"We are afflicted by a congenital uncertainty as to our own value,"
observes Alain deBotton, author of an unfashionably lucid recent
work of philosophy entitled Status Anxiety*. This anxiety
compels us to seek the attention and admiration of others - a quest
virtually guaranteed failure since so many are now seeking the same
from us.
Having reached much the same conclusion about the deepest human
problem in a reflection on the history of Christianity published in
1999*, I was intrigued especially by deBotton's account of the role
of Christianity in ameliorating status anxiety down the centuries.
This account is not as detailed or complete as one would wish, but
his conclusions are provocative and potentially fertile for others
who might wish to take up the theme.
To begin with, he brackets Jesus with Socrates as an outstanding
example of indifference to the opinion of others, and understands
the Gospel concept of 'worldliness' as virtually identical to status
anxiety - quite correctly in my view. He also correctly credits the
Churches with insisting upon the equality of all in the sight of
God. However, he goes on to insist that Christianity for most of its
history did not seriously challenge, even philosophically, the
worldly status pyramids outside the sacred spaces of cloister,
chapel and cathedral.
He points out that St Augustine's 'two cities' model of history did
not allow for the defeat of the worldly, and therefore
status-ridden, earthly city by the Church (the City of God) before
the day of judgement. Though Christendom could affirm the dignity of
the peasant ploughman - for example through the corporatist social
model of John of Salisbury - (for whom rulers supplied the mind and
peasantry the feet of society) - it has been less effective in
ameliorating the impact of meritocratic ideas upon those of low
status in a modern society. So much for the penetration of Catholic
social teaching, and of Vatican II, into deBotton's consciousness -
but this is significant in its own way.
Meritocracy has, deBotton insists, increased rather than reduced
status anxiety. In medieval society 'the poor' tended to think of
their work as useful, of their lot as inevitable, and of their
status as both acceptable and none of their own fault. However, the
eighteenth century changed all of that. In came the 'new story' of
Adam Smith that it was the entrepreneurial spirit that not only
produced most wealth, but made wealth potentially limitless. Social
Darwinism - the theory that 'success' was proof of a genetic and
even moral superiority - followed in the nineteenth century. This
was countered for a time by ideological socialism, but the recent
victory of laissez faire economics and liberal democracy has
consolidated the status of a new aristocracy rooted in ceaseless
energy, shrewd investment and entrepreneurial cleverness. The
seemingly absolute and final ascendancy of a so-called meritocracy
implies that the unsuccessful are without any merit - a supremely
dispiriting conclusion for them at least.
The most entertaining part of the book is a robust treatment of
snobbery, a term that may have originated in the 1820s with the use
of 's. nob.' to abbreviate 'sine nobilitate', inscribed opposite the
names of non-aristocrats in Oxford and Cambridge examination lists.
The snob is forever fearful of being considered insignificant
through association with the common herd. A Punch cartoon of 1892
(reproduced in deBotton's book) captures the problem precisely by
observing a trio of stately London ladies parading through a park.
One of these is looking after another similar trio that has just
passed by. She says:
"There go the Spicer Wilcoxes, Mamma.. I'm told they're dying to
know us. Hadn't we better call?"
"Certainly not, Dear!" Mamma replies. "If they're dying to know us
they're not worth knowing. The only people worth Our knowing are the
people who don't want to know Us!"
When we recall that the person at the summit of that Victorian
status pyramid was a monarch distinguished only by her longevity
(and at one stage ironically hailed as 'Mrs Brown' by the London mob
for her attachment to a Scottish manservant) we have even more
reason to laugh at the follies of snobbery.
Snobbery and status anxiety are, of course, one and the same.
Television situation comedy has exploited a rich vein here in recent
years in the UK - in series such as Only Fools and Horses,
Yes, Minister and Keeping up Appearances. The belief that
advantages such as wealth and education - and country houses and
exclusive china - make people somehow 'better', more worthy of
respect, is, seemingly, a universal and timeless illusion.
That Christian thought and instruction should ceaselessly puncture
snobbish pretensions is clear, but the fact is that the mainstream
churches have never made a serious direct assault upon snobbery
since Constantine. I cannot remember ever hearing a sermon on the
subject - although I have been bored to tears all my life by the
theme of 'materialism'. As people acquire expensive property and
luxury goods for reasons of status, never for their material
composition, that complaint has always missed the mark.
Here in Ireland this failure to indict snobbery from the pulpit and
the schoolroom has been especially destructive of the moral
persuasiveness of Catholicism in a society aspiring to equality. It
has allowed middle class prigs to dominate, and even to
characterise, the public face of the church, while the inhabitants
of our inner cities now tend to see Catholic bishops as snobbery in
purple - simply because they almost always behave as remote grandees
rather than accessible and socially relaxed pastors. Bishops
generally have been delegating to others the virtue of humility
since the fourth century - and this has now become the outstanding
scandal in the Church, the root source of its alienation of
egalitarian societies.
The part played by Irish Catholic snobbery in the maltreatment of
those at the base of the secular period - too often by those at the
base of the clerical pyramid - in mid twentieth century Ireland is
something that surely needs to be explored in the context of the
scandal of child abuse in Ireland. Status pyramids always deprive
those at their base of a sense of their own dignity, and brutality
is an almost inevitable consequence.
