l/idf^f^U/ % Art & Religion Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue. REREDOS • ST. THOMAS S CHURCH NEW YORK CITY Art & Religion B>' Von Ogden Vogt , New Haven : Yale University Press London: Humphrey Milford: Oxford University Press Mdccccxxi MOFFITT-UGL 7r Copyright, 1921, by Yale University Press b\/i5o ^^, ■ ■/ 1 TO THE MEMORY OF MY FATHER WHOSE MENTAL INTEREST KINDLED MINE AND TO MY MOTHER WHO IS A MYSTIC Preface ONE puts forth any venture of constructive sugges- tion for these confused times only with the greatest diffidence, knowing far better than any critic can know the weaknesses and ignorances revealed. Yet there need be no diffidence about any fresh testimony that beauty is desirable and good : nor about the consequent contention that the religion of Protestantism stands pro- foundly in need of realizing it. This, together with some practical explications, is all I want to say to churchmen. To artists and lovers of the beautiful, I want to speak my definite expectation of a time soon to come again when patrons of the arts will see in the religious institution an incomparable opportunity for the most pervasive influence of beauty upon the people. Every church building in village or city should itself be a noble work of art. And the arts have each a proper place in the fostering of the supreme experience of worship. I am led to say these things by the very oppressive burden of disunity in the spiritual life of the community and the time. There cannot be an age of great artistic brilliance until we reach a more nearly harmonious faith. I am happy in the simple daily work of a parish minister. But I am unhappy and deeply disquieted amidst the discord in the religious world. I wish I could have mental fellowship with the Catholics : I wish I could have it with more of my Protestant brethren : not merely for the easement of my own aesthetic discomfort, but for the sake of countless others. There can be no cure for many souls until we are together. Inasmuch as many readers wish to know who it is who speaks of any matter, it is proper to state that I am the regularly installed pastor of a Congregational Church. Much of my feeling in things ecclesiastical is doubtless derived, however, from the Reformed Church in which I was bap- • ix- Preface tized and to which several American grandfathers belonged, as their fathers before them in the Swiss Church. The illustrations presented are taken mostly from the free churches. One expects an Episcopal Church to be beautiful and one looks for an altar in it. The noteworthy thing is the number of free churches which have revived the ancient setting for the communion table at the head of an apse or chancel. I wish gratefully to acknowledge much practical help from Miss Grace E. Babcock. For the loan or gift of photo- graphs, I am very pleasantly indebted to Messrs. Charles Collens, Ralph Adams Cram, Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue, the Society of Arts and Crafts, Detroit, and the Society of Arts and Crafts, Boston. Von Ogden Vogt. Wellington Avenue Church Study, February 25, 1921. Table of Contents I. Introduction ..... i Truth, goodne ss, and beauty. The new age. The close of the Reformation age, Prdfestant negation of the arts. Catholic acceptance of modernism. Tlie^art of worship the all-com- p rehendin g art. Proposals for examining the connections' of art _and religion, historical, psychological, and practical. Proposals of liturgical principles and materials. Proposals for architectural style, tone, significance, and tendencies. Current writings about the new age. II. An Age Described by Its Art . . 9 No satisfactory art in a nondescript age. The arts born of the national and time spirit. The relations of art to unified life. The youth, size, and complexity of Americair lifc;"The chiming description. III. The Unity of Religion and Art . . 18 Religion the source of primitive arts. Religion the principal subject matter of historic art. The inner identity of the mystic and aesthetic experience. The demand for unity in composition and in reality. The feeling of STrttsfactlobL de- ri vedTfom beautY _and from being. The creativity of art and of religion. ~ ~~ IV. The Cleft between Art and Religion . 34 1. The cleft between religion and science. 2. The cleft between religion and morals. 3. The cleft between religion and art. The Roman Mass. Catholic architecture. The Anglican Prayer Book, Protestant forms. American church architec- ture. • xi • Table of Contents V. The Mutual Need .... 48 The world of the arts the source of spiritual life for many. The world of religion. Art needs religion — -to unii^^fsalize its concepts, to supply moral content. Religion-^ieeds the arts— to be impr essive , to g;eta hearing, to be enjoyable, to assisffeverence, to symbolize 0ld:::irutIis, to iieighten the imagination, to fire resolyes. VI. Corporeality in Religion ... 56 1. The corporeality of objects and acts. 2. The corporeality of creeds. 3. The corporeality of crude excitement. VII. The Sensational Character of Art . 63 The sensational preacher. Modem view of human nature. Sensational conduct of ancient religious teachers. The sense appeal of the Japanese temple and of the English cathedral. VIII. A Brief for the Cultus ... 67 Religious culture primary in religion. Its historical recogni- tion. Its apparatus or ritual. The necessity of religious acts. The source of perpetuity. The sermon an insufficient basis for religious culture. The background of change. Modem possi- bilities. IX. Prophet and Priest .... 82 The conflict between reforming prophets and conserving priests. The prophet as instrument of change. The priest as Teacher, Spiritual Adviser, Pastor, and Artist. X. The Artist as Prophet ... 90 Traditionalism preserved by the arts. The aloofness and law- lessness of artists. The historic divergence of artistic forms from their content, Egyptian, Greek, Italian. New ideas through the arts. The per manence of beauty . • xii • Table of Contents XL Symbols and Sacraments ... 97 Classic and Romantic methods. Universality and power of symbols. Danger of symbols. Idolatry. The meaning of a sacrament. The spiritual presence. The materia l^ elements. Baptism and the Eucharist. Objective value and validity. Transubstantiation of persons. XII. Religious Education . . .107 .Qbs£xvinp _beauty . Modern religion weakly impressive. The power ofritual. Worship in the church school. Children in the church service. Adult education in religion. Theological schools deficient in religious culture. The state university and the Christian college. XIII. Church Unity . . . .116 Difficulties of unity in thought and action. The unifying effects of feeling. The desire for more inclusive religious experience. The incompleteness of separate types. The serv- ice of art in promoting unity. The revival of mediaevalism, liturgically and architecturally. The community church. The flank attack in debate. Universal similarity of mystic experiences. XIV. Technique and Freedom . . -133 The positive character of freedom. Futility of complete inde- pendency. The incoherence of liberalism. The necessity for critically improved technique in worship. A new service book. Scholarship in liturgies. Ceremonial. Freedom not the gift of formlessness but the mastery of form. XV. The Mysticism of Isaiah . . -145 The identity of the experience of worship and that of beauty. The elements of the experience: vision, humility, exalta- tion, illumination, dedication. Isaiah's great record. XVI. The Order of the Liturgy . .152 Outer expression in the order of worship parallel to the ele- ments of the inner experience of worship. The principal • xiii • Table of Contents liturgical parts. Dramatic unity. Miss Underbill's analysis of the Mass. The need for experiment. XVII. Introit and Antiphons . . .166 The revival of the Introit. Materials for it. Process of ideas in it. Copies of antiphonals used at the Wellington Avenue Church. XVIII. Music 174 Musi c the highest ar t. The unity of the service. Faults of anthems. The matrix of the service. Members of the choir as ministers in the sanctuary. Antiphonals. Especially com- posed services. XIX. Architectural Style . . .180 Sketch of Greek, Roman, Romanesque, Byzantine, Gothic, and Renaissance building, together with meanings inti- mated by these historic styles. Current style revivals in Gothic and Classic strains. The question of style revival or translation. The new architecture. XX. Structural Tone .... 203 Tonal effects of interiors. The faults of neutrality, comfort- ableness, coldness, agitation. The virtues of repose, austerity, warmth, and brilliance. The effects of proportion, scale, and material s. XXI. The Chancel . . . .214 The historic Christian Church chancel. Its revival amongst non-liturgical churches. The artistic high light, the differen- tiation of liturgical parts, practical convenience. Recent opinions. The use of altar and candle light. Ineffective com- promises. Adaptability of the chancel. XXII. Practicable Matters . . . 229 Educational and social facilities of the church building. Placement of the structure. Problems of the smaller church. • xiv • Table of Contents Partial construction. The aesthetic character of practica- bility. XXIII. Religious Ideas for the Architect . 236 A House of God. A House of Man. A House of Salvation. The intimations of modern free thinking, brotherhood, and art. XXIV. The Future Church . . . 243 The delimitation of church functions. Integrations of the new age. The mergence^fjiistoric faith and natural religion, in the Apostolic agef m the coming age. A time of formation. Truth, Goodness, Beauty. The primary category. Survey of the character of the coming cultus. Christian content in ancient categories. Appendix ...... 252 Orders of service in the Wellington Avenue Church, Chicago. Index ....... 257 XV List of Illustrations Reredos, St. Thomas's Church, New York . frontispiece PAGE Pulpit, First Baptist Church, Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania . . . . . . .21 First Church in Cheshire, Connecticut ... 43 Carved Oak Triptych ..... 79 Silver Crozier; Christmas in Heaven; St. Peter . 95 Skinner Memorial Chapel, Holyoke, Massachusetts . 123 Silver Alms Basin; Altar Cross in Silver, Ivory, and Enamel ; Carved and Gilded Candlestick . . 141 First Baptist Church, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Second Church in Boston, Massachusetts . .193 House of Hope, St. Paul, Minnesota, Presbyterian . 209 South Church, New York City, Reformed . .219 Second Church in Newton, Massachusetts, Congrega- tional ....... 225 St. Anne's Chapel, Arlington Heights, Massachusetts 231 First Congregational Church, Montclair, New Jersey 237 Second Church in Boston, Massachusetts, Unitarian . 247 XVI Art & Religion Chapter I : Introduction IT would seem that humanity permanently values truth, goodness, and beauty. These values are essential to reli- gion. But there is a cleft between the popular religion of our day and all these three. There are many persons engaged in healing the breach between religion and science; equally many concerned with a new ethical seriousness in religion; few seem to be aware of the cleft between religion and art. A new age is coming. It will be upon us swiftly and we must bestir our imaginations to prepare for it. We are like the dwellers in the war-swept areas of the old world whose homes were wrecked by shell fire. Our intellectual houses are falling about our ears. We do not yet know whether we must rebuild them or desert them. We are hurriedly wondering what to save from the wreckage. We are half unconsciously taking stock of our valuables; making new appraisals of what is most precious. It is a time of reexamination of all things, a time of changes, profound and universal. The dis- organization of normal life by the great war has compelled a new openness of mind and roused new demands for better life. Yet it is not the war experience that is causing the new age. It hastens it; it more rapidly closes the old age; it will perhaps in history mark the end of a period about ready to be ended anyway. The breakdown of many old sanctions and standards was already taking place. The crisis of war if not the agent was the powerful reagent, precipitating that which the old formulas could no longer hold in solution. These values that we are reappraising, these formulas that are breaking down, what are they? In the main they are the work of the Reformation age. We have been living religiously and morally and politically by the premises and forms of thought established by the Reformation. This does Art & Religion not mean that these principles have been accepted by all or that they are now to be entirely displaced. It does mean that Reformation assumptions have quite generally wrought themselves into all departments of human life, that their logic is fairly complete, and that it is now time to estimate their success and failure. The new premises, sanctions, and standards, whence are they? They are largely the effects of nineteenth century science and mechanics, both negative and positive. We do not know exactly what they are, nor shall we until they are half consciously established in practice. They relate to changed conceptions of individualism and freedom, author- ity, property, education, human nature, liberty, art. These and other interests are to be differently conceived than in the period under Reformation dominance. Science is not alone the sufficient cause of these transformations. It is rather the efficient cause, the force that will break much remaining mediaevalism, confirm the central Reformation Protest and then displace both Protestant and Catholic sanctions, preparing the way for the positive work of new forces in philosophy, popular morality, art, and religion. The Reformation age is being effectively closed by the work of nineteenth century science, its close marked by the upheaval of war. But the new age will not be predominantly scientific. Science has displayed, negatively, what it cannot do for human life as well as what it can do. Approved scien- tific method will go forward to be one of the major instru- mentalities of the new good. But art will be another major instrumentality. Both will be agents in forming the new age after the desires of life itself, that human experience of uni- versal life which we call religion and which alone is the sufficient cause of human good. A new age is never an entire break with the past. It car- ries forward from the immediate past much that does not logically belong with the new forms. It carries forward from the more remote past much that is still more out of harmony with the new forms. And it restores some things from the distant past more useful and valued in the new age than they were in the immediately previous one. Feelings and •2- Introduction forces are swept out of notice, even for long periods, which later come back freshly to benefit and balance human life. One of these feelings is the feeling for beauty, one of these forces is the force of artistry. The Reformation age has not been favorable to the arts. Protestantism has been chary of the arts and suspicious of the artist. Ancient and mediaeval feeling for beauty has been all but extinguished throughout large bodies of Christians. It is coming back, irresistibly and swiftly. I am all too un- happily aware that mediaeval ecclesiastics will say: I told you so : you should never have left us : give the Protestants time and they will all return to the fold. Nothing could be more greatly in error than so to estimate our new interest in beauty. Mediaeval ecclesiasticism, incompatible alike with the noble morality and the progressively democratic politics of the Reformation age, will be utterly alien to the new age. It is an all but unbelievable tragedy that the old churches still refuse to hear the great Protest, the very while that children of the Reformers are beginning to see the good things their fathers swept away together with the bad. There would be no question about the coming of a new and glorious age if the older churches might honestly try to understand the claims of the free churches, and if the reformed churches might with equal candor survey their faults and weaknesses. We cannot enter upon a great con- structive time without bold, disinterested, and imaginative effort on the part of religious leaders to these ends. We can- not enter the new age until the old churches give up their concepts of an authoritative faith "once delivered to the saints" and freely accept the spirit of modernism: nor until the rank and file of the free churches do the same thing, as their leaders have already done. And this effort must begin at home. It is time for every churchman to realize that his particular sect is insufficient for the brilliant life of the new age. Others have examined it and found it wanting. It will do little good for Protestants to lay all the blame upon the Catholics or upon each other. There is needed a rigorous attempt amongst all Protestant •3- Art & Religion faiths to reestimate the essentials of religious life, and to acknowledge how many of these are found in the old church, and how many are lacking in the common American denomi- national parish. In a general way, the great lack of Protestantism is not intellectual nor moral but artistic, not ethical but cultural. In the pioneer and commercial stages of American life this lack has not been so noticeable or unfortunate. For the most part those who have recognized the severance of art from religion are chiefly persons who have felt the ungodliness of art rather than the ugliness of religious fonns. With the growth of cities and city planning, the rapid improvement in the popular arts, including architecture, and the advanc- ing brilliance of civilized life the church must keep pace. Beauty is one of the essential necessities of human exist- ence. It is a strange fact that so few of those who are critical of the church from without or anxious within have taken notice of this lack. For several years now, both the religious and secular press have been exercised over the church. Many have attacked the theology or the ethics of the church, few have openly criticised its meager worship. Many experiments have been proposed and many tried, few have touched upon the untold assets of the world of the arts for the cultivation of that spiritual life which is the prime function of the church. The art of worship is the all-comprehending art. No other art can satisfy the demand of human nature for an all-inclu- sive experience. Nor can the conditions favorable to that experience be ever freshly reproduced without the aid of all the arts. The suggestions which are hereinafter set forth might pos- sibly have better been arranged for three books, except that at this time it is desirable to feel the close relationships involved. If architects are to build successful church build- ings, they must know more about the requirements of the worship to be conducted in those buildings. If the artist in worship is to be successful, he must know how to set forth his message architecturally as well as liturgically. If worship is to be considered as a great art, there needs to be in the Introduction mind of Protestantism in general a new point of view re- specting both the history and the possibilities of religious culture. The material to follow, therefore, covers these three things: first, historical, psychological, or polemical matters; second, liturgies; third, architecture. The first group of chapters attempts to make some contri- bution to the polemics of the day respecting the church in the new age. The attempt is bom of a deep sense of need for a new popular psychology about the essential religious values. We need to reexamine the practical categories of organized religion. We need to enquire whether the ecclesias- tical institution should not function primarily, not for the sake of theology, nor merely as a moral program, but to foster the religious experience. This group opens with a discussion of the connection of art with the time spirit or national spirit of any people. Next, the historical and psychological connections and dis- connections of religion and art, and their mutual need are set forth. This is followed by chapters indicating the normal connection of art with the priestly and cultural side of reli- gion rather than its prophetic and moral side. The close of the division shows the connection of art with current church movements. The necessity for technique in worship opens the brief liturgical discussion. In this area of liturgies there are only two important suggestions to be presented. After an exami- nation of the nature of the inner experience of worship in the chapter "Isaiah's Mysticism," the findings are in the next chapter applied to the problems of the order of worship. There is stated definitely what I believe to be the only sound principle of liturgical construction. The other suggestion in this department is a detailed proposal for improving the opening part of the ordinary church service by the revived usage of the Introit. These brief chapters constitute, of course, a very incom- plete discussion of the subject. Other books are needed, which will present more comprehensive reports and propo- sals concerning modern liturgies. These will be forthcoming as improved experimentation proceeds. The definite sugges- •5- Art & Religion ^ tions of these chapters, however, are sufficient to specify . something of the nature of the task involved in the better i development of the religious cultus. Respecting architecture, it has seemed advisable to begin ; with an extremely short survey of the historic styles, familiar as the history of architecture may be to many persons. Only so, however, is it possible clearly to present even a brief | analysis of the meaning of style and of the special intima- j tions of particular historic modes. There is just now a great | deal of unintelligent style revival, and also much groping | after new stylistic invention. The chapter discusses this , situation. Other chapters relate to practical phases of church ; building; the modern religious ideas which need to be sym- bolized in the modern church; and the handling of physical materials to the end of producing the desired atmosphere or structural tone in the building. The facts presented in the chapter on the chancel, together with their illustration, are i largely unknown either to the church world or to the j architectural world. ! These suggestions are written for the attention of archi- tects as well as for church building committees and for " people who wish to enrich their powers of appreciation. If | I did not know the facts to the contrary, I should be inclined ; to credit the architectural profession with competency in i these matters. There are brilliant leaders who have thought deeply upon the intellectual issues involved in church building, and whose canons of art are of the highest order. This exceptional ability, however, has not yet succeeded ! in forestalling the construction of many hopelessly ugly churches. It is hoped, also, that the chapters may be of ' practical assistance to the competent architect in his efforts j to persuade building committees to the acceptance of more ! excellent forms. The book is not a defence of beauty or of art; they will , take care of themselves. It is not so certain that the art of i worship will take care of itself. The art of worship is the , combination of all the arts ; the experience of worship is the > consummation of all experience, whether of beauty or of i goodness or of truth. The book is an effort to assist the reli- ; • 6. ; Introduction gious world to a recognition of the category of beauty as a primary and necessary element in the religious reconstruction of the new age. I am well aware that it is talking high talk to use the term "new age," and that the term is being used by many, inde- finably and loosely. But in the thought of many other stu- dents of history, the issues of the day in all departments of life are of such a character as to warrant the use of the words, with a definite meaning. Although I do not agree with the historical interpretations or the philosophic assumptions of Mr. Ralph Adams Cram, his insistence at this point is illumi- nating. "History is a series of resurrections, for the rhythm of change is invariable. Each epoch of five hundred years follows the same monotonous course, though made dis- tinctive by new variations. . . . We are today in the midst of just such a grinding collapse as that which overtook Rome and the empire of Charlemagne and the Christian Common- wealths of the Middle Ages. . . . Before the year 2000, now but two generations away, modern civilization will have passed and a new era have taken its place."