| SOUND SENSE OR UTOPIAN
NONSENSE?
THE LEAVEN
COMMUNITY
At the busy corner of Summer
Avenue and Sycamore View in Memphis stands a historic marker
headlined, "Nashoba." In a few brief sentences it recounts the
story of Frances Wright’s failed socialist colony in the
1820s. Like most of the hundreds of utopian communities
started in America, only a historical footnote remains to
remind us that it ever existed.
From Anabaptist Dutch Mennonite
communities in the 1660s to Hippie peace-love-dope communes in
the 1960s, unnumbered social and religious radicals have
founded utopian settlements in America. (Tennessee has been a
happy hunting ground for them, from Nashoba in the 1820s to
The Farm in the 1970s.)
The reasons for founding these
settlements all differ. Secular settlements arise generally
from some stripe of socialists or, more accurately,
communists. Religious settlements usually revolve around a
powerful personality who claims prophethood. Almost always
they center their wildly varying beliefs on some heresy or
misinterpretation of Scripture, from Anabaptist anarchism to
Shaker celibacy.
DO CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN
OR
DOES MAN MAKE THE
CLOTHES?
What these groups all share is
Skinner’s presupposition that environment makes the man.
Your problem is lack of education, poor lighting, or
too many collards and not enough fatback -- never sin.
The world as is cannot be redeemed, indeed, bears
responsibility for man’s corruption. However, apart
from the world’s corruptions mankind can be
perfected. Clearly, then, they can only reach perfection by
withdrawing from the world to create a new and perfect
community – perfect, that is, according to the Procrustean bed
of their own peculiar ideology or theology.
The only other thing all
these settlements have in common is their universal
failure.
So why in the world would I find
myself today advocating the formation of Christian and
agrarian communities? Have I lost my mind, or is something
else in the wind?
THE TIE THAT BINDS
Whether spoken or unspoken,
every community is held together by a certain worldview, a
culture embodying a set of ideas that every member accepts.
This may be pretty low level stuff – we will all live together
without smashing each other’s skulls, stepping on the grass,
and stealing each other’s wives. It may be higher level – the
Ten Commandments -- but everybody abides by it.
The most enduring tie that
binds is religion (the word comes from a Latin root that
means "to tie.") Religion offers a transcendental basis
for harmony, grounds that reach beyond space and time into the
eternal. Indeed, the history of new church communities
or colonies (versus communist or heretical utopian
communities) has numbered quite a few successes, and many
persist to this day.. In North America Maryland, founded by
Lord Baltimore as a refuge for Roman Catholics, and New
England (for Puritans) spring immediately to mind, not to
mention Mennonites and Amish settlements. On New Zealand’s
South Island, Dunedin (Gaelic for Edinburgh) & Christ
Church were founded as church colonies or with strong church
support (Presbyterian and Anglican). In fact, the whole
settlement of America, whether viewed from the English &
Protestant standpoint or the Spanish and Roman Catholic, was
continuously justified as a vast missionary endeavour to
extend the kingdom of Christ and bring to the heathen the
benefits of Christ’s rule.
TRANSCENDENCE IS NOT
ENOUGH
OR, YOU MUST USE THE MEANS, MY
FRIEND
While a transcendental idea may
be necessary to bind a community together, that alone may not
keep it alive. Some sects such as the Shakers are smothered by
their own beliefs. (Then, too, choosing celibacy as the basis
for community might not be the single best method to guarantee
covenant continuity and longevity.) A community must also
prove economically viable by itself. When not
self-supporting it degenerates into an expensive farce,
supported by those who never intend to live there. It’s just
an expensive toy, mankind in a terrarium.
Nearly all utopian communities
founder on communism. The Pilgrims nearly perished their first
winter because they tried to practice communism. Go ahead,
draw the obvious solution: communism is the death of
community. Building a community requires a common
interest, not common property.
Nor is "free enterprise
communism" a solution – a sugar daddy like Robert Owen to pump
money into utopia to keep it going. Sooner or later that
always wears out, so there is no solution but reality:
every member must support himself, contribute something to
the community, and have his own individual stake at risk in
the community’s success.
WHO NEEDS NEW
COMMUNITIES?
