Fundamentalism: Whence? Where? Whither? Part 5

NickOfTime

Fundamentalism and Sentimentalism

Read Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, and Part 4.

The evangelical mixture from which Fundamentalism developed made serious concessions to populism. Charles Finney took those concessions to an extreme by patterning the inner ministry of the church after the worlds of commerce, politics, and entertainment. Finney made these adaptations at the precise moment when popular culture was coming into existence. The result was that the predecessors of Fundamentalism invested heavily in adapting their Christianity to popular culture. Fundamentalism inherited this link with popular culture and has perpetuated it rather consistently through the years.

Popular culture came into its own during the Victorian-Edwardian era.1 It provided a channel through which Victorian influences began to affect the lived Christianity of most American evangelicals, and consequently of the Fundamentalists who came after them. While Fundamentalists have not been alone in attempting to assimilate popular culture into Christianity, they have been among the foremost.

One of the main characteristics of Victorian popular culture was its sentimentalism. Victorians did not invent sentimentalism, but they made it a significant aspect of their mental and emotional furniture. As the predecessors of Fundamentalism absorbed Victorian popular culture, they imported its sentimentalism into their Christianity.2

Sentimentalism is more than simple overindulgence in emotion. It is a combination of two factors. First, it attaches the wrong degree or kind of emotion to an object. Second, it pursues emotion for the sake of the emotion itself.

Historically, Christians understood each object or activity to merit a certain emotional response (an ordinate affection). To feel more strongly toward a thing than it merited was considered sentimental; to feel less strongly was considered brutal. Alternatively, to direct toward one thing a feeling that rightly belonged to another was also either sentimental or brutal, depending upon the quality of the feeling and its harmony with the object.

Sentimental people mismatch feelings to objects by incorrectly perceiving the value of the objects themselves. They smooth out or eliminate the complicated nature of being and feeling. Consequently, the feelings themselves are sweetened or otherwise imbalanced.3

Dickens is a good illustration of sentimentalism. His characters tend to be one-dimensional stereotypes. Feelings aroused by those characters are clichéd and, from a later perspective, simply corny. For example, little Nell in The Old Curiosity Shop is such an impossibly sweet character that it is ridiculous to think of her as human at all. She is more like a porcelain doll. When Nell dies, the reader is supposed to be overcome with pathos. A person who understands what real thirteen-year-olds are like, however, is more likely to be overcome with the humor of the situation. Dickens attempted to evoke a sense of sorrow that far outweighed the value of Nell’s character.4

Nell was one of Dickens’s most popular characters. Why? Because sentimentalism is more concerned with the experience of the emotion than with its object. Dickens’s readers really wanted to feel the kind of bathetic sadness that he tried to evoke. Their clichéd grief, however, was very different from the misery that one experiences at the grave of a real girl. It was a feeling that people could relish. They could and did wallow in it. Their faux sorrow existed for its own sake, not for the sake of the plastic character toward whom it was directed.

A sentimental person is more interested in the feeling than in the object. The feeling must be quickly aroused and predictable. The words stereotype and cliché really are applicable to the process that occurs.

Because sentimentalism exists for the sake of the emotion, the focus naturally turns toward the individual who feels the emotion. As sentimentalism develops, it focuses less and less upon the object of sentiment, and more and more upon the quality of the sentiment itself. A sentimental song cannot say why a boy loves a girl. All it can say is how very, very, very much he loves her. As people become more sentimental they become more and more occupied with their own inner states, eventually resulting in profound self-absorption.

The consequences of sentimentalism for Christianity were profound. For example, sentimentalism changed the very categories in which unconditional election and efficacious calling were debated. Previous generations had resorted mainly to arguments about the nature of freedom (this approach can be found as late as Finney). The new sentimentalism, however, completely changed the way that people saw God. God was no longer complicated. He was no longer terrible in His holiness. He was not a God who hid Himself or who left His children weeping in perplexity.5 Rather, His fundamental attribute became niceness. God was now thought to be the quintessence of fair-mindedness. Such a God would never barge into an unresponsive heart. Furthermore, His niceness and even-handedness required Him to do everything that He could possibly do for every single sinner. It was unthinkable that God might do more for some (call them the “elect”) than He might do for others.6

Salvation was also sentimentalized. The unsaved were no longer regarded as rebels, lawbreakers, and criminals. They were now seen as poor, lost, lonely wanderers who needed to be shown the way home. The problem with sin was no longer that it scandalized justice and offended moral sense, but that it left the sinner weary, empty, and sad. The question became, “Are you weary? Are you heavy-hearted?” The invitation to salvation was no longer to repent, but to “Come home, come home, ye who are weary come home.” And, of course, the response was, “I’ve wandered far away from God. Now I’m coming home.”

