A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

The use and abuse of Celtic Christianity

Last night–somewhat against my better judgment–I went to hear a talk given by “Celtic Christianity” guru J. Philip Newell at a “faith forum” sponsored by a group of Capitol Hill churches, including ours. Though I didn’t know too much about Newell going in, my fears that it would be fuzzy feel-good New Ageism were, alas, mostly confirmed.

In Newell’s telling, we’re living at the birth of a “new consciousness.” This involves something like overcoming the dualities of earth/heaven, matter/spirit, male/female, nature/grace, the One/the many, etc. and realizing the essential oneness of all things.

Christianity’s contribution to this new consciousness will best be served, according to Newell, by rehabilitating the Celtic tradition and rejecting much of the standard-issue Western tradition. The most interesting part of Newell’s talk was an attempted rehabilitation of the much-maligned Pelagius. According to Newell, Pelagius was a gender egalitarian, appreciated the wisdom of the pre-Christian Druid tradition, and rejected the Augustinian view of original sin. (Confusingly, Newell seems to think that the Augustinian view holds that we are evil by nature, and that the Pelagian view rejects this; but Augustine certainly didn’t think that, which is not to say that his view of original sin doesn’t have problems.) Newell said that we have had the doctrine of original sin beaten into us and need to recover a doctrine of our essential goodness, as well as a sense that grace perfects nature rather than being in opposition to it (he didn’t use the exact phrase “grace perfects nature,” which might’ve given away the error that the evil Western tradition is uniformly anti-nature).

Although the talk (and Newell’s most recent book) was called “Christ of the Celts: The Healing of Creation,” there was actually very little talk about Jesus. Christ, he said, reveals the “heartbeat of God” which is also found in every person, and in all nature. But we didn’t hear much about the specific shape of Jesus’ life, much less his death and resurrection. In his scheme, Jesus seems to serve as an exemplar of a kind of nature mysticism, and this can lead Christians to embrace the “new consciousness.”

To some extent, I’m sympathetic to an attempt to rehabilitate Pelagius. I have no doubt the historical Pelagius probably got something of a raw deal at the hands of his theological opponents. And I don’t accept a full-throated Augustinian doctrine of original sin/guilt. But Newell’s view just doesn’t seem to have the resources to grapple with the reality of evil. I guess if you spend most of your time leading workshops at idyllic retreat locations like the Isle of Iona, off Scotland, and Casa del Sol in New Mexico, you might have a benign view of the world as good through-and-through. But, beyond those surroundings, we have a world that is full of a lot of brutality, violence, cruelty, suffering, and frustration. It calls for a more radical solution than attaining a new consciousness.

This is the truth contained in the traditional doctrine of original sin, however much we might need to re-think some of its cruder explications. Sin isn’t just a matter of limited knowledge or faulty perception, but a profound distortion of the will. The good that we want to do, we don’t do, and the evil we don’t want to do–that we do (to paraphrase St. Paul). This is why a New Age nature-mystic Jesus isn’t the solution to our problems, emphatically including the problem of our despoiling of the earth. Our ignorance isn’t the only–or even the major–reason that we take more than our share of the earth’s goods, crush the poor under our heels, and drop bombs on villages in faraway places. Rather, “we are in bondage to sin and cannot free ourselves,” in the words of the Lutheran Church’s confession of sin. A Christ who can’t liberate us from the principalities and powers that hold us in thrall isn’t going to be much help.

The problem with appeals to “Celtic Christianity” is that the history of the Celtic church is shrouded enough that it enables modern liberals to project onto it pretty much everything good in opposition to everything they find bad about the “Western Church” (this is the term Newell used – why the Celts are not part of “the West” wasn’t clear to me). Such a construct is rarely going to be more than a reflection of whatever values we happen to hold, like the image of the “historical Jesus” at the bottom of the well of history, who simply reflects the image of the scholar peering down into it. Only the living Christ can actually stand outside of us to both judge us for and liberate us from our sin.

ADDENDUM:
My wife tells me that saying “if you spend most of your time leading workshops at idyllic retreat locations like the Isle of Iona, off Scotland, and Casa del Sol in New Mexico, you might have a benign view of the world as good through-and-through” was a low blow. And she’s right. I have no idea how Newell spends the rest of his time and it was unfair of me to suggest otherwise. I think the point stands, though: I really don’t see how Newell’s brand of benign nature mysticism can account for radical evil in the world and in the human heart.