We do. You and I. Humanity. I
can’t lay out the whole case for the failure of modern society
here, but I can explain something by example. (For a more
thorough study, start by reading I’ll Take My Stand:
The South and the Agrarian Tradition by 12 Southerners
-- but that’s only a start. I’ll take My Stand, Baton
Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1977, orig. published
1930.) We – my family and I -- left urban society for the
country, literally for a farm. The environment – social and
physical -- we live in has changed completely, and we have
changed in response to it. (Whoops! I’m sounding like
Skinner now, but bear with me and maybe I’ll start talking
sense again.) Life has not become "easier" in the sense of
labouring less – rather the opposite. There’s much more
physical work. There is the discipline of the soil on my soul.
However, we escape the daily infection of the frantic,
clawing, biting, scratching, angry shopping-mall world. That’s
an infection, I’ll admit, I can’t throw off very well. And
while it certainly can’t be true that God’s mighty and
merciful work in creation is absent in an urban setting, it is
true that I seem to miss it there. You know what I mean, that
spontaneous response of praise bursting out of your soul when
your eyes fall on the world around you:
"O how wonderful art thou in thy
works!"
"The heavens declare the glory
of God; and the firmament showeth his handy-work.
"O LORD, how manifold are thy works! in wisdom hast
thou made them all: the earth is full of thy riches."
"The Lord is righteous in all
his ways, and holy in all his works." (Ps. 66:2; 19:1; 104:24;
145:17)
These witnesses are not
absent when we are surrounded by the works of men’s hands,
buildings and malls and skyscrapers. But together with all the
busy-ness of a civilisation that knows "the price of
everything and the value of nothing", they so distract me that
a sane, peaceful Christian existence recedes into misty
impossibility. Argue it good or bad, a society where
more stuff is both the cure for everything and
the supplanter of all human relations -- a society that
worships raw power and money while glorifying death and change
for its own sake -- a society that worships speed so wholly
that it can never pause to ask where it is speeding -- that
society no longer satisfies me. In fact, it threatens to
destroy me.
A.W. Tozer (1897-1963) wrote,
"We Christians must simplify our lives or lose untold
treasures on earth and in eternity. Modern civilisation is so
complex as to make the devotional life all but impossible. The
need for solitude and quietness was never greater than it is
today." And never so hard to find in the urban world, I might
add.
You longtime readers know that I
am not talking about monasticism, a withdrawal from the
world into cowardly self-indulgence. That may satisfy you
personally, but it also makes you as impotent, impertinent,
and irrelevant to the real world as the Amish.
THE CHURCH OUR MODEL
Rather, we ought to take the
church as our model, the community of the faithful, stubbornly
in but not of the world we are leavening.
Fleshly speaking, the church is a community in the world that
changes the world by teaching and example. (Not fleshly
speaking, the church is the community of the faithful indwelt
by the Holy Spirit, the Body of Christ in the power of the
Holy Spirit bringing all things into dominion to her Lord.) We
change the world by teaching and example.
From the beginning the Church
has created parallel institutions to replace the
world’s corrupt institutions. In part at first, but eventually
in the whole the Christian worldview reformed the Western
world.
But how feckless to plump and
argue for a world that you never get to live in! If it is
right and true, why not just start living in it today? There
are all sorts of ways to start doing this, from
spending more time with your family to putting a ball peen
hammer through your television screen. Most radical is to move
to a community where there are other people who have not yet
completely lost their minds, people who share your faith and
culture.
DON’T CIRCLE THE WAGONS
Every day it becomes more and
more difficult to avoid a "circle the wagons" mentality. Every
day brings new and ever more insane attacks on morality and
tradition. Think about the hyperbolic growth curve, for
instance, of sodomy. In 1970 the word "homo" was hardly
breathed. Today you’re liable to be arrested just for turning
up your nose at sodomites, and liable to be sued if you don’t
hire them or kiss their toes.
If you’re a traditional
Southerner, like I am, the attack is even more violent. By
definition you have become a drooling, violent, moronic,
anti-intellectual racist – without every moving a peg. But
then, this isn’t much more shrill and hateful than the attack
on just plain Christian folk everywhere.