Eternity was sentimentalized. Christians used to think of heavenly places primarily as the throne of God and Christ: “The Prince is ever in them.” Faced with the wonder of their eternal home, the faithful had exclaimed, “Beneath thy contemplation sink heart and voice oppressed!” Such a complicated view of eternity had to be flattened out. Heaven was transformed into a kind of church picnic in which a big family reunion would take place. The redeemed could now express their expectation of a spiritual romp to the rollicking, “Oh that will be glory for me, glory for me, glory for me.”

Even the Lord Jesus was transformed by the sentimentalism of the age. No longer was He viewed primarily as the transcendent sovereign who was coming to judge the quick and the dead. He was now seen primarily as a friend (oh, such a friend).7 This shift probably grew from a desire to emphasize intimacy with Christ, but it resulted in two gross misapprehensions of spiritual closeness. On the one hand, Christ was envisioned more and more as buddy or chum, and spiritual intimacy gave way to mere familiarity. On the other hand, a growing body of expression began to envision Jesus as a kind of spiritual boyfriend and to speak of intimacy in terms of romantic love. People came to the garden alone while the dew was still on the roses in order to meet the Son of God in a parody of a lover’s tryst. From a later perspective, such expressions seem scandalously comical. At the time, however, there were plenty of people whose vision of spirituality was significantly shaped by such stereotyped clichés.8

Finally, under the influence of sentimentalism the role of the individual changed. Expressions of piety became more subjective and self-focused. The perfections of God and the splendor of His plan were pushed to the side as the emotional experience and expression of the worshipper assumed center stage.

These were the influences that Fundamentalism inherited.9 They are the same influences that continue to affect the movement. The shape of sentimentalism has changed, but Fundamentalists in general have either tried to adapt to its latest expressions or else to perpetuate the older expressions as if they were somehow the faith itself.

The past three essays have attempted to define the intellectual and cultural location of Fundamentalism. They have expounded three influences that shaped the evangelical movement out of which Fundamentalism emerged. Those influences were Common Sense Realism, populism, and sentimentalism. All three influences were detrimental, and all three continue to affect the Fundamentalist movement.

To understand Fundamentalism better, we next need to discuss the theological environment out of which it developed. Before that discussion can take place, however, a few loose ends need to be tied up. To do that, I want to go back and to answer certain nagging questions about the matters we have been discussing. In other words, it is time for a digression.


1 The Victorian era properly ends with the death of Queen Victoria in 1901. Victorian sensibilities continued to remain influential throughout the Edwardian period, which is typically extended past the death of Edward VII to the end of the Great War. During the Edwardian period, however, a transition was taking place that would produce the Jazz Age following the World War.

2 Victorian sentimentalism is one of the commonplaces of literary and historical discussion. Recently, however, it has come in for a good bit of scholarly examination. One of the more influential recent volumes in Victorian sentimentalism is Fred Kaplan, Sacred Tears: Sentimentality in Victorian Literature (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1987). Another influential discussion occurs in Murray Roston, Victorian Contexts: Literature and the Visual Arts (New York: New York University Press, 1996). Recent interaction with both of these authors is provided by Suzy Anger, Knowing the Past: Victorian Literature and Culture (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press).

3 A brief but helpful discussion of sentimentalism can be found under the heading “Sentimentality” in Karl Beckson and Arthur Ganz, Literary Terms: A Dictionary (New York: Farrar, Strous and Giroux, 1975), 228-229. See also Thomas Winter, “Sentimentality” in Bret E. Carroll, ed., American Masculinities: A Historical Encyclopedia (New York: Moschovitis Group, 2003), 414-416.

4 For a thorough treatment of Dickens, see George H. Ford, Dickens and His Readers (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1955) or, more recently, Mary Lenard, Preaching Pity: Dickens, Gaskell, and Sentimentalism in Victorian Culture (Studies in Nineteenth-Century British Literature, Vol. 11) (New York: Peter Lang Publishing Group, 1999).