34 responses to “The use and abuse of Celtic Christianity”

  1. In Newell’s telling, we’re living at the birth of a “new consciousness.” This involves something like overcoming the dualities of earth/heaven, matter/spirit, male/female, nature/grace, the One/the many, etc. and realizing the essential oneness of all things.

    Plain old garden-variety promotional hype….

  2. More on what bls quoted above, it brings up some Pascal:

    Pensée 765/241. Sources of contrarieties. A humiliated God, and as far as death on a cross, a Messiah triumphing over death by his death. Two natures in Jesus Christ, two advents, two states of the nature of man.

    I guess I like Pascal’s emphasis on duality (and contrariety) and its importance in revealing the truth and power of the gospel. If things are essentially one, and its only a matter of “realization,” then the gospel is a silly thing; in this case, the facts of Jesus’s death and resurrection are less important than, say, cheap spin-offs of Plotinian philosophy. But if things are not essentially one, if the contrast between heaven and earth, etc., is intensified to the utmost, then Jesus really works in power, and the reconciliation is not merely a metaphor. “The West’s” contrarieties allow us to call Jesus both “the Son of God” and “the Son of Man.” Newell’s essential oneness allows us to make everything, or nothing, God, to make some kind of pantheism or atheism. And, like you said at the end of your post, in this case the literary Jesus becomes a metaphor for all preferences.

  3. I always wonder. If these folks are SO into Celtic Christianity, are they prepared to revive the Penitentials? Because that too is a part of Celtic Christianity. The love of Creation in that tradition is interwoven with a hardnosed asceticism.

  4. Ditto Christopher.

    Funny how I never hear of these modern “Celtic Christians” reciting the entire Psalter–while standing to their necks in the North Sea…

    1. Well, some of us … maybe don’t do the entire Psalter, but how about Psalm 119? And no North Sea around here, but would a small quiet lake do?

      I’m a priest in the Celtic Catholic Church. (Part of) My job is to teach the Gospel, and I do so from what we understand to be the historical tradition of our small bunch of believers. The other part of my job is to tear my hair out when I read or listen to 75% of what passes for “Celtic Christianity.” Most of it is not as absurd as “the Celtic Fairy Church” (I saw such a web site one day), but it comes close. Newell and the rest– I’ve given up on them. Those folk have some real good to say, indeed, something many people may need to hear. But it is enrobed in such nonsense and simplistic pablum that I can’t stomach any more. And it leaves out so much, so very much, so much grandeur and truth and wonder. Truly, I think they all leave out the best, most valuable bits to chase after the sparkley pretty tinsel.

      The old Irish monks et al. were a tough bunch. I would not have liked them one bit; far too focused and single-minded for my tastes. They intimidate me. Oh, but there is some delightful glory in the tradition nonetheless!

      Like everything in our Christian way of thinking, it is not one or the other; there are two hands to this.

    2. And I should have included in my last comment that the daily recitation of the Psalter was a monastic practice, not something you would find the lay folk doing. And the bulk of the people I’m thinking of now are certainly not monks. So they would not be the ones doing that anyway. Ditto for the cold waters of the North Sea, or the local frigid river.

      Granted, the laity did develop the use of 150 Our Fathers to replace the Psalter. But work today is different. I suppose it is possible to guide a plow and pray that way, but I’m not so sure you could work at a help desk or in a classroom or waiting tables or trying to sell condos over the phone and pull it off.

      So, your point is taken, and probably is essentially valid, but the specifics don’t work.

  5. […] Lee McCracken has up a great post discussing a talk he heard by “Author in Spirituality” J. Philip Newell, on how a recovery of […]

  6. As a native born Celt from the West of Scotland, I find this mass marketing of Celtic Christianity distasteful and is usually esteemed by those who get nostalgic when bagpipers play the popular American Shaker tune to “Amazing Grace.”

    They long for the Auld Country and end up touring Iona, which has been taken over by radical socialists like John Bell, posing and promoting themselves as the claimants to the fabled Christian ascetism which was lost when the beloved Queen Margaret of Scotland persuaded her subjects to accept Roman Catholicism.