* Before the war, the late Professor Charles R. Henderson wrote : "We are now in the midst of a transformation more significant than the downfall of the Roman Empire, the rise of modern nationalities, or the Reformation." In a lecture on architecture, Mr. Claude Bragdon used this phrase: "During the post-Renaissance or the Scientific period, of which the war probably marks the close. "f Mr. Alfred H. Lloyd in his paragraphs on "The Glory of Democracy" expresses the same view. "A time of epochal transition! Truly we are nearing something new in life. A time of crea- tive living must be at hand." The most recent definition of the nature of present-day change, in the light of the historic sweep of human feelings, is that of Professor Albert Parker Fitch. "We are witnessing in fact the final emancipation, or if you please, defection, of society from the enchantment of the Middle Ages. ... If the political, ethical, economic and aesthetic interests of man * Cram, "Gold, Frankincense and Myrrh," pp. 2 and 3. i Architectural Record, September, 1918. •7- Art & Religion are changing, it is safe to assume that his religious world is being transformed too."* These and other writers have each a somewhat differing interpretation of the meaning of the times. They all agree in expressing the long historic power of the Reformation forces, the unsatisfactory character of their practical out- come, and the necessity for new integrations of life so far- reaching in character as to constitute a similarly forceful historic movement. I am not presuming to estimate all the factors material to the new construction of life, but only one of them. In the new age, religion will have new things to say and a new burden of utterance seeking to say them. It will be keyed to the discovery of new forms for telling its word to people. If it does not, it will not reach people. In the world of the arts it will find the means for its new creative and re-creative life. In the experience of worship it will center the joys of its new faiths in human nature and its new hopes of divine life. In the better development of the art of worship it will fulfil its function of lifting life out of its ugly materialism onward and upward toward the truth and the goodness and the beauty that is to be. * Fitch, "Can the Church Survive in the Changing Order*?" pp. 26 and 43. 8. Chapter II : An Age Described by Its Art WE are just now so accustomed to looking at everything from the point of view of peoples, tribes, and nations that it is natural to begin our notice of the arts from the same point of view. Peoples are known by their art, the English by Shakespeare and the Prayer Book, the Greeks by the Parthenon, the American Negro by his folk melodies. So also we know an age by its art, the mediaeval time by the great Gothic buildings, the artificialities of early eighteenth century life by English poems and French palaces, the Classic revival by the Renais- sance buildings of Italy and all Europe; and all the greater and lesser movements of human feeling by their records in stone or letters or music. The arts constitute the description of the world as an age or a people apprehends it. The spiritual life of a time is depicted with unescapable exactness in its artistry. A spirit- ual movement that does not find expression in the arts can- not attain self-consciousness or dominance or survival. An age or a people that does not reach any self-realization or any unity of thought or feeling that breaks forth into artis- tic expression is nondescript. Three little objects in my study signify what I mean. One is a katchina of the Hopi Indians of Arizona, a small grass mat with the woven figure of an air spirit arrayed in head- dress and apron. One is a little brass tray with the beautiful geometric pattern of stars in parallel lines so typical of Saracenic art. The third is a little Catholic image of Santa Barbara from Brittany. You could take up one of these little objects and describe almost offhand the main characteristics of the life from which it came, as a scientist reconstructs some old dinosaur from one of the fossil bones. You could conjure, for instance, the whole structure of fatalism in philosophy, despotism in government, the abstract decora- •9- Art & Religion tion, the polygamy, and everything else from beggar to caliph that belonged in the same world with the little piece of brass : and also the faiths, feelings, institutions, and cus- toms that belong with the descriptions of the universe of which the others are symbols. Trifling as the little objects are, no such thing is ever produced in any nondescript com- monwealth. Each has been cast up from a sea of human life, wide and deep, of which it is, so to speak, only a fleck of foam left to remind us of the tossing waters of many souls. Sorry indeed is that citizenship and weak of mind the generation which cannot leave behind even so slight a mark or sign to testify its struggle for faith or describe its hope. Or we may come at the idea by another more familiar route. One of the most early and simple of the promptings which lead people to travel to foreign parts is an interest in the picturesque. Partly childish, the interest is also pro- found. It is the pleasure of discovering communities that are descript rather than nondescript — Oberammergau, Bangkok, Oxford, Kioto, or any other place where there has been some sustained attempt to describe all things and set forth the common view in laws, customs, and all the arts of life from house building to worship. One does not like to see among the maidens at a well in the old land of Ephraim that some carry water in the tall earthern jars of ancient mould and some in the huge tins of an American oil company. It spoils the picture. The charm, the unity, the satisfaction are gone. One does not wish to go abroad unless he may return and say : This is the way the Romans do ; thus and so it is among the Fijis. And some people when they find such a place of unity and charm do not come again home to their own nondescript life and town. Art is not something detached from life: it makes life and is made by it. It appears in every age and represents to us the life of which it is a part. "The artist or the philoso- phizer who maintains that art is purely a temperamental ex- pression unrelated to the solid facts of life, ... is cherishing a fatal illusion."* If that life is disjointed, the arts will be sporadic and weak. If there be no real structure of ideas and * Pond, "The Meaning of Architecture," p. 105. • 10- An Age Described by Its Art customs, no faiths that dominate and unify, no society that is describable, how shall it be described to its own or any other mind'? If the life of a people or a time does not present any strong lines or clear characteristics, how shall it be repre- sented"? In fitful fragments surely. I do not mean to say that any society has ever become so unified that its leading feelings have dominated all. Rebels, prophets, protestants, are in every time and place, but if they are in the majority, the community is nondescript and the voices of the arts are mute, for they have no great thing to say. A seeming contrary opinion has been expressed. "Art must be democratic and win its own clientele of free admirers; it must never again be a mere outgrowth of an authorita- tively united community spirit. It must serve as one of the main paths to the future and the unborn."* The word "authoritatively" is unfortunate. Modern men do not desire an art that is the outgrowth of any formal mandate; but they do desire the kind of united community spirit which both produces great art and is produced by it. "All great periods of art have been but the expression of their time. Art has come after the event, not its avatar, but its fulfiller, not its prophet, but its message. "f We shall wish later to notice the value of the artist as prophet of change, with a free and individual word; but also his word is born of the spirit of his people and time. There is a timeless and universal appeal in the greatest arts, yet Dante was a Florentine, and the destroyed sculptured figures of Rheims could not have been carved in the age of Pericles. So also do the little arts follow the time or society spirit. The dainty chairs of the salons of Versailles were not fashioned in Salem, Massachusetts. The noblest art does not expend itself in trifles; it at- tempts to speak something concerning all things, to utter some intimation of the total human faith about God and man as it is most lately and highly conceived. The most significant and wonderful of such intimations have come, * Hocking, "Human Nature and Its Remaking," note, p. 318. t Herbert Adams, "Address before American Academy of Design." • 11 • Art & Religion not as lone, exceptional voices, but rather as a sweeping wave of human feeling rising to a crest and breaking forth into manifold and beautiful expression. This social char- acter of the arts is testified both by critics and by the facts. "The expression of an ideal is possible because and when and only when, that ideal dominates the race."* Not personal dreams but the hopes of a nation breathe through the Psalms: the genius that dotted the isles of Greece with majestic temples was a racial intelligence : not few but many builders, driven by the fusing fires of a powerful time spirit, hurried up the walls of the great thirteenth century churches in France and Flanders. Even respecting the works of Michel Angelo, certainly as much a lone and individual artist as ever lived, it is said that "We do not think of these great creations as works of individual genius only, but as nourished and inspired by tides of contemporary thought and emotion. Their agitation is the agitation of a century."f It is suggested of another great Italian artist, Virgil, not that he spoke his own word only, but that he was the "Latin that should voice the saddened grandeur of the Pagan heart. "|: In certain times and places, human life has been possible of description. Some conjunction of racial tempera- ment, stage of reflective thought, economic stability, and what not other less discoverable factors, has produced a unity of life. The artists of the age have described the essence of that life. No age is, of course, wholly under the sway of its domi- nant notes. Usually something less than its best is in the ascendant: often rival faiths contend for the mastery of a race : or a strong minority long sustains its illogical footing : or the time is wholly discordant and nondescript. Our American world would appear to be not much better off than this latter case. We are very far from such unity of mind and manners as prevailed in the Florence of Lorenzo, the England of Elizabeth, or in Moorish Spain. We are too large, too new, and too composite in race and religion to have reached a describable unity in life. * Pond, "The Meaning of Architecture," p. 39. t Phillipps, "Art and Environment," p. 264. X Taylor, "The Classical Heritage of the Middle Ages." • 12- An Age Described by Its Art Most of the great historic commonwealths, where life has become refined, customs prevalent, and loyalty so long centered as at last to be celebrated in song and ritual or symbolized in the other arts, were small states — Judea, Athens, Byzantium, He de France, Nippon. In these little groups of human beings, their solution of the great mysteries became so ordered and so intense as at last to form itself into the imperishable crystalline deposit of their arts, and thereby we know them and revere them. Our country is so large as to postpone whatever unity is desirable. In the North and South, in mountain land and plain land, the flavor of personality and temperament varies with the flavor of the speech of the people. The ease of communication and movement helps us to overcome this natural difficulty — but much more help shall we have as we learn to utilize every artistic symbol of our common life, for the arts which unity produces turn about to produce more unity. And we are too young to be formed to a common mould. Young communities have no time for good form. Good form is taken on gradually, always the mark of an older and more settled life. But it is a great blunder to underestimate its power or disbelieve in the certainty of its appearance. The usages of polite as contrasted with frontier society are much the same the world over. Pioneers have always scoffed at forms and their grandchildren have rushed upon them with avidity; perhaps the earlier generation mistaking crudity for sincerity, the younger equally mistaking manners for cul- ture. Later generations learn the economy of energy realized in relegating to forms many things that do not need con- stantly to be freshly decided, and the easement of life's harshness and jar by the dependable respect that resides in good form. There is no older society that does not value good form and the church world is no exception to the rule. Racial recollection is long, racial aversions and sym- pathies are often intense. "Because of a diversity of our origins and ideals a unification of our society must be a long time — perhaps centuries — in coming."* Although there are common grounds of expectation and purpose on which most * Pond, "The Meaning of Architecture," p. 225. •13- Art & Religion of the races mingling here stand together, — and this is our hope, — there are also inherited differences in the sense of values. If the Scotchman admits that he is bluff but honest, perhaps a Latin will make reply that he does not care for honesty so much as he cares for suavity. This is a sheer difference in the estimate of human goods; and with a thou- sand others must be reconciled in some larger unity of com- mon idealism. We have valued the moral integrity and industrial energ}' of the northern races as the foundation of our commonwealth. Surely there are also some virtues and values in the imaginative gifts of the southern peoples and in their deliberate preference for some other enjoyments than those of commercial victory. Some of the forces neces- sary to the interracial development lie in the realm of the arts we are discussing. The religious disunity of America is notorious. It is intolerable as a permanent condition. No useful good is longer served by it. It has ceased to function as a guarantee of liberty. The deepest cleft is between those faiths which are authoritative and autocratic and those which are meas- urably compatible with democratic institutions. A "divine right" kind of church calls for a "divine right" state. Aristo- cratic religion cannot permanently live in the same world with democratic government. One must at last give way to the dominating unity of the other. Less dramatic, but probably, therefore, the more difficult is the Protestant diversity. Most of the differences have been intellectual, creedal. On the upper levels, these are now all cut across by the unity of modern thought. The theological lectures at Union in New York, at Congregational Yale, at Episcopal Cambridge, at Methodist Garrett and at Baptist Chicago are all in the same intellectual world. On the lower levels, the old separations still persist. Some leaders look for progress toward unity by ignoring intellectual differences and seeking the fellowship of common moral effort. This is indeed worth while and partly possible. But only partly, for some of the creedal differences involve such opposite moral ideals as entirely to block practical unity until the intel- lectual breach is at least narrowed. .14. An Age Described by Its Art Meanwhile there remain deep diversities of tempera- ment, varieties of religious experience in the realm of feel- ing. It has often been said that men differ widely in this region, that some require the appeal of form and ritual, some desire a minimum of feeling and a maximum of thinking in their religion, as others enjoy the warmer exercises of a more primitive emotionalism. I believe that such a view is a false estimate of human nature and suggested largely as a piece of special pleading for the separate maintenance of these types of religious expression. The truer fact is that we have all of us something of all these needs. Most people prefer what they have been accus- tomed to in these things and could likely have been bred to enjoy far other usages than they do. The differences of breeding, training, or circumstance account for varied prefer- ences in artistry much more commonly than do differences in original temperament. Simple persons of little education are not effectively moved by appeal that is largely intel- lectual. They require the stronger feeling values of direct emotionalism or of ritual. More education draws away from strong emotion of any sort and demands satisfactions of the mind chiefly. Yet more culture begins to revalue lost feeling and to seek it in the world of the arts. Whoever desires to foster religious unity must take large account of the essential unity of human nature in its de- mand for feeling. It is possible that a study of the artistry of religion, a study of the pleasures and the driving power of the emotive faculties, an analysis of the kinds of formal technique that create emotion, will be quite as valuable for the cause of religious unity as the attempt to get together theologically or morally. When our nation is older, and when our differences of race and religion are less numerous and less sharp, the arts will expand to the proportionate place they must always occupy in the spiritual life of any great race or any descript people. We shall be no longer nondescript, but everywhere there will be evidence of the ideals which dominate our common life. Already American unity has been remarkably strengthened by the common action necessitated in the war. .15. Art ^ Religion But the unifying equivalent of war is not easy to find in time of peace. And the unifying effect of isolation will never again pre- vail in human life. Swiftly all the old descript common- wealths are breaking down before the all-inclusive world economy in which we are beginning to live. No race can again form so separate a culture and artistry as that of Siam or Japan. The world is one as never before. And it is non- descript as never before. Common knowledge everywhere modifies peculiarities and diminishes differences in race, reli- gion, and politics. This is partly the cause of the bewilder- ment among artists. They do not know what to say or how to say it any more than do theologians or senators. They do not live, any more than the rest of us, surrounded by definite and definable customs. We are all more or less cosmopolitans and come dangerously near not "belonging" anywhere. We are rovers and strangers, scarcely having a true spiritual homeland. All these things are admitted and they constitute new and difficult conditions for civilized life. Yet to recognize them is partly to master them. The human race is not yet ready to merge into one vast, vague composite. Nor are states and nations about to disappear in some universal hegemony. Americans believe that there is a future life and greatness for their commonwealth. We are engaged in the gigantic process of self-consciousness. A rich and noble content is already suggested by the term Americanism. That content will be enlarged and specified rapidly or slowly according as we foster our own best ethics and according as we seek spir- itual greatness to match our material success. No mere con- quests of the foreign markets for steel will make us a descript people. But every victory over prejudice and ignorance, every success in our labors for economic justice, every newer and later solution of vexed problems in brotherhood, every restraint and lift in the scale of pleasure will weave itself into the pictured scroll which to ourselves and to all men describes what we think and feel and purpose about life. With the gathering unity in ethics will come increased clarity and brilliance in the arts. And the richer expression .16. An Age Described by Its Art of the arts will in turn promote and establish the common will until America in the new age may become a civilization describable and described as never a life was described before. 17 Chapter III : The Unity of Religion and Art , ART and religion belong together by identities of /% Origin, Subject Matter, and Inner Experience. ; j[_ m. Religion and art were one and the same thing be- fore either of them became consciously regarded as a dis- ■ tinct human interest. The principal subject matter of the world's artistic treasures is religious. The experience of faith : and the experience of beauty are in some measure identical, | In these three ways there is displayed the unity of religion ; and art. I am not here interested to elaborate them, but the ! numbers of religious leaders who have no interest in the arts, ; and the numbers of artists who have no participation in the ,: life of definite religion need all to be made aware of these I facts. The beginnings of religion and of art alike lie far back \ and hidden in the immemorial life of primitive man. In i the earliest historic times they were interwoven and no one ] can say which was first, for they were not two, but one. The ; painted stick or bunch of feathers which as a fetish was : utilized for its magical powers was also in some sense a work of art. The dances and pantomimes of early tribal life were I attempts at the magical control of nature or nature divini- ties. Exercises in frenzy were both religious and artistic, ; primitive forms of ritual, primitive forms of drama. "This j common emotional factor it is that makes art and ritual in i their beginnings well-nigh indistinguishable."* Religion has been historically the great fountain source j of art, and the art of worship the mother of all arts. "Ritual ' and art have, in emotion towards life, a common root, and ' primitive art develops emotionally, at least in the case of drama, straight out of ritual. "f It is sufficient for our purpose to accept the judgment of anthropologists that in one way or another most of the * Jane Harrison, "Art and Ritual," p. 41. t Ibid. .18. The Unity of Religion and Art arts — music, dancing, sculpture, poetry, drama, architecture — were developed out of exercises and objects originally de- vised for the magical control of divinities, the celebration of seasonal feasts or the production of ecstasy for its own sake or for power in war — all exercises of primitive religion, "Art will then never arise and develop among men un- less it has a foundation in religion. Art absolutely profane [ [ in origin, art born to satisfy the aesthetic taste of the specta- tor, art which seeks for expressiveness rather than for the material utility of its products, even if this be a spiritual utility, is inconceivable in human history and has abso- lutely never existed."