5 Psalm 88.

6 My point is not to argue for either side in the debate. It is simply to note the shift in the kinds of arguments that seemed plausible to Christian people. Sentimental arguments about what God’s love or fairness obligate Him to do would have been met with incredulity from both sides a few generations earlier.

7 It is noteworthy that in Scripture, we are never told to address Jesus individually as a friend, though His enemies accused Him of being the friend of publicans and sinners. He names us as His friends, but that is a very different matter. The shift to “friend” language as a norm for defining one’s relationship with Christ represents a very marked downgrading of esteem for Him.

8 There is a legitimate use of marriage imagery to depict the relationship between God and the soul or Christ and the church. Also, Christians have sometimes employed sexual imagery to explain the simultaneous longing and self-forgetfulness of spiritual intimacy, together with the awful nakedness of the soul before God. All of this is miles away from the “Jesus is my boyfriend” sentimentalism of the Victorian period.

9 Daryl Hart, “When Is a Fundamentalist a Modernist? J. Gresham Machen, Cultural Modernism, and Conservative Protestantism,” Journal of the American Academy of Religion 65:3 (Autumn 1997), 605-633.

The Recovery

Thomas Traherne (1636-1674)

Sin! wilt thou vanquish me?
And shall I yield the victory?
Shall all my joys be spoil’d,
And pleasures soil’d
By thee?
Shall I remain
As one that’s slain
And never more lift up the head?
Is not my Saviour dead?
His blood, thy bane, my balsam, bliss, joy, wine,
Shall thee destroy; heal, feed, make me divine.


This essay is by Dr. Kevin T. Bauder, president of Central Baptist Theological Seminary (Plymouth, MN). Not every professor, student, or alumnus of Central Seminary necessarily agrees with every opinion that it expresses.

Discussion

[Silverghost] I don’t see the Scriptures instructing us regarding which song is preferred.
I also don’t happen to see any specific instruction in that verse on whether or not we should sing about “rocking around the Throne of God” or “jam(ming) for the Lamb.” Yet I imagine you (as well as I) would have a sense that such words would be both irreverent and inappropriate.

My only point here is that you assert that the song is legitimate, while a case is being made here by Bauder (and supported by others) that it is not, and therefore would be personally experiential rather than “Spirit empowered”. You haven’t done much to counter, only to assert that your position is a given.

Greg Linscott
Marshall, MN

Well, looks like we’re well into a discussion about music now… but still touching on “affections” at least as they relate to emotions.

I’m not accusing anyone in the present discussion of this, but it’s interesting to me how often people want to identify the Holy Spirit with emotions as though “spiritual” and “emotional” meant the same thing. This is symptomatic of our sentimentalism problem and far more serious than what songs get sung (every once in a great while… I mean, really, who sings “Glory for Me” more than once every couple of years? … I checked, we actually sang it last at our church in 2006. But I did quote from it I think in the Rom.8 context).

Anyway, the readiness to identify the Spirit with emotions and reluctance to associate Him with calm rational thinking is a curious thing, but I think sentimentalism does much to explain it.

SG: on emotions as goal… In Scripture emotion is never the goal in worship. The pattern is pretty consistent of reflecting on truth about God (both experiential—Psalms are full of this and more propositional) then going emotionally wherever that appropriately leads—I think Jonathan Edwards, among many others, would say that the emotion there is the product of stirring the right affections.

Emotions are a gift of God, yes, but so are many other things… and have their place.

How you look at it deepends alot on how you see the relationship of emotions to affections. If Jay Adams is right (and many of the biblical counseling movement), emotions are physical things. So, gifts much like eyes, hands and feet are gifts. Not sure what impact that idea has on affections and sentimentalism, but the question interests me. Maybe someone’s in a better position to explore it.

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

Does God have emotion? Is divine passibility biblical? That is an interesting discussion in itself.

But here is another heart issue for Americans: God vs. the sentimental gods

I do know a possible treatment for religious sentimentalism in America. If people yawn at God and are attracted more to sentimentalism, God can let them follow their sentimental desires and gods and be dominated by them as He treated ancient Israel in the book of Jeremiah. In their sentimentality, the people of God went full circle. All the way backward. And it was awful.

I hope we are not that nostalgic.

