Sometimes,
something “societal” or “cultural” will smack me upside the head. Why do the
news media seem so hostile to faith? Why does it seem that our entire society
is getting more hostile to faith? Why do people often talk about faith only in
cartoon caricatures? Or why is it that our so-called cultural and academic
elites sneer at anything to do with faith, especially the Christian faith?
It’s
easy to blame it all on the 1960s, that decade of my coming of age when the
whole world seemed to come unhinged. I’ve blamed the 1960s, too, until I began
to wonder if all that craziness from that crazy decade was a cause – or an
effect. And if it was an effect, then the answer might be in what caused the
1960s.
I
found at least part of the answer – in a 400-year-old painting.
Rory
McClure was a student at Covenant
Theological Seminary in St. Louis who, as a sideline, did private lecture
tours at the St. Louis Art Museum. The tours
weren’t about the museum’s collection; instead, they focused on particular
paintings and how they represent the power of ideas in culture, and how they
relate more broadly to ideas and events of the times they were painted.
One
evening, we joined 16 others from our church to learn how ideas in the 19th
century reinvented the world. But first there was an introduction – a painting
in the Renaissance collection. That’s where I wanted to linger.
Francois
Clouet’s “Admiral
Gaspard de Coligny” is a small painting, perhaps 8” x 10”, and it’s easily
overlooked. The painting dates from 1567-1570, and in it lies a thread to
answering my question.
Clouet (ca 1510 –
1572) painted “miniatures” of members of royal families in France and England
and their courts. He lived in a tumultuous time – the Protestant Reformation
and the religious wars of the 16th century, likely when a lot of
people thought the world had come unhinged. It was a notoriously political time
in the French court – with Catherine d’Medici, the mother of King Charles IX, a
power to be reckoned with, and Gaspard de Coligny, the most powerful Huguenot
in France, serving as a close advisor of the Catholic king.
After
a spate of religious wars, France granted the Huguenots official tolerance,
lasting all of two years. What happened in late 1572 will likely never be
definitely known, but scholars theorize that Catherine, alarmed at de Coligny’s
growing influence over her son, plotted the admiral’s assassination. He
survived the first attempt, a shooting. Then, on St.
Bartholomew’s Day, he was stabbed and thrown from
the window of his home in Paris. The assassin (or assassins) finished the
job by beheading him. The Paris mob went crazy, attacking Huguenots wherever
they found them. The attacks spread across France. Estimates of the dead range
from 5,000 to 30,000; persecution continued for years. The remaining Huguenots
eventually left for Holland, Scotland and America, leaving France with a much
reduced middle class – which helped spur the country in the direction of the
radical change of the French Revolution.
And
there’s the story, all contained in Clouet’s miniature portrait
of the admiral. The painting shows a handsome man, with ice blue eyes and a
penetrating gaze (yes, I could see him corresponding with John Calvin, which he
did). He was known for his integrity and for his faith, and it says something
about the man that his influence was as great as it was. And if had lived, what
might have happened, or not happened?
The
story doesn’t stop there. It lands right in the middle of the questions I asked
in the beginning. The religious wars of the 16th century contributed
to the reaction known as the Enlightenment, whose ideas ultimately justified
the Reign of Terror during the French Revolution, which helped lead to
Romanticism and the Naturalists and the Impressionists and to Modernism, and eventually to the 1960s.
It’s
not just art, of course. It’s art and philosophy and culture and religion and
politics and everyday life involved here. Ideas have consequences. And tidal
waves like religious wars and the Enlightenment still ripple hundreds of years
later. Challenges to faith, sometimes including persecution and even murder,
come with the territory.
This article was
originally published by The Christian Manifesto, but the site was redesigned
and the archive (with all of my posts) disappeared. So I’m occasionally
reposting some of the articles I wrote for the publication.
I still tend to think that Christians, at least in the West, are far too sensitive to "hostility".
ReplyDeleteWhat is dished out in the media is absolutely nothing compared to what "Christians" have done to each other over the centuries. And please don't get me started on how we have treated non-Christians!
We were never promised an easy ride and if current scepticism is the worst thing we ever have to endure perhaps we should be very grateful...
Thank you for re-posting this thoughtful piece, Glynn, and for reminding me that what happens now is heavily influenced by history, all kinds of history. We don't live in a vacuum, do we? There are strands of connection crossing decades/centuries/millenia. It's helpful to stop for a minute and think about that - and then to release whatever form of 'they're just picking on us' kind of emotions we might be harboring! The commenter before me is right - we were never promised an easy ride. A joyful one? Yes. But easy? No way.
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