* This is perhaps a too sweeping claim, but something very like it is true. An adequate discussion of it would involve a long study not enough pertinent to our present work to make. It is difficult for us with our reflective and analytical habits of mind to throw back our imaginations into the early time when life was just life, single and undivided, without religion or art or any other category as such. It is not impossible that such a unity of experience is a goal ahead of us as well as a forgotten history behind us. The second consideration in noting the unity of religion and art is the fact that in all human history the principal subject matter of the arts has been religious. "All the art of the human race is essentially religious art; from the Chaldean to the Egyptian, from the Mycenaean to the Greek, from the Assyrian to the pre-Buddhistic Chinese, from the Mexican to the Peruvian, there is no exception." f The three things which most attract Americans to cross the sea in search of the riches of the old world are the Greek temples and statues, Italian paintings, and Gothic archi- tecture. With a very few exceptions all of these incom- parable treasures were created by religion. The histories of the older oriental empires and of Egypt display the same facts. Literary art also, considering the Greek dramas, Dante, and Milton, at its high points if not at its lower, has been chiefly religious. * Alessandro Delia Seta, "Religion and Art," p. 35. t Ibid., p. 34. .19. Art & Religion Even the secular spirit ushered in by the Renaissance did not take away the dominating religious content of the bril- liant works of that movement. The revival of pagan themes and the erection of exquisite and luxurious palaces in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries did not rival the continued religious character of the painting, sculpture, and church building of the age. The effects of the movement, however, soon became char- acteristic, and modern art, since the seventeenth century painters, especially Flemish and Spanish, and since Shake- speare, has not centered its attention chiefly upon religious subjects. Whether this has anything to do with the slighter and less impressive character of modern art everyone may decide for himself. There does not seem to have appeared in these modern times any movement of life so self-con- scious and masterful as to attain brilliant and consistent expression by a great artistic movement comparable with earlier creations. I am not saying that modern art is irreligious, or that any art must be religious in subject matter to be religious in spirit. I am not saying that this modem age has been less worthy than previous centuries which were more unified. We. are attempting something wider and harder. But before this time, the principal artistic creations of the world were closely connected with religion. Even now the perennial artistic creativity of religion is again beginning to burst into manifold expression. The best directly church art of the nineteenth century was in the medium of stained glass. The free churches, for the most part prejudiced against the use of pictures on canvas or on the walls, were quite willing to enjoy pictures in glass. Amongst the old churches, with a few signal exceptions, both decorative works on a large scale and handicrafts in small scale were generally either crude, bizarre, thin, or merely rich. But the twentieth century has already developed many notable works born of the revived passion for beauty in the church. Such achievements as the murals in the apse of St. Agnes' Church, Cleveland, the lofty reredos in St. • 20- Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue, Architect. PULPIT • FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH • PITTSBURGH • PENNSYLVANIA The statuettes in the sides of the octagon are figures of St. Augustine, St. Bernard, Luther, Roger Williams, Count Zinzendorf, and Adoniram Judson. The Unity of Religion and Art Thomas's Church, New York, and the new pulpit of the First Baptist Church, Pittsburgh, are evidence that religion cannot long be hindered from its natural flowering in the arts. In another chapter I hope we may see that the artists of the race long ago began to say in form and color things which did not agree with the subject matter they were setting forth. Here we note simply the main fact, that historically the principal themes of the arts have been reli- gious. The arts have grown out of religion or have been produced for the service of religion. The unity of religion and art is more profoundly dis- covered in our own consciousness. It is the unity of expe- rience itself. Religion is more than art and may seem to get on entirely without it, yet religionists are always saying some of the same things that artists say and artists are always testifying some of the same feelings as are religious devotees. To perceive beauty is to be moved by something of the same emotional course as attends on the perception of Divinity. And to create beauty is in some sense to partici- pate in the character of Divinity. Beauty is one of the three supreme categories of value. It follows that religion is directly concerned with beauty, for religion is the experience of the highest value. The three values are constantly interwoven in human expe- rience. The true and the good are beautiful. The beautiful, most highly speaking, is both true and good. That which is false is not beautiful; it is an ugly lie. That which is bad is not beautiful; it comes of an ugly temper. Whether you are aware of it or not, there is a pleasure in the truth and a satisfaction in the contemplation of the good which are in some measure aesthetic feelings. Without presuming to set forth a theory of aesthetics, I want here simply to suggest that the experience of beauty or the formation of beauty into the world of the arts is like the experience of religion in its essential assumptions or demands in the realms of thinking, feeling, and willing. Religion is more than thought, and its experience is larger than merely logical judgments concerning the truth. •23- Art and Art are so much kin in their common Assumption of ■ Unity in the Universe, in their Experience of Contempla- ■ tion, and in their Mandate to Expression, why have we so \ frequently thought of artists as irreligious? The answer is , that we have thought wrong. ' Modern art is individualistic, very little devoted to set- j ting forth a definitely religious content. But this is the i nature of the age and not the fault of the artists. This is ■ the artist's empirical approach to reality no less than the ' scientist's. \ Artists have been habitually antinomian, lawless. So have prophets, breaking down old moralities that newer and better might be formed. Not many devotees of art seem to i apprehend the full course of their own typical career. This I is partly due to much bad art. Not all art is good any more | than average popular religion is the best religion. The better ' the art, the more likely it is to result in a completed course ^ of experience. ,; Artists and critics of art often stand outside the definite '] institutions of religion. But it would astonish the ignorant | church worker to be made aware of the range and passion | of the search for reality and of right attitudes toward it which is revealed in the total world of music, letters, paint- ing, building, and all the other forms through which the : artists of the world are attempting to set forth "their ' scheme of the weal and the woe." I am not sufficiently a philosopher to launch a discussion j of the nature of the limitations of art as compared with ! religion. The transcendence of religion is viewed to be such, j not in one direction merely, but in several, especially in rela- tion to the three aspects of experience so briefly presented •32- The Unity of Religion and Art in this chapter. I can suggest only a hint of such a discussion by another sentence or two from Croce, "Art is the root of all our theoretic life. To be the root, not the flower or fruit, is the function of art. And without a root, there can be no flower and no fruit."* Or again, to much the same intent: "If art, then, be the first and most ingenuous form of knowledge, it cannot give complete satisfaction to man's need to know, and therefore cannot be the ultimate end of the theoretic spirit." Nevertheless, Art and Religion belong together by cer- tain profound identities of Origin, Subject Matter, and Inner Experience. * Benedetto Croce, "Aesthetic," p. 386. 33 Chapter IV : The Cleft between Art and Religion WE cannot live without truth, goodness, and beauty. Not everyone cares for these, but they are the supreme human values. Religion can- not live without them. Yet there is a world of Thought out- side the world of religion which repudiates much of what organized religion claims to be the truth. There is a world of Moral Aspiration outside the religious world which is impatient of the lagging step of organized religious faith toward better conceptions of justice and brotherhood. So also there is a world of Art dissevered from the institutions of religion, its spiritual hunger unsatisfied by the ugliness of present-day religious forms. Religion cannot complete her reformation until she has squared her experience not only with Scientist and Moralist but also with the Artist. Since the mid-nineteenth century there have appeared innumerable books concerned with healing the breach be- tween religion and science. The opening of the twentieth century saw the setting of a full tide of interest in making earnest with the newer moral implications of religion. The coming generation will insist upon its birthright to beauty. The cleft between science and religion is an old story. I recall hearing Governor Baldwin of Connecticut say some years ago something about the happy completion of the task of transition from the old theology to the new. It was true for the noble old parish of which he was a member. It is not true of the larger part of the Christian world. The "modern- ist" movement in the Roman Catholic Church has been stamped out ruthlessly. There would appear to be glimmers of light here and there in the Greek Church. The Anglican communion still maintains rigidly a view of the sacraments and of ordination which is a sheer logical impossibility to the accepted scientific assumptions of modern life. In the great city where I live most of the Protestant preaching still •34- The Cleft between Art and Religion holds to an essentially traditional view of the scriptures and does not accept the canons of historical learning. There is indeed a deep cleft between religion and thought. No one claims that science is always right. It is itself humble and teachable. In these virtues it is often more reli- gious than religion. But it does claim to be one of the avenues toward the truth. It has achieved conceptions of the material universe and certain methods of work accepted by so large a part of the world of thought that religion can do nothing else than examine them fearlessly and try them bravely. Many are no longer interested especially in this con- troversy. The flank of the battle against tradition has been turned by religion itself, in the charge that the traditional views of church and scriptures are not only unscientific but irreligious. Modern religion believes in the prophet, and in the continued revelation of truth as ever of old. The tradi- tional experience is not sufficiently religious for the modem man. The cleft between morals and religion is the issue of the hour. Many times have I listened to the claim on the part of some social worker that there was more of the Kingdom of God outside the church than in it. Many times has it been charged that the church was interested in charity but not in justice. The older aristocratic churches do not in the nature of the case sympathize with the growingly demo- cratic character of modern morals. Of late, there has been large attention on the part of denominational leaders and newspapers to the industrial and civic questions of the day. But even so, the leadership in social criticism and in con- structive social suggestion has been outside the church rather than in it. The fault does not lie with Christianity as such. The implications of that are wide and deep, and would involve profound alterations in many institutional structures if logically and thoroughly applied. It is a mis- fortune not merely for religion but for the world of social and moral leadership that they are so dissevered. More and more people are becoming interested in this subject. It is the overwhelming question of the day. It is •35- Art & Religion infinitely more important for the moment, and possibly always will be, than the subject of this book. And yet, from another point of view it is part of the same subject. For it is after all the struggle of human life to have a larger share in the beauty of life. The cleft between art and religion is a less familiar sub- ject. The lines of cleavage between religion and art run differently. If the old hierarchic churches seem to us of the Protestant world still to be interested in the maintenance of outworn truth and in the practice of an outworn good- ness, they may easily accuse us of not being interested in beauty at all. As there is a world of Science outside the church satisfied with the love of truth and a world of Morality outside the church seeking its own way of good- ness, so there is a world of Art outside the church enjoying its life of beauty ; and it is a very large world. There is something about life more significant than think- ing or than doing, life itself which finds its expression and its joy in the beauty of nature and of art and the intimations and communion which these assist. It is a fatal mistake for religion not to realize the vast numbers of people who find their spiritual satisfactions as devotees of the arts. Humanity permanently craves beauty. The generation will soon be here which will refuse to worship in ugly build- ings, or attend an ill-constructed service with fitful and spasmodic music. There are more people of the present generation who have withdrawn from devotion to the church for its failure in beauty than we imagine. Worship is a fine art, the finest and highest of all the arts, but there has been little improvement in it since the Reformation. This accusation holds against the older churches as well as against the free churches. We may rightly lay to the influence of the Reformation the negation of the arts which on the whole has characterized Protestantism. There is no logical reason why Protestantism should be suspicious of the fine arts, but the historic results have been as unfor- tunate as if there were. Not all the poor artistry, however, in the Christian churches is the fault of the free churches. It is possibly no more blameworthy to be contented with .36. ■ The Cleft between Art and Religion meager and uninteresting forms than to maintain outworn and stereotyped forms, however successful they may once have been. The canon of the Roman Catholic Mass has been fixed for so long that no improvement in the art of worship can be credited to the Roman Church for many generations. The service is still in Latin. Those who are instructed in its meaning step by step can understand it, but not anyone else. Symbolic art was devised for the purpose of communi- cation. A stranger to the Christian faith would be very slightly enlightened by the symbols which the Romanists use to convey the gospel message. The Roman Church makes great claim of being the vehicle for the continued revelations of the Divine Word. But nothing has been vouchsafed to it for hundreds of years sufficiently fresh and enlivening to find incorporation in the regular mode of teaching the people. There seem to have been no improvements even in the matter of telling the old truths. A liturgy which is truly vital must certainly from time to time be purged of the elements for which there no longer appear assignable reasons. The principal variable parts of the missal were themselves selected more or less arbitrarily. Mr. Adrian Fortesque,* in his study of litur- gical sources, cannot discover any reasons for the assign- ment of the schedule of Introits as they now stand. All these things are sufficiently faulty apart from the chief criticism of all, that the religion taught in the Roman service is not the modern man's religion. These things were not always true of the great liturgy of the church. Far back, in the days of the Fathers, there were varied and variable usages both east and west. In the later crystallizations of form throughout different nations there were developed different orders of worship, Syrian, Coptic, Leonine, Galilean, Gelasian, Gregorian, Gothic, Jacobite, Mozarabic, Sarum, St. James, St. Mark, and other sacramentaries. Some of these are still maintained. But many of them were long since merged and lost in the * Adrian Fortesque, "The Mass." •37- Art & Religion authoritative order of Rome, and the vital growth of freedom stopped. Architecturally the Roman Catholic Church in America is just now making very great improvements. Much of its recent work is of great artistic merit. But it is passing strange that for the most part during American history there should have come to this new nation no artistic intel- ligence and culture through the channels of the old ecclesi- astical organization. No Protestant Church in America has built any more ugly buildings than the Roman Catholic Church. By all the probabilities in the case we should look for a far higher record in the Anglican Church and its American associate the Protestant Episcopal Church, And so indeed we find at many points. The architectural history of the Episcopal Church in the United States from its beginnings to the present is almost unexceptionally excellent. No other body comes anywhere near approaching it. Since the Colo- nial days, when it followed the prevailing Classic mode, it has consistently utilized its proper English Gothic inspira- tion. I have never seen a distinctly bad Episcopal Church, and there are many buildings of great beauty. The state of the case for the liturgy is not so good. The English Book of Common Prayer is, of course, one of the great artistic masterpieces of the world. Its rhythmic and noble style of speech, rich vocabulary, and compact, lucid structure are of the highest order of art. Its range of ideas and depths of feeling betoken a religious experience genuine, profound, and sympathetic. But the experience so beauti- fully set forth is not at many points our experience. No very important change has been incorporated since the res- toration of the second prayer book of Edward VI by Queen Elizabeth. However admirable the age of the great Eliza- bethans, its emotions and ideals will not completely serve for us. New collects are, of course, used in this country and in England, but the principal offices remain unchanged. There are so many intimations of a royal and aristocratic regime that as it stands it cannot serve to express our present faith .38. The Cleft between Art and Religion or aspiration. Its morality is different from our morality. The theology back of it is not our theology. Its content of ideas is not satisfactory. And its form, although gracious and powerful, is, nevertheless, more and more remote from the forms of average speech, especially in America. It is not necessary to go to outsiders for criticisms of the Episcopal liturgy. "The prayer book as it stands is a volume that serves only those who are highly instructed in the faith."* This is the same fault that attaches to the Latin Mass, and almost as grave. This remoteness from the com- mon medium speech was more than ever discovered in the pressure of army camp conditions. "How we have blushed for the incomprehensibility even of the collects," writes Chaplain Milner-White. "We never guessed of old how removed it was from common wants : nor how unintelligible are its prayers and forms of devotion. Its climate to the simple ardent Christian is often ice." Respecting inadequacy of the order to express modern moral conditions is this: "The prayer book in a peculiar way reflects the mind of the church to the nation. It is the public programme of British institutional Christianity; an official demonstration of the interests and passions that we bring to the throne of God. Men mark that these interests are curiously remote from those of an eager and well-meaning world, from its life, society, and work. For example, the problems of labor press upon us, and vast Christian issues hang upon them, but the Prayer Book cares, on the face of it, for none of these things; and the Church therefore stands condemned by the millions. If only a litany of labor lay within its covers, what a reproach would be done away with. And more — it would preach Christian social obligations as a thousand sermons could not; the mere fact of being in a prayer book would make it, so to speak, a general routine order; the conscience of church people would be insensibly and surely taught and moved." Another writer, the Rev. C. Salisbury Woodward, M.C., M.A., Canon of Southwark Cathedral, says that "The *The Rev. E. Milner-White, D.S.O., M.A., "The Church in the Fur- nace." •39- Art & Religion language of many of the prayers is out of date and there- fore unintelligible if not actually misleading to the major- ity," and that "The subject matter of the prayers is unsatis- factory; it is too general and abstract for common use." He also believes that the psalms and lessons are indiscriminate and not well selected for modern faith or devotion. He proposes changes in these and in the form of language: "If John Smith and Thomas Jones are to learn to pray with reality they must be allowed to ask for the things they really need and to ask for them in the language of their own day, not in that of the Elizabethans, however perfect the latter might have been."* Some of these criticisms are the same as originally made by the first Puritans. It is surely not to be expected that the average American can be spiritually satisfied by these forms so long ago unsatisfactory to many, lately in the critical experience of the war freshly seen to be inadequate to set forth modem faith and hope. This is not to refuse, however, to make use of many of the best prayers in the book. Some of these prayers are published in the ordinary hymnals of free churches and often used. Yet undoubtedly one of the reasons which keeps the free churches from a larger resort to this great treasury of devotion is the seeming inability of those who use it and publish it to maintain it as a fresh and growing instrument of grace. The cleft between the rest of Protestantism and the world of the arts would be patent to all if we had eyes to see it. Not all of Protestantism is derived from the Puritans. The Lutheran bodies were little touched with Puritan feeling. Their forms early became stereotyped and have ever since been characterized by a certain dryness. Yet even so, some of their usages are far superior to those of many of the free churches. The Wesleyan bodies, having once left behind the mother church, early developed exercises of vivid color and warmth, appealing to the sensibilities in a more primitive and more powerful way than the finer arts are capable of. Fiery speech *The Rev. C. Salisbury Woodward, M.C., M.A., "The Church in the Furnace." .40. The Cleft between Art and Religion and highly colored rhetoric were proved to be more effective in pioneer conditions than lighted altars or vested choirs. It remains to be seen whether the usage of these emotional factors can continue to be inspiring as the community be- comes older and more cultivated. The Puritans themselves objected to the material elements in the sacraments. They abolished not only holy water and ashes but also pictures and statues, not only shrines of the saints but organs and instruments of music and even the use of the ring in the marriage service. Presbyterian, Refonned, Baptist, and Congregational bodies were largely touched at the very beginning with the Puritan spirit. Yet the usages in all of these groups are today ver}- different from the original practices and they are as formal and stereotyped in their own way as the canon of the Mass itself. The boasted freedom and spontaneity of the free church worship has shaken itself down to a common level of custom, and not a very high one at that. One might easily discover on examining the order of service in a thousand churches of these denominations that the variations would be so slight as to be negligible. There is a kind of average order of service used all over the United States in the majority of Protestant churches which is pretty much the same thing. It has been developed naively and has some excellent traits. And if it is proposed to change it, someone is sure to cry, "No, no, this is not Congregational," or whatever other church proposes the experiment. Yet the fact is, that this average order is of comparatively recent date and only remotely resembles the exercises of public worship used in the earlier days of all these bodies. The order has the merit of natural develop- ment, but with equal naturalness it needs more development, and it also needs something else, as do all the old liturgies. We live in an analytical and psychological age, and are no longer able to enjoy a wholly naive experience. In a day when all the other arts are analyzed and criticised in detail, it is impossible to expect that an uncriticised art of worship can be effective. We have come to the point where we must reexamine the whole subject. This average order that is so prevalent among us is unpsychological, tiresome, stereo- .41. Art & Religion typed, ill constructed, neither interesting nor impressive nor beautiful. It contains far less spontaneous and original mate- rial than is claimed for it. Even in the prayers, the only opportunity for fresh content, probably the average minister covers the same thoughts in the same style much more fre- quently than does the Prayer Book and does not do it nearly so well. There is more repetition of phrases and of ideas than in the written liturgy. Notable exceptions on the part of gifted ministers do not alter this unfortunate general situation. We have a liturgy but it is a poor one. We use artistry but not good artistry. The current usages in forms of worship are not at all those which originally characterized the religious movement of the Protestant world. They are the forms de- veloped in the latter half of the nineteenth century, a time, more than any other in all history, of artistic confusion and prevalent ugliness. Recently there have been many attempts at improvement, some of them significant and successful. For the most part, however, they are spoken of as "enrichment of the service," "the use of forms," "an elaborate order of worship." None of these phrases explains much, or indicates any genuinely artistic achievement. They do evidence a dissatisfaction with something sadly in need of improvement. But the need is not more formalism nor enrichment nor elaboration. The need is for unity, simplicity, and beauty. There are many "en- riched" services composed simply of the typical, ugly, aver- age American order with additions of musical numbers, choir responses, vestments, or read prayers, a kind of glori- fied city edition of the common town order. All these things jumbled together, however elaborate, or however beautiful in detail, do not make a noble liturgy. Nothing is beautiful that does not have unity, harmony, wholeness. There will continue to be a cleft between religion and art until the service of worship in the average Christian church is organized on precisely the same principles as those by which any artist, working in any medium, organizes the material under his hand into a beautiful work. Equally severed from the high possibilities