For those interested in understanding more of Dr. Bauder’s thinking about emotions, I recommend his message to the 2007 FBFI Annual Fellowship, “Passionate Teaching.” Here are two alternative links to downloading the message:

http://www.fbfi.org/images/stories/mp3/2007_FBFI_Gen_Session_4_Bauder.m…

http://www.centralseminary.edu/mp3/2007_FBFI_Gen_Session_4_Bauder.mp3

Things That Matter

As the quantity of communication increases, so does its quality decline; and the most important sign of this is that it is no longer acceptable to say so.--RScruton

Amen Todd!

May the Lord shake whatever He deems necessary in this temporal world to get and hold our attention at the end of this church age, and may He spare us from “nostalgiaitis” and sappy sentimentalism.

Hebrews 12:26-29

Here is how you know for sure you are in danger: “Well, the Bible says that, but we have always done this…”

Upon further reflection, the good old days were not really so good after all.

Ecclesiastes 7:10

Church Ministries Representative, serving in the Midwest, for The Friends of Israel Gospel Ministry

Brent, thx for the links. Downloading now.

Todd, I also hope we don’t go there as a people. I don’t want my children or grandchildren to live with that (or die with it).

Edit: Listened to the audio. Very interesting. And definitely speaks to the question of right affections & emotions. I highly recommend it. The concept of koilia is key.

Bauder is clearly not in favor of emotionless Christianity. The message also sheds some light on what he’s talking about in the area of kinds of affection misdirected and, as a result, inordinate. (which is a major part of what he means by sentimentalism). SG, I think this mp3 will help you narrow down what Kevin is not saying… and then where there is disagreement the disagreement can be more precise.

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

Moving to other areas of sentimentalism, I would like to suggest that maybe the reason why some have their entire theological system bound up in a single verse (John 3:16) is due to the sentimentalism mentioned in the opening article. What do others think? Personally, I’ve seen this quite a few times in theological debates. One can mention many many verses, support their meaning with context, and the weight of them is simply dismissed because a sentimentalized version of John 3:16 trumps everything. I would suggest the Holman Christian Standard Version’s translation of John 3:16. “For God loved the world in this way …” I think that too often people think of the “degree” of the love rather than the “manner” in which God is showing His love. The translation just mentioned helps the reader to not make the mistake of thinking in terms of degree.

Because some readers have had the bad tendency of making possible implications into necessary implications, I’ll just mention that I certainly do believe that John 3:16 is a very important verse. By the above paragraph, I am NOT saying that the verse is unimportant to one’s theology, but that the degree to which it has been emphasized seems to border on a sentimentalism much like “God is love” therefore verses dealing with God’s holiness must either be redefined or cut out. Please don’t think like this, “either John 3:16 is everything, or it is nothing. Caleb is suggesting that it is less that everything; therefore, he is saying that it is nothing.” This is not at all what I’m saying, nor is that even remotely implied.

[Joseph] SNIP

I see a lot of romanticizing among Reformed folks especially, and I find it detestably unhistorical. They forget they either would have been killed or persecuted depending on where they lived, or they would have very likely supported the persecution and killing of other Christians who disagreed with them. Although I am a loud advocate for being historically informed in our judgments, I still find it hard to imagine Christianity co-existing with the easy killing and persecutions that characterized early modern Europe (I just heard Eamon Duffy lecture last night on Reginald Pole and Thomas Cranmer, and was reminding how easily and strangely cruelty could co-exist with undoubtedly genuine piety).
I concur. I am not a chain linker in my modeling of Baptist history. However, I get consternated when I read how some would minimize their sacralist heroes connections to the suffering of my continental Baptist cousins.

Hoping to shed more light than heat..

before the Victorian era, infants were not given a name until they were x months/weeks/days old. Why? THigh infant mortality rates caused adults to keep from getting emotionally attached to “new borns.”

Hoping to shed more light than heat..

Thanks Aaron for the clarification and Brent for displaying the links for Dr. Bauder’s messages on emotions. I listened to a little for now, and of course, there is no word for emotion in the Scripture, yet God does speak of the motivations of the heart often.
[Aaron Blumer] SG: on emotions as goal… In Scripture emotion is never the goal in worship.
Yes, nor the heart’s passion as a goal, but the appeal to the heart is obviously God’s goal. I had not said that emotions was my goal, but said this:”I choose to have emotional reaction for the good, so it is a goal.” I am looking for “emotional responsiveness,” or, as Dr. Bauder seems to indicate, the motivation of the heart’s passion to glorify God.