    My people have been Celtic Christians for 1500 years and there’s one thing we learned from Patrick, Columba, and Mungo – you can smell cow dung a mile away.

    1. I love your post, very well said.

  7. Hey.

    Let the sun shine in.

    Ignore false antecedents that mean no more than claims of the Masons to have been founded by the Templars.

    It started with this.

    Hair

    And this.

    The Greening of America

    And this.

    Maharishi Mahesh Yogi

    The New Age movement is what’s left of the Hippies.

  8. […] (no, not that one) “creation spirituality” to task on many of the same grounds that I criticized J. Philip Newell. Like Newell, Fox embraces a form of nature mysticism, disdains talk of original […]

  9. Gaius – I think it’s the Age of Aquarius filtered through the Me Decade, Reaganite capitalist excess, and feel-good Clintonian liberalism.

  10. The weather can be pretty bad at Iona.

  11. Marty Farrell

    Greetings in Christ!

    A simple question please, is this site for bashing Celtic Christianity only? Are contrary opinions accepted? Or is Truth now ‘one-sided’? I doubt this will be permitted to be posted here but I just had to ask it anyway!

    Slan…

    1. > is this site for bashing Celtic Christianity only?

      I’m all in favor of the Christianity of the Irish missionaries who evangelized Britain, and the monastic communities that remained faithful during the era of viking raids and preserved classical learning.

      The monastic Rule of St. Columba is good common-sense Christianity 101. And the early Irish Christians’ love of Mary and the saints is a refreshing change from the stark individualism of the “Me & Jesus” religion I encounter so often.

      The Irish liturgies, with their rich repetitions and invocations to all the powers of heaven, firmly established the believers in the conviction that they were part of the communion of saints and the Kingdom of the Most High God.

      What does deserve bashing, though, is modern new-age fluff dressed up in harps and pennywhistles and marketed as “Celtic Christianity.” If it’s not faithful to what the great historical Christian cultures of Ireland, Britain and Gaul practiced or believed, then it’s neither Celtic nor especially Christian. it’s just branding.

      1. Marty Farrell

        “What does deserve bashing, though, is modern new-age fluff dressed up in harps and pennywhistles” – hehehe… agreed!!! However, the Rule of Columba, the institution of private penance, sheaving, are all things that only serious seekers of the Celtic Way even know about. Most are content to read a few books, feel good about the environment, and remain unchanged about ‘Jesus and Me’. Perhaps that’s all they are ever capable of? Celts, however, see them all as Christ does… regardless of how they see us! We only must BE him in their midst and trust the Spirit will touch their hearts for more…

        Slan

      2. I would like to add to Marty Farrell’s original post – is this site only to bash Celtic Christianity? I am going on a Study Tour to learn about Celtic Christianity and looked up some of the suggested readings (some by Newell and some by Esther de Waal) and found this website. I do not appreciate the many insults – especially when they are generic attacks, rather than constructive and specific observations. Ex: the description “modern new-age fluff dressed up in harps and pennywhistles” does not address any particular issue. This is a statement designed to create disunity – because there is no way someone can defend themselves against something this vague and offensive. Would you like someone to say this about you?

        It is my firm belief that in the midst of any flawed theology, whether it’s “Jesus and Me” theology, or whether it is some sort of historical nationalism (“I know the real Celtic Christianity, and Newell doesn’t”) – God is at work. The fact that Christ’s holy bride, the Church, is still alive and well testifies to the miracle God makes possible DESPITE any Christians’ shortcomings. So my prayer for each of you, and for myself, is a sobering dose of humility.

        Paul recognized how silly it was for the Corinthian church to pick one preacher over another to follow “I follow Apollos, Cephas, Paul… Newell, the Original Celtics.” So let’s realize our own sillyness. Let’s take seriously his call to unity! That’s okay if you think that your sister or brother in Christ is wrong, but it’s NOT okay if this is the cost of disunity, or if you do not act out of Love towards them. If Newell is preaching the gospel – praise God! If you think he’s a bit off base – pray for him!

        In 1 Corinthians 1 right after Paul reminds the Corinthians that they are not to follow preachers – but God – Paul reminds the Corinthians how foolish Christianity really is anyways. Let’s not get too caught up in our own descriptions, logic, history, theology… Because this is all foolishness anyways.