that are open .42. Hall & Winton, Builders, 1826. FIRST CHURCH IN CHESHIRE • ■C0N;NECTICUT A "Colonial" church greatly superior to any' of the nondescript buildings common in America until the recent style revivals. The Cleft between Art and Religion to us is the most of American church architecture. Here also all is confusion in the Protestant world. Those ecclesiastical bodies of a homogeneous tradition and race have done much better than the others. The Lutheran and Reformed groups are of this character, and their buildings, if not always beau- tiful, are always symbolic of their use and dignified. Pre- vious to 1830, an excellent American style prevailed, and there yet remain, throughout the commonwealths of the early colonies both north and south, numbers of very beauti- ful Colonial churches. Everyone familiar with American domestic and public architecture since that time knows the sad story of wretched and ugly work in various forms. Two or three strong notes in building gained considerable currency one after another throughout the country, such as a slender kind of wooden Gothic, the walnut-and-marble-fireplace period, the Mansart- roof decade. Then came the most shocking of all the types, the attempted reproductions which followed the work of a great architect, Richardson. Not only West, but in the East, there are innumerable church buildings which must be laid to his door. His own work was magnificent, especially in Trin- ity Church, Boston; but all over the country there are little churches which resemble, however faintly, the few successful buildings that were made in this adapted Romanesque style. By some terrible invasion of a desire for a practical build- ing, a combination building, there appeared in this style the device of a square church, having the pulpit in one corner so that the opening of great folding doors could combine a Sunday school hall with the church auditorium. No inven- tion was ever more frightful. No artist would dream of focusing attention to the comer of a square room. Sitting askew of the cardinal points puts a slant into your very morals. And the circular pews make one feel as though he were in a clinical laboratory. The prominence of organ pipes on one side and the dreary, barren waste of folding doors on the other constitute a composition in disharmony and impropriety almost positively demoralizing. The buildings of this style stand on one side of a deep and wide gulf from .45. Art & Religion anything that could remotely be connected with the world of the fine arts. It seems utterly unbelievable, but within a year or two there has actually been published a book promoted by the Missionary Education Movement, recommending for coun- try churches precisely this most ugly conceivable structure, the square church with corner pulpit. That such ignorance and bad taste should be found among church leaders of the time is ample evidence of the sorry state of religious art. Why should these leaders be unaware of the excellent work being done in many quarters? We are rapidly approaching a time of far greater interest and demand for successful artistry than ever before in American life. Domestic and public architecture is improv- ing by leaps and bounds. Better taste is being developed throughout the whole community. Larger and larger num- bers of people are becoming familiar with the best products of the world of the arts. Meanwhile very few religious leaders are at all conscious of the connection between the art of worship and art in general, and there are still being built incredibly disagreeable church buildings. Religion may fairly be charged with being far removed both architectur- ally and liturgically from the canons of taste and of beauty which are rapidly being applied in all other departments of life. The charge should be extended to include blame not only for bad artistry, but for failure to make larger and better use of the positive goods to be derived from all the arts, glass work, painting, sculpture, decoration, dramatic action, music, literature, and architecture. The fault is not wholly the fault of the church, but also of artists. Very few artists know enough about religion or the church to represent it in saying what needs to be said artistically. Few architects understand the message of modem religion. Few composers have sought to produce work which could be woven into a unified liturgical compo- sition. Few patrons of the arts have realized the incom- parable opportunity for public refinement and elevation offered by the churches. .46- The Cleft between Art and Religion Religion is more than beauty, and worship is more than art. If the artist is captivated by the life of beauty, the reli- gionist is able to see the beauty of life. It is precisely because the artist is himself so good a seer, and because his work helps people to see some part of reality, that religion needs to work with him that people may be led to a more moving vision of the Whole. 47 Chapter V : The Mutual Need WE need first to speak of mutual recognition. The i churchman has not yet noted the magnitude of : the world of the arts. He has moved in the area j of his own spiritual experience and his own modes of wor- i ship. He has related that experience with the problems of i thought, or at least he thinks he has. He has related that | experience with the problems of conduct, the morals of pri- j vate life, and now more and more the morals of industrial i life. He has noticed the world of science and the world of \ civics ; he is only slightly aware of the world of art, ; The artist is vaguely aware of the pervasive fact of reli- i gion, but is in the main ignorant of the directions of religious ; progress. His religious interest tends to be archaeological. He : enjoys the survey of the picturesque remnants and survivals \ of once vital and noble rituals; he has little interest in the i spiritual growths which have not yet found expression in i his own mode. If art is to have a vital connection with ! religion, it must face forward instead of backward, it must '. begin to anticipate the future movements of the spirit rather ! than to occupy itself with wistful regrets for disappearing | religious cultures. i Every civilized community is now vitally interested in \ the arts. In any great modern city the numbers of persons j and the numbers of hours devoted to some form of artistic , production are very far in excess of the numbers of persons | or hours consciously devoted to religion. Night after night, ! theaters are filled with thousands of people. Day after day, I the moving picture houses are thronged. Week after week, , the printing presses are turning out unnumbered copies of , novels. Month after month, the popular magazines publish i millions of pages of short stories. Much of this output may not be sufficiently good to be acknowledged as art, but it * .48- j The Mutual Need pretends to be, and the success of its appeal lies in the cate- gory of the arts. So much will be readily recognized. It is not so easy to be aware of the scope of the higher works of art and of artistic criticism. A very large number of American cities foster the production of music on a high plane. The most of these also possess a more or less creditable collection of works of plastic or pictorial art, together with the possessions of private collectors. Large portions of the journalistic press of all nations are devoted to the criticism of the fine arts. The comparatively small space in the popu- lar journals devoted to religion is in some measure an index of the comparative popular interest. There are not many journals devoted wholly to the arts, but they are for the most part of a high order of excellence. Not only questions of technique and composition, but questions of spiritual interpretation crowd the paragraphs of the art critics of the world. The first thing to say, then, is an admonition to the churchmen simply to notice these facts, the incalculable sum total of human interest devoted in one way or another to the production or appreciation of poetic, dramatic, and other literature, to music, painting, sculpture, architecture, and the decorative arts. The second thing to say, is an admonition to the artist to open his eyes to the perennial and pervasive human interest in religion. There is no community without it in some form or other. It is a world far more subtle, powerful, and exten- sive than his world. Those who consciously devote them- selves to it far outnumber those who have anything like a critical attitude toward the arts. Its feeling reaches almost every human life at its beginning and end. Its enterprises engage the services of far more professional workers, to- gether with far more volunteer workers, than any other human interest. It is a vast, complicated world, which can- not possibly be ignored by anyone who attempts to see life and see it whole. In the light of these facts, I am setting down two or three ways in which art needs religion and religion needs the arts. I am not unmindful of the danger to the artist and his .49. Art & Religion I work if he sees and speaks from the point of view of any i specific religion. If his spirit and outlook are limited to the range of experience derived from any particular religious \ sect, he is by that very fact hindered from the fresh and un- i trammeled insight expected of him. He cannot be a success- ■ ful seer if he sees nothing more than he has been taught to i see. But the true artist is not very liable to this danger. He | possesses an independence of his own. His danger is, rather, | a too great separation from normal feelings. The average ' artist is a separatistic person. He may belong to a group or : guild of fellow craftsmen. He is at least subconsciously ; aware of the great dominant spirit of his time and nation: I but he is almost necessarily a more aloof and independent j worker than the scientist or the moralist or the religionist. ! The superiority of religion is this, that it has been built i up in the community. It relates itself to all interests and all { experiences, past, present, and future. It comprises the pur- j suit of truth and goodness as well as of beauty. It draws I upon efforts of the mind and of the will as well as of the ' emotions. It has its theology as well as its ritual. It is at ' work as well as at worship. It has an evangel to proclaim, a : mission to perform, a perpetual moral program to carry ! through, a perpetual ministry to exercise. When it betakes ' itself to contemplation, it is already equipped with the best j thinking of the day and the best ethics of the day. Its total \ attitude to the world is not derived from the imagination ! only, but from rigid processes of historic thought and from : persistent efforts in the practical world. These mental and ' moral factors have entered into its make-up profoundly. j The artist, without religion, usually approaches his world ! very largely uninfluenced by the values derived from science and philosophy, or the virtues engendered in the moral j efforts of mankind. It is impossible for the religious mystic j to approach his world without being profoundly affected, I even though subconsciously, by the long inclusion of the < values of thinker and doer in the life of the religious com- ; munity to which he belongs. The fine arts of the world would j be infinitely richer if produced by men whose attitudes | toward life came forward out of the more inclusive back- j •50- j The Mutual Need ground which it is the constant effort of religion to main- tain in the human consciousness. Art needs religion, therefore, to universalize its back- ground of concepts, both mentally and morally. Some art critics, such as Benedetto Croce, repudiate the art that be- gins conceptually. They do not regard anything as strictly in the world of aesthetics except an immediate intuition of particular reality. I do not know what they would make of "Macbeth" or Rodin's "Hand of God." Certainly these works seem to have been conceived rather than perceived. And in any case, the artist's perception of particulars is powerfully affected by his conceptions of all things. The only area in which conceptions of all things are formed by the historic and communal exercise of all the human facul- ties and endeavors is the area of religion. Art needs religion to correct its moral content. I do not wish artists to be pointing morals. But they are constantly affecting popular morals whether they intend to or not. I am willing to admit that this is none of their concern, but it is the concern of the rest of us. And it is their concern to pro- duce works of artistic excellence, which is impossible if these works are not true reports of life as it is. Religion presumes to make a true report of life as it is. It assumes to describe spiritual laws as these are discovered to be true and univer- sal. It assumes to construct a definite moral content in the light of these laws. If the artist could bring to his observa- tion of life and his artistic depiction the moral equipment of religion, he would be a better artist. I am not asking that he be a moralist except in so far as it affects his art. Religion needs art to be impressive, to get a hearing. This is one of the chief problems of the church. How shall it arrest attention? How shall it make itself more noticeable in the community*? How shall it set forth its first appeal so that he who runs may read? Most people are in a hurry these days, involved in many affairs. Weak voices and unimpres- sive proposals do not reach them. Religion cannot affect the average man unless it first gets his attention. The problem of advertising religion is far deeper than a matter of newspaper notices. At this point the fine art of building is the chief .51. Art & Religion dependence and religion cannot dispense with it. This is especially true in the larger communities. In the life of the older America, most people of the community understood a great deal about the intellectual and spiritual differences through which the differing sects came into being. This is not true today. The masses of our church people no longer understand these things or care about them. The masses of aliens know nothing about them. The majority simply read from superficials. The obscure and unimpressive church buildings, however high or distinguished may be the life which they house, tell nothing to the average outsider. The religion that survives in the new age will be impressively set forth at the very start by the outward appearance and interesting character of its structure. Moreover, first impres- sions on the inside are vital. The church can utilize the work of the artist architect, decorator, musician, and liturgist to the ends of an immediately impressive appeal to anyone who comes within. It is the artistic side of religion which is the chief source of the enjoyment of it. The deeper joys of religion are, to be sure, its spiritual joys, trust, and peace, and hope, forgive- ness and worthy labor. But the everyday human satisfac- tions, and sometimes the stimulus for the higher spiritual joys, are derived from successful artistry in public worship. Religion would not long attract people in an advancing civilization if it should cut away the rhythmic fonns of hymns and songs, the artistic excellence of diction and rhetoric, and the stately dignity of noble buildings. Many people turn to art instead of to religion for rest and refuge, for recreation after the moral struggle of practical life. A work of noble art is in itself, by its composure and perfec- tion, a peace giver, a restorative, a sanctuary for the moment inviolable. How much more would men turn to religion if the great composing faiths could be set forth so triumphantly in noble and sensible forms as to restore the joy of salvation. Reverence and humility are assisted by the arts. Ugly buildings together with careless and slipshod orders of serv- ice certainly do not assist reverence nor tend to make any- body humble. The most of people despise poor workman- .52. The Mutual Need ship. They are not readily led to revere the works of God by bungling and imperfect works of man. Perfection they respect; carefulness and finish they admire. It is the attempt of every work of art to approach perfection in its own medium. Its effect is to shame carelessness and imperfection. The assistance of various arts can be brought to bear upon the worshiper in church in such a way as to help him to be reverent and to display to him the larger cause of religion over against which his own life may be seen to be unsatis- factory. To conserve and freshen old truths is a constant task in religion. All communication is more or less symbolic. Sym- bols addressed to the eye and to the ear add weight to those which merely address the mind. Art is representative, that is, it presents again and again understood but unrealized truths. It refreshes the experience of valuable but neglected standards. It revives fundamental but oft-forgotten ideals. It succeeds in reaching the inner man. It is penetrative, it drives deeper than prose or logic. When we wish to realize afresh for our comfort the providing care of God, we do not simply state a proposition about it; we read, "The Lord is my shepherd." But this is art. The Twenty-third Psalm carries farther and means more because it has rhythm and imagery as well as beautiful thought. So also, in many direc- tions, works of plastic or pictorial art, music, song, succeed in communicating the faith where bare prose and cold reason are ineffective. To seek new light and new truth is an equally constant effort of religion. Some form of artistry is always valuable as a preparation for new insight. The direct physical effect of beauty is to kindle the senses and to increase the imagina- tion. This tends to open-mindedness. This lifts people above the region of prejudice into a freer air and a more compre- hensive outlook. Something of this sort is necessary before the word of new truth can secure a hospitable reception. The editor of the Outlook has recently said: "There is nothing today so essential to the world as its art. Even the prophet and teacher of religion cannot avail unless he either has in •53- Art & Religion him the creative power of the artist or can enlist that creative power in the service of the ideas he promulgates,"* Religion needs the arts to quicken resolves. Resolution is getting courage up to "the sticking point." Great purposes may be formed in the cold and the dark. Not often, however, unless that cold and dark be exceptional and critical. They are more commonly formed in times of illumination and power. The many lesser resolves necessary to keep good works and good lives going are assisted by recurrent emo- tional experiences. If the emotional life of people is largely stimulated outside of religion, it is less liable to be directed into worthy or intelligent resolution and practical issue. If religious life is unstirred by emotion, it is little likely to develop the zeal necessary to overcome the world. Religion and art, therefore, need each other. Art without religion fails of the highest significance. Religion without art is dumb. It is unfortunate for the world that the imaginative power engendered amongst the devotees of the arts is not more directly harnessed to the moral efforts of the times. It is unfortunate for art as art not to be stirred by the great con- cerns of progressive religion. Writes Mr. Lisle March Phil- lipps: "It is the peculiarity of modem art that to an entire doubt as to its own aims and principles it unites an extraordi- narily highly developed gift of manual dexterity and great technical knowledge. It can paint or carve anything it likes exactly in the manner it likes; at the same time it does not know in the least what to paint or carve, or with what pur- pose to paint or carve it."t Religion could tell it. Religion, on the other hand, is in these days often crude and uncultivated in its forms of expression. It is often meager in thought and limited in imagination. It does not give people entrance to that abundant life that thrills and throbs in the aspirations of humanity as a whole. It is often less passionate and less daring in its search for reality than art. Stanton Coit has pointed out this dearth of religion without the aid of art: "Protestantism in purifying its inner * The Outlook, December 17, 1919. t Phillipps, "Art and Environment," p. 266. .54. The Mutual Need life has gone far toward destroying its outward form. . . . But without expression, and expression in choice and deliber- ate form, religion, like the feelings, tends to become stag- nant, sour and corrupt."* The religion of the new age will sympathize with every circle of spiritual aspirants, and call to its service the gifted workers in every field of human progress, the artistic no less than the scientific and philan- thropic. * Stanton Coit, "Social Worship," 55 Chapter VI: Corporeality in Religion THE word spiritual is one of the most misused terms in the religious dictionary. It is commonly used as applied to some experience that is largely physical. Paul had a difficult time persuading the Corinthians that the excitement of speaking with tongues was of a lower spiritu- ality than the more temperate gifts. There would appear to be something properly called spiritual about those unim- passioned virtues, patience, perseverance, meekness, and the like, displayed in the cold and the dark, in temptation and loneliness, that is far removed from the emotional glow so often called spiritual. These are the highest fruits of the spirit. But the spiritual life as a whole rises from the physical life. If it rises at last purely and freely, it none the less rises from the swathing fires of sensibility. And the kindling of the sense usually requires something tangible, touchable, visible. Spirituality is the great and desirable end; corporeal- ity is the necessary means. Truth must be embodied to be realized ; it must be incorporated to be understood. No reli- gious movement has ever been forceful or popular without a rich corporeality. An image, a rite, a creed, a feeling, a feast, a vision, or a sacrament has always been used to embody its truth. Religion has ever struggled to reach a true balance of body and spirit. Prophets, in the name of the spirit, have over and again led the revolt against idolatry. But the people have not been able to reach their heights, they have neither understood nor remembered the high word of the prophet until a priest has brought it close by a symbol or a sacra- ment. Then, alas, the people have loved the symbols and the sacraments for their own sakes, until the day of another prophetic revolt of the spirit. My sympathies in this entirely human story are not only with the prophets, but with priests .56. Corporeality in Religion and people as well. Religion will always require fresh incor- poration as well as recurrent reformation. Historically, there have been three principal types of appeal to the senses — the incorporation of truth by Physical Symbols or Acts; its embodiment in Creeds; its arousement to Crude Excitement. The symbols, rites, and sacraments most commonly famil- iar are those of the Hebrew and Catholic worship. Our modern interest in the Old Testament is so largely centered in the prophetic books yet so valuable to us, that we fail to appreciate the prominence of the cultus or ritual practice in early Jewish religion. Beginning with no other object of veneration than the Ark of the Covenant, the Jehovah faith rapidly adopted Canaanitish shrines, high places, and sacri- ficial practices. The three agricultural feasts, later increased to seven, Solomon's Temple, the calves of Jeroboam the son of Nebat at Dan and Bethel, the morning and evening sacrifices on the open altar in Jerusalem, the great Day of Atonement, the processionals and psalm liturgies, with other objects and exercises, constituted a rich and impressive corporeality in religion without which it could not have maintained its life. So also the mediaeval Christian church made elaborate use of symbols and rites to represent its truths and make them impressive. Mediaeval corporeality centered in the seven sacraments, around each of which was developed a more or less extensive usage of forms, acts, and objects. Baptism brought the child into membership with the church. Confirmation signalized reception into full communion and imparted grace from God. By the Eucharist the spiritual nature was nourished to eternal life. In Penance, sins since Baptism were healed. Ordination invested the new priest with power for the eucharistic miracle. Marriage expressed the sanction of the church over the fundamental acts of life. Extreme Unction fitted the believer for entrance into Heaven. Besides these, many other religious ideas and expe- riences were tangibly symbolized or stimulated — penitence by the confessional ; the forgiveness of sins by priestly abso- lution; the life of personal prayer by the rosary, household •57- Art & Religion images, candles, and incense ; the sacrificing spirit of secular and religious priests by humble garb and ascetic life; the sacrifices of the people by special and