I still consider “O That Will Be Glory for Me,” a good song, motivating God’s people to think about: “Just to be near the dear Lord I adore…When by His grace I shall look on His face, that will be glory…for me.” It’s a good song to help God’ people to be heavenly minded. We are, after all, told about “the glory which shall be revealed in us” at our final redemption.

That should make the heart rejoice!

PS: I listen further to the MP3’s. Been quite busy.

Open our eyes, Lord. Luke 24:31,32,45 KJV <·)}}}>< Silverghost °Ü°

A question we could look at is:

“Why did people begin get all ‘gushy’ in the mid-nineteenth century?”

Hoping to shed more light than heat..

[Rob Fall] A question we could look at is:

“Why did people begin get all ‘gushy’ in the mid-nineteenth century?”
Yes, that would be interesting.

I’m tempted to say it was “progress.” What if we suppose that western civilization actually moved forward for a period (due to having alot of truth mixed in with its errors and more than a little grace from God)? There’s alot I hate about the romanticism and sentimentalism of the era, but on the plus side, it was good when we stopped viewing children as nameless entities (that probably won’t live long) until they had survived more than a decade. Why did they start living longer? In part because of a few advances in medicine. In part because the plague had run its course. (All of that was long before 19th cent. though)

On the other hand, you have guys like Rousseau (Also long before mid 19th cent…. I think Emile is probably most relevant example) who were busily arguing that children are some kind of pristine paragons of virtue that are sullied by adult society… a reverence for childhood.

Niel Postman’s book (I forget the title… googling “Postman” and “childhood” should get it), is interesting on that whole subject. He argues that there was no concept of childhood before modern times (but really only makes a good case for no concept of childhood in the middle ages), but then seems to want us to conclude that it’s horrific that we are losing the concept of childhood again now (because adults are increasingly child-like and and children are increasingly adult-like).

But the gushiness of the view of childhood is just a small piece of the overall gushiness of the period. I’m sure someone has written a good bit on why that gushiness happened.

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.

Few would disagree with the view of history that asserts an inseparable Judeo-Christian influence on Western culture. At what point did that influence cease? Would the answer to this question help us understand the influence of sentimentalism/gushiness on Christianity? There is a real affectation difference between eastern European and western European music. Musicologists attribute this to the difficulties associated with living in such climates, economies, political systems, etc. Does it make sense that an eastern European Christian composer would compose music parallel to western European Christian composers? If so, why? If not, why not? When one listens to a Lobe den Herrn-style text set by an eastern European Christian composer, it is so much more sober than one set by a western European composer. Do we then conclude that the eastern European Christian did not understand the joy of the Lord? Do we conclude that the eastern European culture that influenced the Christian composer was inferior because it did not have the advantage of Judeo-Christian influences? If the Word of God is the Word of God, and the Spirit of God is the Spirit of God, regardless of the cultural context, why would the joy be different? Maybe the joy is the same but the expression thereof is culture-bound? Having been to Fiji, I can tell you that their music is extremely peaceful - the exact opposite of eastern European music. Again, their climate, economies, political systems, conflict resolution habits, etc., have influenced their aesthetic. Would it be wrong to use their native music to accompany “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.” What does Christ’s peace sound like as compared with what the world’s peace sounds like? Clearly, they are different peaces. Is the Christian experience, as understood from the Scriptures, a sentimental experience (as characterized and defined on visualthesaurus.com “effusively or insincerely emotional”)?

On a completely different line of thinking, it seems our familiarity with the hymns mentioned in several posts disqualifies us from discerning from an objective position. May we agree that if I were to find a piece of music with a similar aesthetic to O That Would Be Glory For Me, the music alone, without the melody to trigger the theological thinking, would seem a bit hokey (to borrow a synonym of sentimental) and rather inappropriate as a vehicle for communicating the glory of heaven? An objective hearer might be inclined to announce “All Skate!”

As I see Eastern Christian music, it’s influenced by the lack of a Reformation. The Reformation was seen as a foreign/German innovation. So, the closest Western Christian music style is that of the Roman Catholic Church that is not borrowed from Evangelical Christianity.

Hoping to shed more light than heat..

Thanks for that. Sounds interesting.

Views expressed are always my own and not my employer's, my church's, my family's, my neighbors', or my pets'. The house plants have authorized me to speak for them, however, and they always agree with me.