        “But God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong. God chose the lowly things of this world and the despised things—and the things that are not —to nullify the things that are, so that no one may boast before him. It is because of him that you are in Christ Jesus, who has become for us wisdom from God—that is, our righteousness, holiness and redemption. Therefore, as it is written: “Let the one who boasts boast in the Lord.” (v27-31)”

  12. Heh – take a chill pill, Marty. I have a very laissez-faire comments policy here. The point of this post is not to “bash” Celtic Chrsitianity, but to critique a warmed-over and sanitized version of it served up as an item on the yuppie “spirituality” buffet.

    I think there’s value in the re-appropriating parts of the Celtic tradition; I like what Sean+ Lotz has to say above, for instance. Paul Santmire also has some useful things to say about this in his book Nature Reborn, IMO.

    1. Marty Farrell

      Thanks for your reply Lee, I’ve tried several times in the past to respond on the positive side of CC but the posts were never presented! Hence, my frustration! It seemed this site was being moderated for only those in agreement with your assessments.

      I’d actually agree with Sean’s frustration with the Fairy church or even the Baptist Green Monk Monastery I saw a year of so back. There are many weirdos claiming to be under the umbrella of CC, but it ain’t so!

      We are a sincere people seeking to see the Light of Christ in all mankind as our forefathers had done. We still worship in all the major churches in the US, UK, NZ, Australia but hold our views on ‘original sin’ to ourselves. If anything, CC has brought a whole other dimension to my love and care for all of God’s Creation. Its all ‘His Kingdom’ to us.

      Again, thanks for the reply…

      Slan

  13. Ah, your frustration’s understandable. My apologies–if any of your comments contained links it’s possible they were gobbled up by the spam filter. I need to be a bit more vigilant about checking that. Keep the comments coming!

  14. I’m working on a blog (sort of). It is a scatter of random thoughts, but it has a theme: the prayer Adjutorium. That is “O God, come to my assistance. O Lord, make haste to help me.” This short prayer was probably the most frequent group of words out of the mouth of an ancient Irish (i.e. “Celtic”) monk in any given day. I believe it was the single most common thought, being prayed continually all day. It’s use was very important, and formed part of the foundation of practice among those who used it. You can see this from the frequent mention in ancient Irish monastic rules, etc.

    Anyway, I believe that this short prayer is essential to a fully developed and authentic “Celtic Christianity.” So I’m blogging about it. BUT, I have gotten rolled eyes and very little interest from people who profess extreme, almost fanatical interest in “Celtic Christianity.” Here is something of verifiable importance, something which seems to have helped formed the essence of probably many of the Celtic saints we so love and admire. But no interest. And I’m not complaining that there is no interest in my blog. I’m finding little interest in the prayer itself, even when I emphasize that it is of ancient Celtic provenance and was the very breath of Celtic saints.

    (The blog (linked to from my name at the head of this post) is meandering, and I am tackling the subject very slowly, so I don’t care that there is little interest in it. But I do get confused by those who ought to be eager for real information about a real Celtic prayer-style with provable-through-the-years spiritual depth who just don’t care. )

    1. Ah, Fr Sean, it’s not hard to understand… most folks who claim the word “Celtic” don’t want a known, historical, gritty practice to submit to; they want an aesthetic they can use as a jumping-off point for creative speculation – and an appealing brand they can apply to their emerging community.

      (Just my impression; your mileage may vary.)

      1. Hmm… I guess I have gotten most of my exposure to Celtic prayers from the Carmina Gadelica and not from monastic rules. I’ve never heard of that prayer. That may be why you are getting eye roles. The Carmina Gadelica has so many facinating prayers to take our attention.

    2. Sean+Lotz’s prayer is from Psalms, is it not? Of course the monks prayed that. It also reminds me of the Circling Prayers and all the other prayers that were for protection. Maybe it’s the “come to my assistance” that is putting people off. It sounds so formal. In any case, it’s a very believable prayer. Anyone read Esther De Waal’s book on Celtic prayer? or is she dismissed here like Newell?