However, "circling the wagons"
would be a big mistake. More apt is the response of General
Nathan Bedford Forrest at Parker’s Crossroads. Just when h had
whipped one Yankee armyand they were about to surrender,
another army attacked his rear. An aide came running up and
shouted, "General, we’re surrounded! What should we do?
Without a blink Forrest shot
back, "Charge both ways!" That’s what we should do. What do we
have to fear? Please explain to me what atomic bombs of social
perfection and cultural achievement the modern world has to
throw at us. Madonna? Psychoanalysis? Mapplethorpe? Ritalin
& Prozac for the masses? Ted Kennedy? Timothy Leary?
Deconstruction? Seinfeld? Rap music? Tech stocks? Partial
birth abortion? The Federal Reserve system? Only braggadocio
and the absence of any alternative keep it propped up. Let us
raise, as Washington said, a standard to which the wise and
just may repair.
PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS
Why would we want to establish
new communities? To enjoy and establish for ourselves and our
children a lifestyle independent of and different to the
present world. Call it modernism or technofascism or simply
insanity, I don’t want to live there anymore, and I want to
leave something better to my children.
So, yes, all things
considered I am advocating that people who share
traditional Christian culture form communities -- not as a
method of retreat, but of rebuilding. Our job is to create
parallel institutions and a parallel worldview that by its
excellence and beauty will supplant the current culture and
economy. Now, I am not numb to the dangers. The opportunities
for stupendous pharisaical legalism abound here, so we
must take great care not to end up worse off than we started.
Here are a few practical considerations.
** Communities ought to be in
rural areas or small towns, it seems. You can certainly
try one in an urban setting. Let me know how that
works.
** As much as possible,
communities ought to grow organically, rather than
centrally planned from the top down, adding one family
at a time rather than a mass migration.
** The community must be open
and not closed, must look and reach outward and not inward.
Think of it as an advancingbeachhead, not a besieged
enclave.
** Individuals must be able to
support themselves. Many will have to keep one foot in two
worlds, to earn a living outside the community. (Long live the
Internet And modern telecommunications!) That will enable them
to get started and live within the new community. (I don’t see
how anybody could move to a small farm and get it paying in
less than three years, unless it was exceptional to start
with.)
** Starry eyes ought to be
de-starred. Rural life is physically challenging. Its monotony
can deaden. You have to work at providing intellectual and
artistic stimulation. Count the cost before laying the first
brick.
** Individuals settling in new
communities ought to want a lifestyle change. Move from
the city to the country expecting to live as a mall-rat and
you’ll just disappoint yourself and annoy the folks at
Wal-Mart.
** Individuals in the community
must be self-supporting, and communities economically viable.
Members probably ought not depend on the new community alone
for sustenance.
** The community must work like
leaven in the local area and culture where it finds itself.
Unless the members of the community cultivate social
intercourse with their neighbours, they won’t transfer
anything, and certainly not ideas. You can’t sit there like a
scab on the land. You have to put down roots and mingle with
your neighbours.
** Humility, humility, always
humility. You’ll never make it in a rural locale if you show
your neighbours that you’re a smart aleck know-it-all. You
probably have more to learn from them than they do from
you.
** Physical does matter.
A community is physical. People ought to work and live
conveniently close together. (Think of urban churches, where
members might drive an hour or two just to get to church.
Under those circumstances physical fellowship is practically
impossible.)
** A community must have a
transcendental center. It must self-consciously know what it
is and what it stands for.
** A community must have
continuity. There is no covenant without a covenant people.
The culture must be self-consciously passing itself on to the
next generation.
** But a community that is all
rules and rigor without compromise or compassion will shatter
shortly on its own tyranny. God is gracious, and has decreed
freedom for us. In fact, he insists on it. I think
Robert E. Lee’s single rule as president of Washington College
sums it up best: "Make no unnecessary rules."
WILL IT WORK?
Do I think such communities
would live and thrive? Could people living together, building
communities, really regain and reform anything? Well, if not
they could sure have a good time trying. (I know I am,
along with my whole wide family.)
The alternative is the counsel
of despair: give up and let the barbarians take
over.
-- F. Sanders
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