We need to re-evaluate also the devotion by the Irish church of so
much educational capital to the children of the middle classes. The
assumption that this investment would guarantee the fidelity of the
Irish meritocracy to the values and truths of Catholicism was
clearly sadly mistaken. There is now not a single national news
medium in Ireland that can be said to be sympathetic to and
supportive of the church - proof that its efforts on behalf of the
middle classes are now interpreted as part of a right wing political
agenda rather than as an example of social concern.
And in the context of the growing problem of bullying in our
schools, and the self-hatred and self-harming that can follow, the
failure of Irish Catholic education to make any explicit connection
between social derision and the Gospel account of the crucifixion
must be regarded as another disastrous failing.
All of this casts an interesting light upon deBotton's analysis of
the historical failure of the mainstream churches to tackle the
spiritual challenge of snobbery in society at large. It is difficult
to avoid the conclusion that snobbery has become deeply embedded in
the church itself.
Just as the secular world is now full of wine, food and all kinds of
consumer snobbery, so do we find in the church the liturgy and
sacred music snobs who just cannot abide the typical novus ordo mass
or folk music hymns. There are even fashions for styles of
meditation, for theologians and philosophers - and even
'spiritualities' - but little intellectual attention to fashion
itself. The awarding of 'papal knighthoods' - even to globally
notorious pornographers - speaks for itself - as does the English
Catholic Herald's obsession with eulogising supposedly high status
converts to Catholicism such as Alec Guinness and Ann Widdecombe.
Opus Dei's recruitment priorities and social attitudes are snobbery
incarnate. (It never fails to remind us of its founder's alleged
noblesse.)
Meanwhile we are urged by hierarchs to 'engage with culture' -
without reflecting upon the very essence of culture itself - its
mimetic character. That is what fashion and culture essentially are
- the mimesis or imitation of the behaviour of those who have
somehow acquired status. No Catholic bishop to my knowledge has yet
connected the careerism of bishops - the subject of Cardinal
Gantin's astonishingly frank post-retirement outburst in 1999 - with
status seeking in the secular world. This does not bode well for an
effective 'engagement' by Irish bishops generally with the culture
of meritocratic Ireland.
And this means that there is also scant hope at this stage for an
effective national response to the challenge of 'new
evangelisation'. True evangelisation elicits an awakening from the
mimetic compulsion to seek status and celebrity, an awakening to the
good news that one is lovable for oneself and so can be both
autonomous and spontaneous. Those who would propose to lead a 'new
evangelism' in Ireland would need to be sure they have experienced
this themselves.
DeBotton reminds us poignantly of one of Tolstoy's greatest
characters - Ivan Ilyich - who discovers on the brink of his own
death that the status he has achieved in late 1800s St Petersburg
does not mean that he is truly loved by either friends or family. He
has sought all his life the regard of others, and so has taught his
children to do the same. His supposedly cherished beliefs are the
fashionable opinions of others, and nowhere near his heart. His work
colleagues' tepid sympathy cannot disguise their greater interest in
who will benefit most from his demise.
Late nineteenth century St Petersburg was no less, and no more,
Christian than 1950s Ireland - because (as Cardinal Cahal Daly has
acknowledged in the case of Ireland) conformity in pursuit of status
had become in both the norm - and conformity is just another word
for fashion.
How could Christianity and conformity ever have become confused? It
happened, surely, as soon as Constantine's opportunistic vision was
blessed by the Catholic bishops as the real thing, and this
Caesarean mass murderer was eulogised in the most excruciating terms
by Bishop Eusebius of Caesarea, the proto-typical Catholic snob.
This set a new priority for evangelism itself: to convert the
socially elevated, because this would guarantee the setting of a
spectacular conformist fashion among their 'inferiors'. This fashion
was already established in continental Europe before Patrick came to
Ireland, and even Patrick could see the advantage of converting
political and social elites first of all.
Thus the support of social elites became essential to the power of
the Church all over Europe. And it was the social elitism of the
Irish Catholic church that placed it in opposition to the
equalising, and therefore, in that limited sense, more truly
Christian, tide of modern secularism. Clerical elitism is also the
root cause of the tide of clerical scandals that we have seen over
the past twelve years - scandals that egalitarian secularism could
almost gleefully exploit.
Work such as deBotton's suggest, therefore, an essential preliminary
to any attempt at a 'new evangelism' in Ireland - a revision of the
history of the Church that correctly identifies Christendom as a
failed attempt at evangelisation-through-elites - and military
elites at that. It failed because it compromised the Gospels which
are centrally an assault upon elitism itself, and especially elitist
violence. It failed also, probably, because the Christian God could
not let it succeed while remaining true to the radical
egalitarianism of his Son.
I do not believe that neo-scholastic philosophy has yet produced a
book as relevant, fascinating and revealing as this on the problem
of status-seeking - one of the key components of the global
environmental and social crisis. This too underlines the fact that
the best of secular thought has much to teach the church -
especially when secular thinkers reflect honestly upon the
mysterious failure of secularism to achieve its original 18th
century programme. When the apostles asked 'which of us is the
greatest?' they were revealing what Christianity, and secularism,
need to recognize as the basic human flaw - our boundless desire for
priority, measured in the deference of others.
Alain deBotton, Status Anxiety, Hamish Hamilton, 2004
Sean O'Conaill, Scattering the Proud, Columba Press, 1999
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