      1. Cindy, the Adjutorium is the first verse of Psalm 70. Yes, monks would pray it often in the normal course of praying the Psalms, but more than that. Starting in the Egyptian desert with the desert fathers and mothers before them, the use of this prayer-phrase had been long used in isolation, constantly. It is essentially different than a caiming/encircling prayer. The caim is a one-off prayer, generally, specifically for protection. The Adjutorium is a constant companion through life, and is not really about protection so much as being conformed to the image of God, being healed.

        And… I love Esther de Waal. I even like some of Newell. I don’t dismiss any of those folk. Well, not the ones who are making some genuinely good points. Some stuff is just silly, but de Waal certainly is not silly. It’s just that … well, … the “Celtic atmosphere” is lovely for a while, but it doesn’t seem to have the meat needed to get one through life. At least not for me, after I got to the point when I realized I really needed to start doing this Christianity thing. The monastic rules, even though I am not a monk, have some real substance. The Adjutorium. The _Alphabet of Devotion_. Good, solid, meaty, humbling stuff there. Something I can grow on.

        Carmina Gadelica type prayers, lovely though they are, and as much as that prayer style has entered into my life each day, — it’s not the soul transforming, humbling, teacher I need. It is a beautiful part of the “Celtic Christian” life. It is a prayer style wonderfully adaptable to trying to get through each day and year of grace in this world. But it is not meant to teach, to kick me in the tookus when I need it. It is a different category of thing. My “dismissal” is only o those who dismiss all the grand and glorious material and spiritual tradition that really heals the soul. I appreciate much of what is being published under the heading “Celtic Christianity.” It’s just that a lot of it is missing out on half of the glory of it all.

        — Sean+

      2. Quote: “Carmina Gadelica type prayers, lovely though they are, and as much as that prayer style has entered into my life each day, — it’s not the soul transforming, humbling, teacher I need. It is a beautiful part of the “Celtic Christian” life. It is a prayer style wonderfully adaptable to trying to get through each day and year of grace in this world. But it is not meant to teach, to kick me in the tookus when I need it.”

        I guess I’ve been so saturated with scripture and teaching that what I need now is help living gently and knowing God is with me. Basicly, I don’t need a kick in the tookus; what I need is to develop more trust in God’s love. I find the Carmina Gadelica prayers very comforting, especially the adjectives they use for each of the trinity and the concept of God putting His arm around you as you sleep.

  15. […] 29, 2009 by Lee There’s a lively conversation going on downblog on the “Use and abuse of Celtic Christianity” post from a few weeks back. Welcome to any new readers! I don’t have much to contribute to […]

  16. The Adiutorium prayer is a discipline brought to the West by Cassian in the Conferences. I’ve never heard of it connected with the Celtic monks, though… Are there some good sources you can direct us to for the connection, Sean+?

    1. Derek, yes, there is some document evidence. I am researching and blogging on that very subject (gradually), so until I have produced my vast scholarly tome with the definitive final word on the subject (or not– probably not), I would recommend
      The Celtic Monk: Rules & Writings of Early Irish Monks (at Amazon.com)
      The Celtic Monk (at Amazon.co.uk)

      The monastic “rules” contained therein are the pertinent parts (oh, but do read the Alphabet of Devotion!). It would be fun to see if anybody spots the one sentence which got me started on this line of inquiry and practice.

      — Sean+

  17. Marty Farrell

    Greetings all,

    Sean – this link came through a few of the other CC sites (Yahoo) and I thought it might be of interest to you. Its about Irish Monasticism in the 5th through 12th centuries. http://monasticon.celt.dias.ie/

    Slan,
    Marty

  18. Newell says that some Celtic teachers spoke of Satan as an angel of light. His interpretation of this is that there is goodness at the heart of everything. I wonder if the teachers he speaks of were not quoting 2 Cor., in which Paul says that Satan disquises himself as an angel of light.
    Another questionable proposition is Newell’s thought that Mary Magdalene may have been the “partner” of Jesus. Would Jesus expose Mary to the shame that would result from an illicit affair in that culture? Would Jesus have been “sneaking around” with her? Both ideas seem ludicrous.

    1. Joel,
      Could you put those statements of Newell’s in context? Where did you read them? Thanks.

  19. Cindy,
    Sorry it has taken me so long to anser. I just saw your question. The comments were in “Christ of the Celts,” P. 13 for the angel of light quote and p. 59 for the quote about Mary Magdalene and Jesus.
    Joel

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