do this the Light that shone upon him, illuminating
his deepest thoughts, may brighten our own path. As
he himself said of Virgil, Emerson "is a thousand
books to a thousand persons." These books may trumpet
sovereign individualism, but they orchestrate it with
a harmonious spirituality that enhances the prospects
for interdependence by fostering a reverence for all
life. Of "The Over-soul" he wrote, "The heart of thee
is in the heart of all."
As intimate with nature
as he was guarded in his personal relations, Emerson
is the poet laureate of the interdependent web. "Every
chemical substance, every plant, every animal in its
growth, teaches the unity of cause, the variety of
appearance," he wrote in his essay "History." Speaking
there of "the chain of affinity," and elsewhere (in
"Compensation") perceiving that "The world globes
itself in a drop of dew," Emerson was a vivid part
of the poem he pondered. When walking through Concord
on his daily stroll, he almost never failed to enter
a field of enchantment. In his essay on "Plato," Emerson
expresses the essential oneness of creation by way
of analogy: "The ploughman, the plough and the furrow
are all of one stuff."
Here his pulse can
quicken our own. Modern Unitarian Universalism is
as captive to linear reasoning and the constrictions
of rational positivism as Boston Unitarianism in Emersons
day was bound to the presumptuous logic of supernatural
rationalism. Emersons awe and cosmic humility
can help us tune lifes wondrous manifestations
to "the miraculous hum of their spindle."
Emerson sought no disciples.
He wished no one to languish in his shadow any more
than he himself was content to bathe in the reflected
glory of his own heroes. What he asked of his own
generation in "Nature," he also asks of us: "Why should
we not also enjoy an original relationship with the
universe." Beyond this, however much it owes to his
gospel of self-reliance, Emerson would recoil at the
tyranny of modern American individualism. At the inertia
and conformity we witness today, he would bridle with
a rebellion appropriate to the sins of a new age.
He might even cast down the idol of sovereign individualism
that he placed on the American altar.
But that is our work
now. If we band together, cultivate interdependence,
build strong institutions, support them generously,
and become more fully accepting and embracing of one
another, we too can extricate ourselves from the shadow
of the pastin our case Emersons shadow.
We can come of age. Going one step further, by walking
forward together with reverence and awe, we will honor
this remarkable mans memory on his birthday
in a way that he would celebrate. We will honor it
by emerging from Emersons shadow into Emersons
Light.
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