seasonal self-denials; the dignity and power of the church by the pomp of the hierocracy; public worship by magnificent and beautiful churches, shrines, statues, paintings, and music; the unity of the church by prayers for the dead and offerings to the saints. Many other lesser usages and forms were utilized, varie- ties of vestments, festivals, processionals, crucifixes and banners, chants and offices, prayer books and gestures, sta- tions and pilgrimages; all of these being forms of incor- porating some experience or faith. Outtopping all, brilliant, penetrating, and awful, the celebration of the Mass consti- tuted perhaps the most impressive religious act ever devised. Against these great Hebrew and Catholic systems of cul- tus, the prophets revolted; Amos, Hosea, Isaiah, and Micah in the eighth century B, C. ; Luther and Zwingli and others in the sixteenth century A. D. But in each case the prophets had scarcely done speaking when their spiritual word was in turn embodied in a new form of incorporation on a dis- tinctly lower plane, but by a process absolutely necessary to its perpetuation. We thus come to the second type of corporeality in religion, that of creeds and codes. The ancient prophets looked on the rites and sacrifices of their day, and they sternly said: No, this is not religion, this is not what Jehovah requires. We are not saved by feast and assembly; we are saved by righteousness. "I desire mercy and not sacrifice." They thoroughly moralized religion. Then the legalists stepped in and began to define and specify the righteousness. They framed the code of Deuteronomy to embody, to incorporate, the moral religion of the great prophets. Speedily the "Law" became the same kind of object of veneration and formality as the golden calves. They worshiped the "Law" like an idol. Psalm 119 is a song of praise to the "Law." So, also, is the story of the Christian reformers. Luther thought on the sacraments of the mediaeval church and all the gross formalism that had gathered round their adminis- .58- Corporeality in Religion tration. And he said: No, this is not religion. We are not saved by these sacramental rites, we are saved by faith. He, too, freshly moralized and spiritualized religion. But he was no sooner gone than once again the same old story repeated itself. His followers and successors began to make lists of the faiths by which we are saved. And these were written down in the Augsburg Confession, the Heidelburg Catechism, the Thirty-nine Articles, and the Westminster Confession of Faith. In these formularies there was embodied and incor- porated the new spiritual and moralized religion of the Reformers. But these became the same kind of objects of veneration as the images they dispossessed. Probably no statue of the Virgin was ever more thoroughly idolized than the West- minster Confession of Faith. The attitude toward it is no more commendable on the one hand and no more repre- hensible on the other than the attitude of the devotees of the Mass. It is quite precisely the same, no better, no worse. Psychologically, this creedal form of corporeality in reli- gion has answered the same purpose as the ritual form. Just as the mediaeval priest held up his crucifix, or elevated the Host, just so the Calvinist preacher held up his creed; and for the same purpose, to bring near that which is far, to com- municate the unspeakable, to tell the unutterable, to make tangible the faith in the unseen. These Reformation state- ments of faith are so complete, so exact, so finished, clear-cut, and closed as to partake of the nature of an object. They are no less objective than a Catholic image; but not so flexible, for you may get anything you put there out of an image but not from a creed. They are no less formal than a Catholic ceremony, for salvation by faith has often become salvation by credence, a thoroughly unspiritual proposal. Against these systems of legalism and creedalism, the prophets again revolted. The reformation of Jesus was set over against the formalism of Pharisaic devotion to the "Law," that there might be born a religion more purely of the Spirit spiritual. The movement of John Wesley was in part a reaction from the hardness and dryness of creedal formalism that there might prevail a more inward expe- •59- Art & Religion rience of the Spirit. But here again, as ever before, the high prophetic and spiritual word was lowered in the process of popularity. The issue displays the third type of corporeality in religion, that of crude excitement. An account of Jesus' break with the legal religion of his day is a long story by itself. Although he spoke of fulfilling the "Law," he distinguished between greater and lesser commands of the "Law" and did not himself hesitate to break lesser laws at the inner dictation of a higher law of the Spirit. The outcome of his relation to the "Law" was the liberation of the early Christian community from the Mosaic codes and the freedom of new life and power by the Spirit. But the more violent and bodily manifestations of the Spirit soon became the more popular. People began to enjoy spiritual possession. They began to seek it, not for self- mastery and all the graces of goodness, but for power over others and for physical thrills in themselves. They sought excitements and ecstasy for their own sakes until they appeared to be mad or drunken, uttering incoherent cries and speaking with "tongues." So, also, John Wesley was disturbed by the formalisms of his later day, the creedal religion so like the legal religion of Pharisaism. No, he said, we are not saved by these beliefs, these agreements to the creeds and confessions. Religion is a matter of the heart, a right attitude of spirit, an inward knowledge of God and His saving grace, not a thing of the mind and its definitions. We must have a new heart and know and feel ourselves saved. This was the high word of a prophet, protesting against the formalisms of creedal reli- gion in the name of the Spirit. But it was scarcely said than it, too, like its prototypes, descended in order to be understood, to be popular and effective. You must feel your religion inwardly. Very well, then, go to an old-fashioned camp meeting and you may see people feel it. They come home reporting a wonderful spir- itual time, when what they have had was a wonderful physi- cal time. I am not criticising just here, but only describing. The popular camp meeting preacher has never been the quiet teacher of spiritual and moral religion, but the brilliant .60. Corporeality in Religion orator, who, by vivid imagery, personal magnetism, and a kind of physical tour de force could rouse the emotions until laughter, tears, and creeping flesh, and half-hysterical speak- ing with tongues signalized that ecstatic enjoyment for which the people had come and marked another memorable "experience" of religion. This type of religious corporeality, no less than the ritual and creedal types, thus came to be enjoyable and sought for its own sake; that is, it was idolized, made an end in itself. Its thrilling and emotional character brought together throngs of people attracted over and again by its fleshly pleasure. This is the factor chiefly responsible for the power and rapid spread of this type of religious experience in America. The religious bodies which have fostered it and utilized it have become the largest churches in the country. Besides these three types of physical appeal in religion, there are, of course, others, such as Christian Science and Apocalypse. The incorporation of religious faith in a creed has often been paralleled by the symbolism of a vivid Hope. The history of this kind of formalism in religion is long and interesting, just now renewed in popular attention to Pre- millennial or Second Coming dreams. Its widespread recru- desence at this moment is simply another instance of the immemorial tendency of human nature to slip from under the hard demands of spiritual and moral religion in order to enjoy the speculative, the vividly imaginative, and the self- approval of passionate attachment to a definitely objective religious figure. Followers of this Adventism, instead of worshiping God and seeking to display the Spirit of Christ in common life, have fashioned the physical figure of a vision descending from the clouds, and devote themselves to the adoration of this image and to calling upon other men to share with them this useless cult. Christian Science also must be described as making liberal use of corporeality. Like Omar Khayyam, who constantly advises us to forget death, thereby indicating that it is the one thing he cannot forget, so the Scientist constantly cries Spirit, Spirit, all the while blaming the rest of us for our refusal to be forever concerned with healing our bodies. .61. Art & Religion In the main, however, historic religion has always dis- played one or another of the three types of physical appeal we are chiefly considering. Some kind of formal element religion has always had. I am not objecting to these forms; the thing I am objecting to is that we have given them up. At least the bulk of present-day Protestantism no longer makes any very large or interesting use of them. And this is one of the things the matter with us. We do not have statues and paintings, nor a noble liturgy; we no longer devote ourselves to the great Reformation creedal formu- laries; even the Methodists have largely left off the very emotionalism that gave them such great power; we are too spiritual; we have a religion that won't work except in a realm of disembodied spirits. Without detailed analysis, and not to anticipate, there would seem to be more hope of future improvement along the lines of the first type rather than the others. The third form, that of Crude Excitement, is too low and primitive and never has appealed permanently to the better spirits of any people. Moreover, its intellectual content is always too meager and shifting and personal to be long utilized on a general scale. Which is not to say that at its highest it is not to have a powerful place in religion. We still hope that there may be many in the succession of Chrysostom, Savona- rola, Whitfield, and Moody. With the second type, the modern man and his contempt of creeds has perhaps too little sympathy. We need creeds, but we are properly too humble to complete and compress our faith in finished creeds : we want sun parlors and open porches in our house of faith, always inviting the visitation of newer and later revelations of the Spirit. For after all, the humility of agnosticism, so far from being inimical to worship, is perhaps its natural beginning. Which is not to say that we can get on without slogans and mottoes and working statements of common faith. But these can scarcely supply the emotional fire necessary to popular religion. The first type, however, can be utilized with vastly greater power and variety than ordinary Protestantism has ever considered. .62. Chapter VII : The Sensational Character of Art T^E first force of a work of art is its appeal to the senses. This is direct and immediate. It is the physi- cal effect, ahiiost utterly unescapable whenever there is presented to anyone a vigorous composition in color or in tone or a strong rhythm of song or of motion. Religion which has disdained the arts as sensuous has not, therefore, escaped sensationalism. It has developed the sensa- tional preacher. He is the man who preaches for a sensuous effect. He has greater success usually in getting people to come to hear what he has to say than in having something worth while to say when they get there. This is not always true but it is so very commonly. Our most thoughtful minis- ters, those under whose preaching the more serious-minded people desire to sit, are little given to sensational preaching. Their form is good form but it is not nowadays florid, overly dramatic, or eccentric form. They touch upon timely themes of the day, not as advertising captions but for real discus- sion. Your true and proper sensationalist develops rhetoric, gesture, perhaps even hair cuts, newspaper themes, and peculiar exercises calculated to rouse interest and produce a momentary enjoyment or excitement. Sensationalism is necessary for religion, but not this kind. I would rather that my boys should be appealed to by the noble sensationalism of excellent paintings, brilliant music, and noble ritual than by the sensationalism of an evangelist crawling about on all fours like a bear show. However much we may desire to spiritualize our religion, we are not disembodied spirits, we are compact together of flesh and spirit — "Nor soul helps flesh more now, than flesh helps soul." Our view of human nature and of the bodily life is very different from that of the Refonnation theology-. Our new • 63- Art & Religion utilization of the fine arts is to be based upon the new psychology and upon the new theology rather than upon Calvinism. The impulses of the flesh may develop downward. But also every human instinct may become the root of a possible spiritual virtue. If our task is still partly to mortify the flesh, it is also to understand it and use it for good. If spir- itual experience is an incorporeal thing, its beginning is usually something born in the mystery of the bodily being. We do not have the same reasons for fearing the arts that the Puritan had, as he did not have our reasons for using them. Sensationalism has always been deep and constant in human life and in religion and always will be during the life of earth. The Hebrew prophets not only used abundant imagery in speech but actual physical objects and eccentrici- ties of conduct to capture attention and press home their message. It seems questionable whether Jesus performed his works of healing for this purpose, but hardly questionable that his approach to the city on the Day of Palms was a form of sensational appeal. It may be said of it, as it may be said of other sensational conduct, that it was done for effect. Precisely so, for that is the way to be effective. Our modern church has rather too little than too much of appeal to the senses. It is not sufficiently interesting or suffi- ciently thrilling. I do not at all object to the sensational methods of the orator or of the evangelist in their proper place. But the sensational preacher should not be the pastor and teacher of a normal church, large or small. That form of appeal to the senses is in the long run neither so effective nor so beneficial as quieter forms — music, decoration, architec- ture, and liturgy. The oratorical type may be more thrilling at the moment but less lasting than the rhythms set going by the finer arts. The older religions all make more effective use of the noble and more commendable forms of appeal to the senses. One would not expect to get the following testimony from a modern free churchman, but here it is: "The Japanese know how to produce effects, they have a sure instinct as to the moods in which a person should stand before a temple or ■64- The Sensational Character of Art shrine. Hence they study the approaches to their sacred spots ahnost as much as they do the elaboration of the spots them- selves. The Shintoists have their torii or more likely lines of torii before each shrine; the Buddhists love to place their houses of worship and meditation in the midst of great trees or on the tops of hills which they approach by moss-covered staircases of stone. . . . When one has removed his shoes and penetrated to the inner shrine and stands on the soft matted floor before the image of the Great Buddha, the subtle power of idolatry when wedded to high art becomes apparent in an unmistakable way. The sense of solemnity, of quietness, of peace is in the very air, and there comes to one a new sympathy toward those who know only this way of consolation."* These beautiful and skillful arrangements are planned for their direct and immediate ejffect upon the senses and they are effective. Nor would one naturally expect the testimony written by one of the most distinguished New England clergymen of the nineteenth century, a leader and representative of the best thought of his day. Dr. Theodore Munger describes the cathedrals and cathedral services of the English Church. And then he adds: "Here lies the secret of public worship; we do not worship because we feel like it, but that we may feel. The feeling may have died out under the pressure of the world, but coming together from mere habit, and starting on the level of mere custom, we soon feel the stirring of the wings of devotion, and begin to rise heavenward on the pin- nacles of song and prayer. This is well understood in Eng- land, and underlies the much criticised 'Cathedral sys- tem.' . . . Here is a mighty fact tremendously asserted; it forces a sort of inevitable reverence, not the highest and purest indeed, but something worth having. It becomes the conservator of the faith, and in the only way in which it can be conserved, through the reverent sentiment and poetry of our nature. . . . The main value of the established church is its lofty and unshaken assertion of the worth of worship — keeping alive reverence, which is the mother of morality, and furnishing a public environment for the common faith. * Cornelius H. Patton in the Congregationalist, September li, 1920. .65- Art & Religion This system of form and worship is kept up because the high- est culture and intelligence in England believe in it."* Sensationalism of some kind we must have if religion is to be effective. It is simply a question of a critical examina- tion of the best kinds of appeal to the senses that may be properly developed for our own time and temper. Human nature is what it is, we must touch it where we may. There is not only an attracting power, but an educating power, in right devices of artistry carefully and conservatively han- dled. I am not disposed to quarrel, though I cannot agree, with the objector who does not wish to use any form of appeal to the senses. But let not the man who objects to a richer development of the fine arts in religion ask approval for the coarser arts of rhetoric and eccentricity on the part of sensational preachers or the more bungling arts of worship current amongst our American churches. The question before us, if we are candid, is not whether we shall have sensationalism in some sort, but whether we shall have it in the more refined and improved forms which are at once just as effective and also more natural and productive of the healthy emotional life. * Munger, "The Freedom of the Faith," pp. 209-211. 66 Chapter VIII : A Brief for the Cultus EVERY religion maintains a system of religious acts and exercises: this is its Cultus. When religion be- comes so largely practical as greatly to minimize the enjoyment of it, there arise differing forms of Cults, systems of self-realization. Every nation which arrives at self-con- sciousness does so by some process of "Kultur," the total system of patriotic values. Culture is a perennial human interest, the enjoyment of the "history of the human spirit." Modern Protestantism is becoming weak on the side of its Cultus. It needs freshly to consider the necessity and char- acter of religious culture. First of all, religion is an experience of Divinity before it becomes righteousness in the midst of Humanity. The old antinomy between action and contemplation is ever with us. Fought out many times in the history of religion, it will doubtless be fought out many times more. Always the prac- tical moralist accuses the religious mystic for his lack of interest in development, morality, the timely issues of the day. Always the mystic wonders what the practical man is driving at, always questions the truth of progress. Always he asks concerning mechanical inventions, "Do they culti- vate the soul?" Each party has almost wrecked religion many times. Artists and mystics have often made religion formal and unmoral, needing reformation. Moralists have never been able to establish and conserve their new systems without the aid of artistry and of worship. It is a great mistake to regard a system of ethics or a code of laws merely from the point of view of utility. It is rather more true to regard moral systems as the means to religious ends. Religion is the end, morality the means, rather than contrariwise. The whole history of culture, religious, ethical, and artistic, testifies this. We have just fought a great war for our faith that the State with its "Kultur" is secondary ■ 67. Art & Religion and the fortunes of persons primary. Persons are the ends for which the State exists, not means to be sacrificed to the god of the State. Even codes of laws reveal an aesthetic interest. The ani- mus of many regulations, not only in primitive sacred law, but in modern statute law, is not merely utilitarianism, but an interest in orderliness for its own sake, good form, decorum, beauty. The world of the arts in toto is not a practical world. It expresses and reproduces experiences of the spirit, leisure for which has been purchased by the active life. The artist is not interested primarily in activity, or in the results of activity. His interest is personal or universal. No great novel, for instance, holds our attention by a recital of accomplishments. Even the stories of adventure and bold achievement care not so much for the value of the achieve- ment as for the moving portrayal of the hero's stout heart. The novel is not interested in what a man does but only in what at last he is. Religion is not religion unless it is primarily the culti- vation of the divine experience, fostering the culture of the soul as its supreme end. Secondly^ all religions have so regarded themselves, and have sought and have cultivated the religious experience. They may or may not have had a good effect upon morals, they have invariably reproduced for themselves the purely religious experience. The survey of these facts is the source of the oft-repeated assertion that man is incurably religious. Every historic religion has insisted that life was not all work, but also worship. Even the most prophetic periods in reli- gious history have speedily established some form of Cultus, some awareness of self in the approved role, some system of enjoying the ideal of action set forth in the prophetic word. No religion has become so thoroughly moralized as to lose its sense of the value of the religious experience. Even the Ethical Culture Society, not claiming to be religious at all, by its very style and title publishes its belief in the "culture" of its standards, not merely in the prosaic discussion of them. That is, it seeks to bathe itself in an experience of contem- • 68. A Brief for the Cultus plation as well as to inform itself concerning the rights and wrongs of human action. The purely religious experience is, of course, never wholly divorced from the moral ideal. Even devotion to a Cultus which seems to include no moral laws involves a moral choice. Every religious experience thus contains moral im- plications. In Christianity, the moral ideal is very completely involved in the religious faith. So the culture of religion includes the culture of the accompanying ideals of conduct. This is only an added reason for that culture, for right atti- tudes of the spirit toward problems of the practical life need to be not merely discussed but cultivated. Great moral prin- ciples and precepts need not only to be formulated and pro- claimed but also to be viewed imaginatively, attended to and inculcated. Thirdly, for assisting the reproduction of the desired reli- gious experience, all religions have used some form of Ap- paratus, some Ritual. No social, spiritual experience has been maintained without external and formal aids. Merely getting together is the first of these aids. Merely keeping silent is a ritual in itself, and by no means the least formal or difficult exercise. The Society of Friends in devising this usage did so not because they would minimize spiritual cul- ture, but precisely because they would magnify it. The sing- ing of a hymn is both easy and informal compared to a pub- lic exercise of silence. The Quakers, incidentally, developed other and powerful ritual forms, such as peculiar dress, speech, and manners. So whether the Apparatus used be simple and bare, or whether it be a highly elaborate drama utilizing all the fine arts, it is, nevertheless. Apparatus for the purpose of assisting the culture of the religious expe- rience. Fourthly, these exercises might in the main be classified as religious acts in contrast to those doings which might be called moral acts. All human action is in some sense moral, it has to do with human relations. There would appear to be some elevated persons capable of casting upon all the acts of their common life some religious significance. Yet for the sake of clearness we are justified in making distinctions, .69. Art & Religion and in holding that there is such a thing as a religious act, an exercise of the human faculties, whether with or without bodily action, such as is something more than mere thought, and something other than can be described in terms of human or moral relations, though it may include these. Prayer