Spencer Heath's
Series
Spencer Heath Archive
Item 374
Taping by Spencer MacCallum from conversation with Heath while driving, Heath at the wheel, on the road to Sewanee, Tennessee. To be published as an essay in Economics and the Spiritual Life of Free Men.
January 1954
To establish a religion is impossible, only a church. Religion is an element that exists in nature.
Christ didn’t establish a church, but he practiced a religion; what he did above all else was to inspire people. There was never a church with this function solely in view, of inspiring people.
To establish a church is to formulate a body of belief or tradition different from others and claiming to be only or absolute or most inclusive, and then to obtain membership to support a formal clergy, their qualifications conforming to accepted doctrine and perhaps ritual practices, with or without any inspirational element, or any element of religion — which is the same.
Religion was planted in men’s nature when the Divine Breath was breathed into his material body. All those things in nature or human nature that lift men out of themselves, the things men call beauty, constitute the divine element or aspect in the cosmos. In the degree that men are receptive to this inspirational influence, they are redeemed from their mere animal and necessitous condition into creative power and Joy. They become co-workers with the Divine by becoming co-creators.
Salvation is for the unregenerate man — salvation out of his animal nature into his divine nature. Morality likewise belongs to the unregenerate world. So far as men open their consciousnesses to the persuasions of beauty, they are inspired and thereby divine. They need not even be admonished as to their belief or their behavior, much less governed or ruled.
The one and only mission of the church is not to save men even from themselves, not to prescribe their beliefs or their behavior, but only and always to inspire them. When the church fulfills this mission it will be the home of freedom for men; for the inspired man is always the free man, the only man who can create a free civilization.
When the church becomes the source and home of inspiration, and thereby the institution of freedom among men, it will draw to it all those activities of men that flow from their spontaneous natures and desires and cause them to seek beauty in the heavens and in the earth and in the living things, plant and animal life, including themselves. In this great institution the sciences, born there, will flourish to a never-ending maturity. The esthetic arts, sponsored and cherished by the church, will flower into such beauty and grandeur as the imagination cannot now conceive.
The church is the ultimate home of every expression of the free spirit of man — the arts and sciences and the recreations with which the human body and spirit are refreshed. It will be the crown and summit of civilization, which has its basis in the physical keeping of the peace, and its sustenance and nourishment in the reciprocal relations of economic men practicing the golden rule of service by contract and exchange, each serving all and all in turn serving and thereby loving each.
No church embodying the inspiration of the Holy Ghost will ever be set up. But it will grow. As men come more and more under the inspiration of beauty, they will be drawn more and more to one another. And so far as they practice the spontaneities of the intellect and of the intuition in the sciences and in the arts, they will become extremely reciprocal one with another. This body of inspired persons, building an ever new and renewing world around themselves and within themselves, will constitute the living body of the church.
Metadata
Title | Conversation - 374 - The Living Church |
Collection Name | Spencer Heath Archive |
Series | Conversation |
Box number | 4:350-466 |
Document number | 374 |
Date / Year | 1954-01-01 |
Authors / Creators / Correspondents | |
Description | Taping by Spencer MacCallum from conversation with Heath while driving, Heath at the wheel, on the road to Sewanee, Tennessee. To be published as an essay in Economics and the Spiritual Life of Free Men |
Keywords | Religion Church Inspiration Beauty |