is such an act. The singing of a hymn might be such an act. The joint recital of a creed is such an act. Swearing allegiance to a moral program may be such an act. The ad- ministration of a sacrament and participation in it are such acts. All such acts, of however great or small physical expres- sion, are more or less religious according to the inner and real participation. The sum total of the public religious acts of a religious society or of a community constitutes its Cultus. Fifthly^ some system for the culture of the religious life, maintained by the exercises of a Cultus, is necessary to the perpetuation of religion. To begin with, this is religion, this is the experience of divine communion for which the moral life is only the means. It is this Cultus, moreover, which makes religion popular because enjoyable. Moral tasks are irksome, the requirements of duty are severe, the vicissi- tudes of life are often painful, the record of achievement is usually unsatisfying. Only an experience of religion, only the committal of all to God and the fresh vitality by Him bestowed can yield the highest joys. I know that many peo- ple come to church out of habit and some out of duty; I believe that most come for the joy of it. Whether the Cultus consists of fervid, free, and easy recitals of conversion expe- riences ; or of a simple, dignified service of hymns, readings, and prayers, together with a strong and enthusing sermon; or follows the canon of the Mass, it is the emotional lift that the people come for. This enjoyable experience is necessary to the life of reli- gion, not only as a perpetual attraction, but as an unfailing source of vitality in the personal lives of the worshipers, and vitality in the life of their common cause. Moral tasks are not only irksome but exhausting. The religious expe- rience recreates the power for them. In the long run, the energy for reforming society and evangelizing the world • 70- A Brief for the Cultus comes from the continued exercises of devotion which con- stitute the religious Cultus. Sixthly^ modern religion has a deficient Cultus. If our ordinary American churches had in themselves sufficiently supplied human need in this direction, there need not have been developed the so-called Cults. We have only ourselves to blame that we have given cause for these one-sided move- ments by our own one-sidedness. The intense modern inter- est in the moralizing of religion has undoubtedly swung the pendulum far away from the culture of religion. We are not yet through with this moralizing process, in some ways only beginning it. The social gospel is the cry of the hour, and rightly so. It needs no denial of this to sound a warning respecting the other side of religion. Indeed, secu- lar sociologists themselves are in these days beginning to revalue the instructive, holding, dignifying, stabilizing worth of public religion. Meanwhile, the best Protestant minds are so engrossed in the all but overwhelming demands for the development of a new and more thoroughgoing Christian morality, that little attention has been given to the cultural promulgation of the principles and standards already achieved. We need a bigger and better Cultus. We need a more successful Apparatus of self-realization and of God-realization in these times. Moreover, the culture of religion relates itself always, not merely to exercises in contemporary moral conviction, but also, or perhaps rather chiefly, to those timeless inter- ests of human life, those forces and factors of human nature and divine nature which are so largely the same in every time and place. The bulk of the literature of the world re- volves not about the innumerable divergencies of times and places, but about a few great themes of universal human experience. If this be true in the spiritual life of humanity as expressed in its letters, religion cannot do otherwise than take account of this testimony and this perennial human need. It is this fact which makes it possible for religion to develop a series of exercises which will set forth its faith and revivify its convictions and apply its solutions re- .71. Art & Religion specting these few great themes and problems of human existence. It is commonly admitted that in the average Protestant worship, the chief dependence for whatever heightened expe- rience or afflatus is enjoyed, is upon the sermon. The sermon is becoming more and more inadequate to the task. As the level of education in the community rises, and especially the level of cultivation in the arts and letters, this is the more true. Why depend upon the art of rhetoric alone, when other arts also afford rich resources of inspiration? And it is the experience of many that to carry in the sermon the burden of the emotional effect often injures its usefulness as instruc- tion and its candor as discussion. If it is to inspire, it cannot also sufficiently inform. Turn about, its task of instruction gets often in the way of its function of emotional uplift. It would not necessarily minimize the sermon if there could be also a highly successful and moving religious exercise. We have too commonly regarded the other exercises as prepara- tion for the sermon. It is possible to make them complete and wonderful in themselves. Even to regard them as preparatory to the sermon de- mands a vast improvement. The average exercise of public worship today constitutes neither a finished Cultus by itself nor a pertinent, skillful, and dramatic preparation for the sermon. The sermon, at its height, as a great prophetic utter- ance, is sufficient unto itself, and needs no considerable preparation or outside assistance. But we would do well to recognize the irregularity of the prophetic gift. It is an extremely conceited and presumptuous claim, which is fre- quently asserted, that the preacher's voice is regularly the voice of the prophet. The Vords teacher and priest suggest a more humble and accurate description of what the min- ister is in the usual services for public worship. But if this be true, it is fatuous to allow the most of all conscious and subconscious judgments about this matter to fall under the categor)^ of prophecy. It is better to aspire to be a good teacher and priest than constantly to assume the role of prophet while the people for long-continued periods suffer the dearth of any genuinely prophetic word, and at the same .72. A Brief for the Cultus time arc poorly fed and faintly stirred by a bungling and amateur exercise of devotion. These times of instability need amongst other things a more rich and full and dependable presentation of the rounded and complete message of the Christian faith than can be derived from the average sermonizer. They certainly need, also, a more quiet and informing presentation of truth than can possibly come from the highly picturesque and rhetorical style of utterance which so often characterizes the exceptionally brilliant preacher. The cul- ture of the spiritual life is insufficiently assisted by the ordi- nary sermon ; by the extraordinary sermon, it is often misled, neglected, or directed into incidental and spasmodic consid- erations. Moreover, almost by definition the culture of the spiritual life is partly a matter of self-energy, and self- realization, and self-devotion, and not altogether a thing that can be done for you. The most stimulating sermon in the world leaves much to be desired as the only method of the Cultus. Response, meditation, participation on the part of the worshiper are more profound and beneficial than fitful excitement. Silence and composure, self-exercise and spirit- ual effort are greatly lacking in our American life. We are little practiced in the tutelage of the spiritual faculties and the discipline of the spiritual powers. Adequate provision for these things needs something richer, something at once more stable and developing than brilliant sermonizing. Those churches whose vitality seems to depend upon a succession of exceptional orators are not well-grounded institutions. As a matter of fact, they are disappearing one by one, losing out to the slow but sure competition of a more churchly and broader based program of spiritual culture. Seventhly^ objections to the Cultus have been largely based upon its alleged nonmoral and unchanging character. There is undoubtedly a tendency for anything admittedly an end in itself to disregard its relations to other desirable ends. Every system of Cultus has displayed this tendency, the evangelical types no less than the ritual forms. Enjoyed for its own sake it easily becomes an oft-repeated celebration, •73- Art & Religion its own justification, withdrawn from the concerns of practical life. The first thing to say is that in a measure this is not only good but also right. One sometimes wonders why the wor- shiper in the church, accused of fostering his own pleasure and failing in the application of his faith to the affairs of institutional and public life, does not sometimes turn and demand that the accusers give him a little peace while they direct their efforts against the actor and the painter and the singer, and other devotees of the spiritual life. From one point of view, people have at least as good a right to enjoy the worship of God in a church as they have to enjoy a play, or an opera in the theater. It seems not to occur to anyone to accuse the regular attendant upon the productions of chamber music of being uninterested in social settlements or prohibition campaigns. It were better for religion not to be ashamed but to glory in the Cultus for its own sake. In the next place, it is not true historically that the Cultus has been nonmoral. The primitive priest and the typical priest has been always a lawgiver and teacher. The cults which come nearest to being unmoral are not those most highly elaborated but rather the modern non-Christian movements centered in narrow forms of evangelicalism or in revived forms of apocalyptic hope. No religious move- ment is weaker ethically than the present-day revival of Messianism, centering its religious experience about the expectancy of world renewal by the literal reappearance of Christ in physical form. Of commendable piety on its reli- gious side, it is deadening in its moral effects. It tends defi- nitely to the withdrawal of its devotees from the strenuous human effort to improve society and all its institutions by the divine powers given to men to these ends. The other objection is that the Cultus historically has been too unyielding to change. Two things are to be said concerning this charge. The objection is not really against the use of forms but rather against the premises of thought behind the forms. Perhaps forms need to be changed, certainly the content of ideas in them needs to be changed, but not the use of forms. •74- A Brief for the Cultus In another chapter I am presenting some facts which display the historical influence of the artist, that is, the formalist, as a prophet of change. That whole argument might well be inserted in this brief at this point. The other thing to say is that the charge is partially ad- mitted and claimed to be valuable rather than otherwise. Surely at a time like this, so confused in morals, so lacking in generally accepted ethical standards, the stabilizing value of any great system of Cultus is not to be underestimated. The prevalent individualism in ethics needs no encourage- ment but rather a tighter rein. The weakness of liberalism is its divisiveness. If the best moral aspiration of the day could be defined, crystallized, and promulgated in a great system of Cultus, its aims could be given far more practical effect in the national life. No liberal wishes to curtail the liberty of prophesying, but the voice of prophecy is by very definition the voice of protest, the cry for change. The very name of Protestantism declares its one weakness. Can the permanent nurture of the spiritual life be founded upon protest alone*? Morality is always suffering the dilemma of the old and the new. The conservation of the elder values, and the admission of the newer lights seem always to be contending factors. It is certainly no solution of the dilemma simply to choose sides. Some day concrete religion must solve the problem of being and becoming. It is a practical no less than a philosophical question. Cannot the lovers of liberty and the claims of prophecy ad- mit the necessity of establishing for at least a brief space from time to time, a system of dogmas, set forth and taught for the guidance and the stability of customary life*? Can- not the conservatives, who fear change, be willing to incor- porate amongst these dogmas themselves some principle of change that will serve to guarantee freedom and introduce the desirable new? A world fixed and set by the culture of old experience is stagnant and tyrannical. But a world per- petually agitated by discordant voices of change is a no less unhappy state in which to live. We value the Old Testament prophets and applaud their •75- Art & Religion protestantism. We take sides with them against the unmor- ality of the ancient Hebrew Cultus. It is, nevertheless, a profound mistake not to value that Cultus. Without it there had been nothing to protest against. It was the establish- ment, the crystallized experience, the holding, stabilizing force, which unified and centralized the national life. If it taught the wrong things, it taught something. If it resisted change, it was at least a power of resistance. It made of the people of Israel a powerful nation and did not leave them in the half-barbarous life of contending tribesmen. So always, if every historic Cultus has been chargeable with formalism and conservatism, it has also been chargeable with unification, cohesion, racial integration, and national survival. Becoming is nothing if there is no Being behind it. The Cultus is the perennial Background of Change. There is another fact of current life which needs notice in this connection. If our churches are in these days under- interested in anything that might properly be called a Cultus, preferring rather everything that has to do with the timely issues of practical life, this condition is vaguely un- satisfactory to the flower of our youth. If the young are the great adventurers into the unknown and untried paths of the new, they are also generally occu- pied with the discovery of the precious treasures in the inherited culture of civilized life. Without exactly knowing it, they come back from college and find the churches lack- ing in culture. They are offended at the crudity of the speech, manners, and forms of religious life. Having found delight in the artistic and literary deposit as opened up to them in the schools, they find no comparable satisfactions in the religious world. If the schools have failed to give them this delight, then the schools have failed. If they have succeeded, it is a loss to the society of the time if that early prompting to culture is submerged and inhibited in the practical world. Or, if it is not lost, it turns for sustenance away from the churches to theaters, or clubs and other secular centers of the culti- vated life. I have failed to be clear at all, if it is not by this .76. A Brief for the Cultus time apparent that Cultus and Culture have deeper con- nections than a common derivative root word. Eighthly^ a modern Cultus is possible. We have perhaps too easily assumed that it is no longer possible to devise any- thing in ritual comparable to the great systems of Cultus in times past. We think we are not sufficiently naive, that we are too introspective and analytical and unchildlike to share the pageantry of a great celebration. Our enactments are dramatic and not ritualistic. We look upon pageants rather than ourselves participating in the original primary human actions of which pageants are only the pale representations. Nevertheless, I should like to have walked in the Pan- athenaic Procession. I should like to have made the dev- otees' progress through the great pylons from lower and larger court to higher and smaller court, and on so far as I could go toward the last and inmost shrine of such a temple as that of Medhinet Habu. Certainly it appears dif- ficult to conceive of man, thoroughly modernized, as ever again capable of enjoying the breathless delay and anxious expectancy with which the reappearance of the high priest on the great Day of Atonement was awaited by those who stood in the court of Israel celebrating their most solemn sanctification and renewal. We seem to be incapable of so keen a feeling as the hazard of life, the danger of divinity, or the peril of godless- ness. We enjoy these things onl}^ in reproductions of the drama or of the imagination. Yet I am not content with Miss Jane Harrison, unless I misread her, to describe the history of these things as the story of the perennial neces- sity for ritual to become merely art. Is there no way to com- plete the circle by utilizing the arts to bring us again to hours of noble worship? Despite the fact that we may be no longer childlike, that we seem to be such inveterate self- observers, I believe it to be possible to proceed in the direc- tion of a genuine Cultus. But we must begin very humbly and simply. It is easy to become artificial and bizarre. There are three open oppor- tunities for improvement and growth. Quietly and naturally we can improve our ordinary pub- '11' Art & Religion lie worship in many ways — by simpler, nobler, and more beautiful church buildings; by altogether more pertinent and better disposed religious music; by high points of stimu- lus in the placing of a painting, a window, or a statue if we can afford it; by a more unified and climactic order of ser- vice ; by patient attention at many little points in the admin- istration of the sacraments ; by better prepared prayers ; and by more instruction for securing spiritual effort and reverent expectancy on the part of the people. Another opportunity is that of making the most of special occasions. In almost every church and community through the years, there are occasions and days which can be more effectively celebrated, special union services between churches, community recitals, community discussions, pa- triotic meetings, festivals of the church year, and other such like. These will afford many a chance for some simple com- mon recital, mutual avowal, or even dramatic representa- tion. In this connection, we should much more frequently call upon musicians and composers for especially prepared works. The organist of a great city church should be capable of preparing fresh music of his own writing for responsive services at the Christmas, Lenten, Easter, and other seasons, for memorial or dedication exercises, services in which some of the great themes and experiences of the spiritual life might be set forth with moving power by the combination of all the arts. We are undoubtedly entering upon a kind of life in which the community consciousness will play a great part and demand its appropriate and adequate expression by these means. In addition to these, there should be many more experi- ments and efforts in the way of small groups and classes gathered for the culture of the spiritual life, such as Mrs. Porter's Discussion Clubs in New Haven. Perhaps we should all copy and extend the Methodist class meeting system. Special services for the unwell and the tired may be held in churches strong enough to provide a varied min- istry. There should be week-day hours of prayer in the open church. Our larger and better Protestant churches have .78. 'to*- ..-^-J"^ 1 r,- t" r . y ■ ^- \ Kixr-''^-' CARVED OAK TRIPTYCH 'The Supper at Emmaus," for Emmanuel Church, Baltimore, Maryland. Waldemar H. Ritter, Architect; I. Kirchmayer, Sculptor. A Brief for the Cultus already revived the older custom of keeping the church building open and ready for meditation and prayer all the days of the week. This will be greatly extended in the early future. Moreover, there is need for a new prayer book. The modern cults with their manuals of private spiritual exercise and devotion have not made great inroads upon the bodies of Christians furnished with a book of prayers. It is to be hoped that soon some group of gifted and progressive leaders will begin the preparation of a Christian's Book of Devotion, which will contain a modern guide to Bible reading, a col- lection of prayers new and old, and perhaps other material. Meanwhile every family may be urged to possess a copy of the Book of Common Prayer; or "Prayers, Ancient and Modern," selected by Mary Tileston; or some other collec- tion of prayers and proposals for meditation. These suggestions by no means exhaust the possibilities. They are merely intended to intimate some simple and for the most part modest ways in which it is possible to begin an extended revival of the culture of religion. Let anyone utilize them all, and he will have a noble Cultus already. Whatever else hereafter may be, no one can tell. The temper of the new age will be far different from that just past. It will find itself and express itself according to its own genius. But there are already many signs, unless we fall backward into discordant and chaotic life generally, that the new age will seek to cultivate its ideals and hopes in more brilliant forms than we now use, and inculcate its standards by a more effective mode of religious education, and devote itself to enjoying the "history of the human spirit" and the pres- ence of the Divine Spirit by usages and forms that will constitute a great historic Cultus. 81. Chapter IX : Prophet and Priest ' TrIE conflict between priest and prophet is as old as ; history and it is not yet settled. Priests and prophets ! are always at odds. They always have been and | they are now. \ Priests have always stood for order and stability, the | maintenance of things as they are; prophets have always ' produced disorder and change and hoped for things as they j should be. Priests are conservers and instructors; prophets j are radicals and destructors. ■ The conflict goes on because we have not yet learned to j conserve the ancient and at the same time take on the new; \ we have as yet failed to solve the dilemma of stability and ; progress. We think we believe in progress, but usually resent ' it when we see it, for it always hits us at the sorest spot, it always strikes where we least expect. We assume that we j have an open ear to new teaching, but when it comes, we i cry out in dismay: Oh, yes, I believe in progress, but I had ! no idea you meant that. I can't accept that. We go on to ! complain of the new doctrine: Why, that subverts every- ' thing. Where are we, anyway, if that is adopted? But that is precisely what prophecy is, some new doctrine that is ' strong enough to subvert everything. i There was in an ancient day a priest by the name of j Amaziah at the famous sanctuary of Bethel. His king and i patron, Jeroboam II, was strong and successful. Commerce I was good, the arts of life were advanced, religious observ- ance was popular and elaborate. Amaziah conducted the I burnt offerings and peace offerings, taught the children to 1 observe the fast days, instructed the people in the moral f law, and passed to and fro in the solemn assemblies. He was j evidently a faithful priest. Then along came Amos the | prophet and criticised everything. He said that the poor were being oppressed and the needy exploited and that the women •82. Prophet and Priest were too luxurious. Moreover, he claimed that the Lord had no delight in their priestly offerings, anyway, and would not smell in their solemn assemblies. Yea, rather, for all their sins the Lord would destroy the house of Jeroboam and lay waste the land. This was more than Amaziah could en- dure, so he "sent to Jeroboam king of Israel, saying, Amos hath conspired against thee in the midst of the house of Israel : the land is not able to bear all his words. Also, Amaziah said unto Amos, O thou seer, go, flee thee away into the land of Judah, and there eat bread, and prophesy there: but prophesy not again any more at Bethel: for it is the king's chapel, and it is the king's court." To this Amos replied that the Lord had sent him and proceeded with his denunciation. This story is a typical picture of prophecy and its obstruc- tion by the priesthood. The priest teaches personal and indi- vidual matters; the prophet carries these up to some na- tional or universal view for fresh examination and revision. The priest seeks the prevalence and power of present morals and customs as they are maintained by rites and forms ; the prophet breaks present forms to lay foundations for a better morality that shall be. The priest relies on some ancient sanction for his sacred authority; the prophet claims the authority of immediate inspiration. It is a small and inadequate conception of the prophet to regard him as one who foretells events. The true prophet is not concerned with foretelling events, but with foretelling the destiny of the new view of life which he has received. The true prophet receives the divine inspiration of some great new truth, some new way of looking at life. Thence- forth life as it is appears wrong to him; he criticises and condemns it. He does not know future events. But what he does know is that somewhere, sometime, all things, govern- ment and commerce, morals public and private, must come round to his idea, must square themselves with his new truth. He throws his word into the stream of history and lets it work. This is what Elijah did, and Amos and Jesus, Luther and Wendell Phillips. We have thought of prophets as religious leaders whose • 83- Art & Religion inspiration was acknowledged and whose word was received. This is because we look back so far on the most of them, and also because it is hard to believe they have anything in common with us nowadays. The fact is that, at the time, the prophet is almost always unpopular and rejected. The New Testament honors the Old Testament prophets, but in their own days the Old Testament prophets were not so honored. Jesus often thought of himself as a prophet and had the usual prophetic experience — "A prophet is not without honor, save in his own country." And out of his own bitter experience of rejection he thought of the prophets of old as he wept over the great city, "Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee." Priests are teachers of the laws of life as they are received, upholders of the current customs and practices, mainstaying traditions, conservative because their business is to conserve the good that men already have. They are therefore none too friendly to prophets who protest and oppose tradition, who try to break down forms in the name of inner and spiritual light. The appearance of the prophet has always troubled the priest. What shall he do"? If the prophet begins to gain popular support the priest declares that he is crazy. This has often been done and is not unlike the suggestion which President Hadley says that "hard-headed business men make regarding poets, professors and other idealists 'That they have a bee in their bonnets.' " If this ridicule does not succeed, the prophet is persecuted. Amaziah the priest ordered Amos out of Bethel; Isaiah probably died a martyr to his prophetic truth; Jeremiah was tried for his life in the royal court in Jerusalem; Socrates was poisoned; John Huss was burned alive; Luther was hounded and excommunicated; and more than one professor has been driven from his university chair. Yet the word of true prophets has prevailed and is prevailing. People are always looking back to old prophets to honor those that are dead, and failing to see the live ones present with them. And yet — there is something to say for the priest. If the true prophet often suifers persecution and martyrdom, he • 84- Prophet and Priest usually receives, at last, superior honors. The priest is never likely to receive either. When the prophetical storm has passed and the church and state are strewn with wreckage, the priest must take up the slow, hard work of reconstruc- tion; he must gather up the fragments of old and new and make a practical building. When the final issue of anti- slavery prophecy had been settled by the Civil War, there remained the wreckage of the old South, and long pains of reconstruction were necessary before the new South began to appear. When the great prophets of the Reformation pulled down the whole structure of the mediaeval church in several nations, someone had to go to work to build another structure that would preserve the results and pass them on to other generations. This has proved to be so hard a task that the priests of Protestantism have not yet devised as good a system for conserving sanctions and standards as the old one was. The work of the priest is a difficult one. He must take the new truths of the prophet and the great general principles laid down and he must study and apply them to particular conduct. He must tell people just what the great principle means in their homes, in their work, and in personal morals. He must say what is right and wrong in each special instance in such a way as to induce general agreement. The prophet disintegrates old standards; the priest must integrate new ones; and that is a very hard thing to do. It is disastrous to life to be all the while in a prophetic whirlwind. Society needs a hundred years or so of quietness and stability to make civilization possible. The Priest is a Teacher. But how shall he teach the youth, if there be no general agreement about right and wrong which can be conserved and maintained for a season *? How shall he instruct if there be no structure to put in*? How shall childhood be guided and builded up into the right if you cannot say: This is the truth accepted among us, these are the standards society holds, this is the way you should go, walk ye in it? The priest is not therefore to be too seriously blamed for becoming a dogmatist. This is the func- tion we have assigned him. He must integrate and construct, •85- Art & Religion collect and sort and arrange his materials, and build a habit- able house of truth. He can, of course, do much more than priests ever have done to prevent the tyranny of old dogmas. He can say at the end of every list of standards or ideals: Moreover, it is one of the tenets of our system to be always expecting change and always working for progress ; it is one of the articles of our faith to make earnest with the doctrine of the continued revelations of the divine Spirit. This, too, is a dogma, but one that turns the flank of the dilemma of prophet and priest. Yet the solution is easier in theory than in practice. Protestant ministers are expected to be both priest and prophet, but few succeed. Many are greatly to be blamed for becoming no less priestly, dogmatic, and crystallized than the Catholic type. Others have become so individualis- tic and prophetic as gravely to threaten the whole stability of Protestantism. Witness the independent movements of theater and hall in every large city, the prevalence of timely topics in innumerable pulpits, the many popular preachers who center attention and devotion upon themselves to the weakening of the institution, and, in general, the failure to recognize the priestly element in the function of the modem clergyman. It is not for social reformers and zealots to be too severe in their condemnation of men who know what they are doing and why, when they hold steadily to their humble priestly task of teaching the youth standards and ideals as they are, while waiting for the prophets to agree among themselves about the faiths and works that are next to engage human devotion and energy. The Priest is a Spiritual Adviser. As such, he has to do not so much with those timely and social questions which are the interest of the prophet as with the timeless concerns of the individual life which are essentially the same whether the person live here or in Mars, in one age or another — birth, death, and the beating sun, and the arts of gracious living. With what spirit and fortitude shall a man be pre- pared to meet loss and defeat, sickness and death, and every evil hour? With what spiritual mastery shall a man control .86. Prophet and Priest the experiences of temptation and success and richest With what faith and hope shall a man envision his destiny*? Admonition and exhortation, comfort, the resolution of doubt, the healing of the inly blind, these all are the uses of a good priest and true. He is friend and fatherly confessor, counselor, guide, and man of God, bringing near the fresh peace and joy of the timeless and eternal world. He invites the strong to bear the infirmities of the weak, and in his church provides them a definite and ever ready medium for that ministry, varied, adaptable, and permanent. He carries to lonely, sick, and sorrowing persons the assurances of the faith, assurances, believe me, out of my own humble expe- rience, more than doubly strong because not merely his own and personal but rather of his office, representing the strong body of believers and loyal workers behind him and around him in the church, whose servant he is, of whose word and faith he is but the mouthpiece: assurances received also be- cause conveyed by one set apart to ponder holy things and pray for all souls. This makes very respectable the quiet men who prefer to give themselves to this sacred calling rather than to become sensational preachers or meddling politicians. The Priest is a Pastor and Bishop. He is a shepherd and overseer, keeping watch and ward of the flock committed to his care. He is an evangelist, seeking the wandering and the weary. His business is the cure of souls. Always at the background of his consciousness is concern for the growth and development of persons. He sees others as they cannot see themselves and longs to help them correct their faults and enlarge their ideals. His interest is, like the novelist's, in his characters ; an artistic interest not in what a man does but in what he becomes, not in what he accomplishes but in what at last he is. But his interest is not aloof as is the novel- ist's, for it is sometimes given to him to play, not fate, but divinity in the human story around him. More often than you suppose, a minister will decide some practical question, not according to expediency or organizational efficiency, but according to the yield of character influence upon the persons involved. •87- Art & Religion The Priest is an Artist. He is charged with the develop- ment and maintenance of the cultus, the offices of public worship, marriage and burial, and the administration of sacraments. He addresses not the mind alone but the feel- ings and the imagination. He uses the arts of speech and of ritual to aid in the reproduction of spiritual experience. With the problems of public worship other chapters are concerned. Here may well come in a word respecting the more private functions of the priest as artist, as on the occa- sions of marriage and burial. A ceremony of the priest is precisely like a poem or other work of art in that it enables us to say to each other what we should otherwise leave unsaid or conceal. One of my friends who sent his only son to the war has written a little book of very beautiful sonnets setting forth some of the noblest feelings and faiths I have seen expressed. He would hardly bring himself to say baldly and nakedly in bare prose and open statement what he has told in the poems. He would feel an immodesty in such an utter exposure of his deepest heart. The form of the verse is a cloak partly con- cealing the passion beneath, yet enabling its release and expression. So are we all reticent, bearing in silence what we cannot speak save with tears, not wishing to wear our hearts upon our sleeves. The ceremony speaks for us. We cannot utter all or a part of that majesty of respect we feel for a human life that has left its house of clay, or that solicitude and love with which we would follow lives newly wedded, nor can we willingly keep silence. The ceremony speaks for us, its cloak of form at once concealing and expressing our inner passion. So, also, every other cultural exercise of religion is a work of art and the priest is an artist, not only in presentation like the actor and singer, but in origination and creation as sculptor and composer. His work should be approached with the same canons of appreciation as that of other artists nor should there be anything falsely sacrosanct about him to ward off judgment on the success or failure of his artistry. All these things may be regarded as priestly functions without any claim to peculiar power or authority, and with- • 88. Prophet and Priest out any denial of the typical Protestant doctrine of the priesthood of all believers. They might perhaps as well be defined under the terms pastor or minister. But they are certainly not prophetic functions. The term minister in its specific meaning includes the prophetic. I do not favor the official designation ot the clergyman as priest., pleading only a more general popular sense of the labors, responsibilities, and values suggested by that name. The pastor of a modern church must be jealous of his work and word as a prophet, a severe and perilous calling. It is disastrous for religion if the voices for social justice, the prophetic demands for righteousness in all departments of life, be found chiefly outside rather than inside the insti- tution of religion, and we are, alas, close to this disaster. Yet some of these voices are not worthy of attention when they lightly estimate the quiet, patient, and regular work of those who aid in the maintenance of public order and morale through established institutions. It is always easier to stand off and criticise than to share the long labor of successful moral integration, construction, and conservation. It would be a profound benefit to society if there might develop among prophets outside and inside the church, lay- men and artists and ministers and all, a fuller appreciation of the worth of such priestly functions as I have merely sketched. Part of the failure of the ministry is not its own, but the excessive demands upon the thought and labor of a single person. It is enough to be a good priest. Why expect the minister to be also several other things'? He himself will wish sometimes to speak as a prophet, a prophet of the most high God, but his usual and daily labor is that of a priest, not a worker of magic nor a monger of breaking authority, but a priest after the order of the endless life. 89 Chapter X : The Artist as Prophet ONE of the most important objections to the greater development of the arts on the part of religion is the alleged conservative character of art. Forms are fixed. They perpetuate the ideas which fashion them. They conserve the traditions prevalent at the time of their crea- tion. They maintain in human life, by the power of their beauty, faiths and ideals that otherwise would be discarded. There is much evidence in support of this objection. It is questionable whether mediaeval religion would still be so prevalent in many nations were it not for the vast and im- pressive character of the mediaeval church buildings. Rituals and liturgies tend to be continued in use, however archaic in style, resisting change long after innumerable changes are demanded on the part of progressive spiritual experience. Before coming to the main suggestion in reply to this objection, it is worth noting that there is something good as well as something unfortunate about this conserving power of the arts. Many good things of the past are worth con- serving. Human nature and human experience do not so profoundly change in the course of a thousand years as to invalidate all the elder insights. The religious culture of the future will ever be enriched by the spiritual values of the Bible and also by other expressions of the spiritual life in various older and later times. Many of the prayers in the Anglican Collect are derived from the older liturgies. They belong to us all. They give voice to perennial needs of the human heart and to many of the permanent values of spir- itual experience. In these times of superficial culture, it is more than ever worth while to be surrounded by something that is memorial of the august life of the past. There is a conservatism not narrowing in its effects but broadening. The tendency of religious art to perpetuate the force and • 90- The Artist as Prophet prevalence of the faiths of the past is very far from being unfortunate. There is another tendency of art and of the artist, how- ever, which in the long run is a more sufficient force to counteract any losses ascribed to the conservative character of the arts. The artist is a prophet in his own right no less than are other innovators. There are two ways in which this is true. Artists are not only constantly saying new things or devising new forms, but they have, in the past, many times expressed by their manner something different from the subject matter of their work. First, the artist is one who sees things that other men ignore. If he expresses what he desires to express, it is always some fresh way of looking at things. He is always adding to the world of created beauty. Standing apart from practical life, at least imaginatively, he is little hindered by the prejudices and concerns of the ordinary man. He is not him- self in the "game." Sitting as a spectator, his eyes are clear of the dust and passion of the struggle. I am keenly conscious of a great difficulty here. There is much bad art in the world because of this separation on the part of artists. Perhaps there is no moral evil greater than that of looking upon life as a spectacle. It is contempt of persons. Every artist is in constant danger of this evil point of view. As a man and citizen he is required to be a man among men. As an artist he is required to stand apart and to be an onlooker. I believe that it makes a profound dif- ference as to which is the real self of the artist and which is his assumed dramatic role. If his real self is the spectator, and he merely makes dramatic excursions into real life, I think his art will be bad art. If his real self is man and citizen, and he makes the supremely dramatic effort of imaginative withdrawal, I think his art will be good art. In any case, whether the aloofness be real or assumed, it must be in some profound sense real for the purposes of good artistry. It must be a genuine attempt to see more things and to see them differently than they are seen during the actions of common life. As already suggested in another chapter, this is why the artist has always been accused of .91. Art & Religion lawlessness. And this is why there is no need for liberals to be afraid of him. The historic freshness of art is a great fact, as well as the historic conserving power of the arts. Mr. Bertrand Russell says that "art springs from a wild and anarchic side of human nature; between the artist and bureaucrat there must always be a profound antagonism." The artist is almost always a prophet of change, being dissatisfied with the world of ugly facts, loving the more romantic world that is potentially beautiful. It has been a matter of frequent observation among critics that great artists have oftentimes anticipated by the reach of their imaginative intuitions, points of view later conceived or confirmed in science or politics. Secondly, the artist early began to depict things for their own worth rather than for the purposes of his patron, the religionist. His subject matter immemorially has been the succession of divinities and saints to be represented by statues and paintings, to convey the faiths of religion. But from very ancient days, the artist seemed to peep out from behind his subject matter. He has spoken his own independ- ent word, proclaiming by his lines and colors a message of his own, sometimes even contradicting the subject matter of his work. One or two allusions will illustrate the point. The earlier wall relief drawings amongst the Egyptian antiquities are vigorous, simple, childlike, unsophisticated pictures. It is hard to discover in them — as, for example, in the tombs of Sakkara — much of any separate feeling for beauty on the part of the artist. But the later works of the imperial age are very different. Such wall reliefs as those of the Temple of Seti at Abydos are religious in theme, and strictly religious in the conventional treatment of the figures, but they reveal highly self-conscious canons of artistry on the part of the designer. Despite the subject matter and despite formal requirements as to its treatment, there is a lyrical feeling about lines, and a very advanced concep- tion of composition which conveys to us across these many centuries the artist's separate satisfaction in pure beauty. It is almost impossible to draw any other conclusion from the skill with which the artist has elaborated the various .92. The Artist as Prophet borders about his space and utilized repetitive forms to make a successful decoration. The walls are very beautiful in themselves as decorated surfaces. The same tendency is amply displayed by the Greeks. Perhaps, at the highest point, form and content are so unified that there is no suggestion of the matter we are here discuss- ing. But it is scarcely conceivable that Praxiteles was as much interested in representing the god Hermes as in repre- senting an ideal man. At least, so the great statue at Olym- pia appears to me. The same is true of many of the great works of the Italian Renaissance. Even very early the separate impulse of the artist was manifested. For example, in the Crucifixion scene on Niccola Pisano's pulpit at Pisa, the figure on the cross is not drawn true to life, but gracefully, as though to make a decoration. So also, other figures in the bronze panels by the same artist on the doors of the Baptistery in Florence. I believe that the greatest art is that in which form and content are so thoroughly at one that the total effect is unified. Artists should not be required to say things which they do not themselves believe. The history of their work in the world testifies their revolt when they have been called upon to do so. In this way, the artistic work of many times and places has been definitely prophetic ; that is, it has criticised by its own independent interest in life and the beauty of life, the particular conceptions of the religion of its day. The sugges- tion I am trying to make is quite precisely stated in an address of J. A. Symonds on the New Spirit. "Whatever the subject matter, . . . silent and unperceived, art, by its naturalism, sapped orthodoxy much in the same way as scholarship, by its rationalism, was serving the same pur- pose. "^ There is, therefore, on the whole, nothing to fear from the conservatism of the artist. His conservatism is never so objectionable as that of the creedalist. If works of religious art set forth the conception of the times, so do creeds. But * Symonds, "Last and First," p. 40. •93- Art & Religion when creeds are gone they are of little further worth, while the artist's formulation contains not only a perpetual mes- sage of beauty but a proper conserving memorial of the former values. I seldom read the Nicene Creed or the Heidel- berg Catechism, but very frequently get pleasure and benefit from an excellent copy of one of Bellini's Madonnas on the wall of my study. Perhaps the artist helps as much as any- one in solving the ever recurrent dilemma of conservatism and change. He represents the great conceptions of faith and preserves them, but also by the values of his beautiful form he transcends the particular ideas intimated. There is a permanence about any work of beauty. It is ever old and ever new. High art conserves the apprehensions of the elder ages ; by it we have communion with the fathers. And the highest art never fades. It is always second sight, always revealing, with true prophetic spirit, that things are not what at first sight they appear to be. 94- e ^ ^ •,' Church Unity the Second Parish Church of Boston, Massachusetts, and in the Second Parish Church of Newton, Massachusetts, are distinguished by extensive drawing upon mediaeval liturgi- cal sources, forms, and customs. The services of the Union Church of Winnetka, Illinois, and others, contain prayers from the Book of Common Prayer, together with congrega- tional responses from the same source, or rather from the more ancient sources. The illustrations of this volume will amply reveal the fact, also, of the revival of mediaeval forms in church build- ing. Several liberal churches have restored the altar, some make use of candles, and many have revived the chancel. The rapid increase in the choice of the Gothic style of build- ing, not only amongst the Episcopal churches, but by Methodist, Presbyterian, Congregational, Lutheran, Re- formed, and Baptist parishes, is a notable fact which no one who wishes to study religious tendencies can afford to ignore. These things are very powerful. A solid structure of brick and stone, of large size, and of great beauty, spreads an influence and speaks its message for many years. A Gothic building is in itself a definite message, and probably many of those who have chosen this style were well aware of what it means and deliberately desired to say that thing to the people. All these facts, taken together, constitute a remark- able tendency of many modern men to revalue some of the excellencies of pre-Reformation religion. Meanwhile, other modern men are seeking a way out of the unhappy divisions of Protestantism by the hope of a church which may gather to itself all the spiritual elements and traditions of the community, including the aspirations of the outsider as well as of the churchman. The Commu- nity Church idea is in the air and is in some important instances a concrete experiment. No one has as yet just precisely defined what it is with sufficient clarity to be con- vincing. In general, it is not a Federated Church, nor a Union Church, but something inclusive of these and of other factors besides. I do not know that there is as yet a single organization, strictly speaking, in existence in any community. There are communities in which there is only .125. Art & Religion one Protestant church, having no particular denominational connection. There are towns where there is only one church, and that one connected with a denomination, though some of its members may be active in the national affairs of other bodies. I know of no Community Church which includes Roman Catholics and Jews, unless they have left their previous standing. Portland, Maine, has a town music hall, municipal organ, and organist, where at the public expense there are con- ducted programs of music, at which also — and this is the significant point — there are addresses calculated for the public good, by clergymen of different sects. Something very like this seems to be forecast by the plans on foot in many towns for the construction of Civic or Community Centers. If you will follow the architectural journals for a while, you will run upon designs for a good many such buildings. It is not to be supposed that these buildings will house a program of merely physical or social activities. They will also develop community dramatics and probably many of them become forums for the discussion of public affairs. Here are two definite tendencies in the life of the day, seemingly entirely opposed to each other. But the urgency under each of them is probably much more nearly the same than appears. They are both, at least, profound expressions of the inadequacy of typical Reformation Protestantism as it has been worked out by the logic of individualism, sepa- ratism, and the consequent starvation of the fuller man- hood. Both are dissatisfied with the final product of the Reformation age. The one group would find a more abundant life by the recovery of some of the lost treasures in the total historic spiritual experience of Christendom. The other would en- large the basis of its spiritual life by reaching forward to give expression to the more inclusive and the more coopera- tive ideals of the new democracy. No one can now say how, but it is open for all to forecast and to labor for the inclu- sion of both forms of riches in the life of the future church. The protagonists of the Community Church have not as yet sufficiently valued many of the timeless elements in • 126- vChurch Unity historic Christian experience. They have not sufficiently weighed the profound conservatism of human nature. They have not sufficiently studied history to understand that almost every reformer and prophet has turned to some more ancient and venerable age for the sanction and authority of his message. As Jeremiah recalled the primitive pastoral life of his race, as Jesus quoted the great eighth century prophets, as Luther passed over mediaevalism to rediscover the Scriptures, so every reformer the more readily persuades conservative human nature to the acceptance of his new truth by asserting that it is really not new. The history of human culture is a continuum. Culture in general, including religious culture, will always draw largely upon the past. This does not mean that the values to be discovered in the past are merely antiquarian or artis- tic either. The moral message of the Hebrew prophets is still pertinent and will continue to be so for many genera- tions. The moral implications of the teaching of Jesus are still revolutionary. But if the life of the past is still valuable to us in the sphere of action, where presumably there are to be expected constant changes of standard, how much more may the life of the past be valuable to us in the sphere of beauty and human feelings about it, which is more nearly unchanging in its quality. This means that humanity will still continue to be inspired by the moods, passions, apprehensions, and inner joys of the great souls of the race. Why should this be less true in religion than in literature and the other arts'? The plain conclusion of these facts is that we do not want any Community Church if it means that we are to be cut adrift from the inestimable treasures of devotion that are our Christian inheritance. The inheritance of the near past will perhaps be destined to be no less powerful than that of the more remote days. The average American Christian has no intention whatever of giving up his connection with historic Christianity. However lacking the common Ameri- can church may seem to the critical analyst, whether of the riches of the historic church, or the riches of the coming social light, it is still the most powerful thing in the national • 127 • Art & Religion life. It can be changed and improved ; I do not believe with ; Mr. Jackson, the author of "The Community Church," that '• it can be obliterated. It is a going concern, and with all its ; weaknesses, it is after all the nearest thing we have, both j to the historic treasures and to the future free thought. The ordinary American town still receives more enrich- '• ing contact with the past and more enlivening ideals for ■ the future from the average church than from any other i source. It would be folly for statesmen, political or reli- i gious, to underestimate the resources whether of material i property or of moral idealism in the Protestant churches of : America. ■ The recent vigorous book of the Rev. John Haynes Holmes, "The Revolutionary Function of the Modern , Church," also is skeptical of the values of the old organi- , zations as a basis for the church of the new age. He appears j to be endeavoring to justify the development of a religion i so far eclectic that it no longer regards itself as specifically ] Christian. He sees the individualistic method, as well as the i individualistic philosophy, as the only characteristic of \ Christianity. He is hopeless of organized Christianity get- ! ting away from the sole function of saving persons. "With , the weak, tempted, imperfect individual, the work of the : church must begin; and beyond this weak, tempted, and i imperfect individual, I cannot see that this saving work I can ever go."* For this reason he says that "the churches | of today are not worthy of support." j I fear the prosperity of the typical American Protestant j church, as it is today, almost as much as he does. I also be- ! lieve it to be inadequate to the new age, but I am not hope- j less of it. There is in it more than he credits of the very social j spirit which he sets forth so cogently. There is in it also ; a very reasonable conservatism which is not willing wholly i to lose the continuity and power that it has until the pro- ; posals for change are made much more clearly. And this ( conservatism is the more reasonable, when the carelessness of the average unchurched person is more clearly recognized ; than by these writers. Criticism of the church is. often bom I * The Revolutionary Function of the Modern Church," p. 18. * .128. ■ Church Unity of irresponsibility. The wise social student is cautious about expecting too much from the Outsider, as well as willing to credit the virtues of the Insider. Even Dr. Holmes appeals to Jesus the reformer. He draws a true and moving picture of the supreme effort of Jesus to reform the legal and moral system of the nation as well as to reform persons. Why, then, abandon the Christian Church *? There is a genuinely hopeful movement in the Protestant world, which I expect will some day spread into the Roman Catholic world, for a new loyalty to the real Jesus and to his reli- gion and ethics, including their thoroughgoing applications to industry and government, including the imitation of his life of reform as well as his life of personal piety. The Community Church idea would come to us all more commendably if it were presented in a more unbiased way. There are many men no less interested in the improvement of society than these men, and no less interested in a future free thought in all directions. But the very reason alleged by some advocates of the Community Church for leaving off the distinctive appeal to the inner and spiritual authority of Jesus, is our very reason for retaining it. There is no fellowship so liberating as his. If ever there was a fresh and free mind it was his. To some of us there is no imagin- able symbol of liberty and progress and free-mindedness so true or suggestive as that of the personality of the real, historic Christ. It is just because we want to be guarded against narrownesses, rather than the contrary, that we hold to him. There is much more yet to come, however, from the com- munity religion movement, both of ideas and definite experi- mentation. The writings of Mr. Joseph Ernest McAfee along these lines, lacking in concreteness partly because it is not yet time to be concrete, are especially valuable for their urgence of inclusiveness and their hopes of religious democ- racy. Meanwhile we are not going back to a papal Catholicism, nor even to forms and assumptions that are chiefly mediae- val without being papal. And it is inconceivable that the bulk of American Protestantism, so various in racial and • 129- Art & Religion ecclesiastical traditions, can be compressed into the moulds of the Anglican forms. The authoritative assumptions of the Episcopal body are entirely unacceptable to the typical American Christian. He cannot accede to the conception of a faith once delivered to the bishops. Nor can he be satisfied with a compression of his modes of utterance, either archi- tecturally or liturgically, into the too rigid forms of that tradition. Why, then, bother about it*? Because these forms are the i best perpetuation among us of the total history of Christen- | dom. Because, though our fathers may have been French, \ Swiss, Bohemian, Norwegian, or what not, we speak the | English tongue. Because the English Prayer Book is our \ most direct point of contact with the devotional treasures ', of the Christian ages and because the best psychology of i worship is found in the usages under discussion. ' I have always been a believer in the flank attack in de- ! bate. It is better not to contend all your opponent's points I of view, but to admit all you can, holding out against the i irreducible remainder. It is a quality of human nature to hold more steadfastly to its customs than to its ideas. If the ] future Protestant churches of whatever denomination could | revive every possible mediaeval form or custom judged to \ be valuable on its own merits, the movement would go ; very far toward promoting church union. The Lutheran bodies have all retained a larger usage of past forms than ! the more free churches. The Reformed bodies use a liturgy ] based upon the common mediaeval sources more nearly than \ do Presbyterians or Baptists, Bucer of Strassburg having been in England as a consultant at the very formation of the English Prayer Book. Moreover, what is to be the future of the Roman Catho- lic Church ■? Must we forever assume an insoluble dilemma of divided Christendom"? Can we afford to concede that we are at a permanent impasse? In a fair and vivid paragraph, Dr. Newman Smyth describes the divergent ideas of the church as held by Catholics and Protestants, closing his series of contrasts with this : "According to the one, the out- standing Church figure is the priest; according to the other, .130. Church Unity the prophet."* It would be valuable if we might all so far lay aside prejudices as to consider what further he has to say about the future mergence of these two conceptions. "The Catholic idea is certainly here to stay. But so is the Protes- tant. ... A fundamental education in religious values alone can cause these two ideas to coalesce and point the way to their final union in the truly Catholic Church. The Protestant must come to apprehend the indispensability of the Catholic position; and the Catholic must learn to recognize the validity of the Protestant witness; and to- gether they must mount to the higher Truth which includes them both. . . . What we need to pray for, then, is not that this or that experiment of reunion shall succeed, not that this or that plan of an interlocking Church relationship shall work out, but that these two great contrasting Church positions and ideas, each with a noble history, each with spiritual first-fruits to justify its truth, each firmly im- bedded in the religious consciousness of our time and of all time, shall come to understand each other; more than this, shall come to understand that each has that to give the other without which it cannot fully realize its own true, best life."t If anyone is able to share such a grand hope, it is indeed an added reason for finding and using all the possible good forms of the old body. If the Protestant world could freshly study the whole subject of the art of worship open- mindedly, there is no question whatever but that it would produce new inventions of form. There is equally no ques- tion but that it would also revive much good psychology and much detailed material from the usages of the ancient Church. In this attempt, I mean not merely a study of artistry, superficially, but of the meanings of symbols and of sacraments, both old and new, which in a general usage of the words are comprised in the category of the art of wor- ship. Such a procedure would not only immensely forward * "Approaches towards Church Unity," Newman Smyth and Willlston Walker, p. 86. t Ibid., pp. 87-90. .131. Art & Religion efforts toward Protestant unity, but would also place the whole of Protestantism in a most favorable position for the future possibilities of a genuinely united Christendom. Moreover, such a procedure would not discourage, but rather foster, the development of a united Church of Christ expectantly open to the newer and later lights of the Divine Spirit. What I have been trying to say might be summed up in the remark that the mystic experience is much the same thing, whatever its mental content either theologically or morally, and that this experience is therefore the natural meeting ground of union. I have already suggested certain identities of the aesthetic and mystical life. In a later chap- ter is described the psychological order of the experience. That order is the same emotionally and vitally, whatever realities or conceptions originate it or whatever ethical pur- poses eventuate from it. Mysticism alone has never yielded a distinctive theology, but rather a distinctive psychology. The world of the arts by itself has never yielded a distinc- tive morality, but rather the passion for whatever morality is carried to it. Men may differ in their beliefs and in their ethics; the inner process of the enjoyment of their faith is the same. As the conscience tells all men that they ought, but not to all men, in the same way, what they ought, to do, so worship is the same whatever its content. No category of thought, therefore, nor of ethics, can yield the same hope of union as that contained in the essential commonness of the nature of worship. 132 Chapter XIV : Technique and Freedom THERE is no more important practical subject than that of freedom. We of the "free churches" value our liberty. Constantly we reiterate the fact and the virtues of free, spontaneous prayer and unstereotyped public worship. We are prone to consider a liturgy or a rite as a form of bondage. We claim the right of free thought un- authorized by bishop or Bible or creed. We almost wholly misconceive the nature and the source of freedom. Our con- ception of spiritual and ecclesiastical freedom is often as childish and wrong as many popular notions of personal, industrial, or political liberty. Freedom is not acquired simply by release from law or sanction or authority or technique. Liberty is not negative but positive. It is derived, always, from some new and com- manding principle or from some new mastery of technical processes. Freedom is not the gift of formlessness but the mastery of form. The effect of the teaching of Jesus was to free the Chris- tian community from the old Jewish law. What was the thing that made them free? Certainly not simply making a declaration, certainly not a mere "kicking over the traces." They did neither of these things. The thing that made them free was their own inner acceptance of the new Christian principle of love. Without this, they had far better have stayed under the holding authority of the old law. The acquisition of a positive freedom is always harder than it appears to be. We are wrongly given to regard the release from the old tyranny as the essence of liberty. It is rather only the opportunity of liberty. Liberty must be acquired and established by some new and self-imposed regulation. The American colonies were not really free and independent states until the struggles of the Constitutional Convention had given them a new instrument of cohesion •133- Art & Religion and stability. The criminal released from prison is not really a free man until his definite devotion to a new labor has reestablished his feet in the path of hope and progress. The scientist is not free to move with authority and precision through the mazes of his material until long toils have given him mastery over that material. The baseball pitcher is not free to place the ball exactly as he desires until long practice has given him the reward of a nearly perfect control. I am not free to paint a picture nor to play an organ because I have not acquired the necessary technique in these arts. It is a question whether the so-called free churches are free to do anything but perish. Independency can be devel- oped to such an extent as entirely to nullify the very free- dom sought for. Premature revolution has oftentimes defeated itself. In the hurly-burly of history, more than one group of protestants has separated itself only to find that its new organization was too slight and shifting a thing to sustain itself amidst the vast complications of civilized life. During several years of travel throughout our country, I was amazed at the remarkable intellectual and civic influ- ence of the New England and Puritan heritage in our national life. It is a grave question whether this brave and adventurous individualism, philanthropic in practice and progressive in thought, can sustain and perpetuate its own strain in the face of the competition of thicker-bodied move- ments. There is no citizen who so misreads the meaning of free- dom as the typical modem liberal. The "independent" in politics oftentimes discovers that he has no effective instru- ment whereby to influence the affairs of state, frequently being reduced to an obnoxious choice as between two almost equally offensive programs. Even more so, the moral and religious independent is ineffective in the deeper life of society. There are very large numbers of men today, men of public spirit and intelligence who stand outside the organ- ized efforts of moral education and social control. They are asserting their freedom. They think they have found a liberty of conscience and of action untrammeled by the •134- Technique and Freedom alleged narrowness of any ecclesiastical organization. But their freedom is a very specious thing. Instead of acquiring freedom for themselves they have thrown it away and placed it where it ought not to be. Without even a fight for it, they have given a "free hand" to the forces of conserv- atism or of reaction. There is no more profound problem in sociology than just this matter of the incoherence of liberalism. Men of inde- pendent mind are by their very nature individualistic. And, unfortunately, the revolt of each is likely to be due to some slightly different cause. It is hard for liberals to agree, harder for them to accept any new partisan bondage. But without agreement and without definite organizational in- struments there can be no positive freedom. These men are, strictly speaking, not free at all to affect the life of the state as they would like. They have misinter- preted freedom. They are only free to wring their hands in futile protest. They should, rather, intelligently face the fact that a large part of the moral education of the youth of America is in the hands of religious and moral conserva- tives. The liberal vainly wonders why he cannot affect the prejudiced minds of adult citizens, the same while that he allows the minds of youthful prospective citizens to be bent in wrong directions from the very start. In other words, the freeman is not free to affect the life of his time until he has acquired, perhaps at a cost that seems to limit his freedom, an instrument which he can use effectively to promote his ideals of the social welfare. These remarks I am making for two reasons. They sug- gest a line of thought and a series of problems pertinent to the general point of view of this whole book, the view that the individualistic temper of the Reformation age must be modified by new forms of cooperation or cohesion which will be characteristic of the new age. The most of these problems lie outside the range of the artistic interest we are pursuing. They form, however, a line of reinforcement to the urgence for church unity. And they serve to answer some of the objections to it. The free churches will be not less, but more, •135- Art Religion free to wield the influence they desire according as they shall be willing to develop modifications in the direction of the new age commonality. The other reason for these remarks is that they constitute another illustration of the necessity for free ideas to find adequate symbols of expression or a definite technique if they are to be communicated in ordinary life. These con- siderations require an improved technique of worship in the Protestant world. The chair of homiletics is an old institution in our schools of theology, a recognition of the necessity of technique in the sermon. Not nearly enough instruction in the technique of public prayer has been provided. On the whole, the aver- age minister's sermons are far superior in variety, structure, diction, and good taste, to his prayers. The prayer is far the more difficult exercise. The limits of propriety as to its form of discourse, choice of words, imagery, and other factors are much more narrow and exacting than for that of any other human utterance. Almost all those who attempt a critical improvement of public prayer have found it valuable to requisition more or less material from the old books of devotion, the Psalms or other prayer books. They have done this, not by way of dis- placing spontaneous expression, but rather by way of an added value and an improved background, as Dr. Orchard suggests: "the intention being to create an atmosphere of devotion and to provide a background of prayer, rather than attempting to force individual aspirations into a prescribed form, or pretending to cover the complete exercise of prayer. Rightly understood by those who lead, liturgical prayer may therefore be a greater encouragement to 'free' prayer than the often too dominating, individualistic, and complicated utterances which have come to be thus exclusively de- scribed."* It is highly questionable whether the new technique can be adequate without a new service book. So-called non- liturgical churches have been proud of their freedom from a prayer book. Yet more and more it becomes evident that * W. E. Orchard, "The Order of Divine Service," Preface, p. 5. .136. Technique and Freedom some kind of public liturgy is necessary. Most of our denom- inational publishing houses issue books of prepared service forms. The Reformed Church has always had a liturgy. The Presbyterian Book of Common Worship was copyrighted in 1905. The Unitarian hymnal contains a complete order of service for each Sunday of the month. Notable publications have been issued by local parishes such as that of the First Congregational Society, St. Louis, Missouri, in 1845, ^"^d of Second Parish Church, Boston, in 1914. The most recent published liturgy is the Order of Divine Service for Public Worship, Oxford Press, 1919, following the usages of the King's Weigh House Chapel, London. None of these will be found wholly satisfactory by the average Protestant church. It is noteworthy that all of them draw heavily, both as to form and materials, from the Eng- lish Book of Common Prayer. I have already suggested why the great Prayer Book cannot be used as it stands. Dr. Percy Dearmer in his recent and valuable book, "The Art of Wor- ship," suggests important improvements in the English ritual. Considerable changes and additions are proposed by offi- cial bodies now at work on the subject. The English "Report of the Archbishop's Committee of Inquiry on the Worship of the Church" and the American "Report of the Joint Com- mission on the Book of Common Prayer" were both pub- lished in 1919. But the changes suggested are insufficient for winning any considerable following outside the Episcopal Communion. If the Episcopal Church could more fully understand the points of view of the free churches, it might be persuaded of the great opportunity before it, should it be willing to make important changes in the liturgy. If it does not do this, we need a new service book. Perhaps such a book is an impossibility for the early future. Its preparation would require not only study and collation, but wider popular experimentation, before a usable and satisfactory manual could be produced. It is earnestly to be hoped that some great university may establish a Chair of Liturgies in order to centralize scholar- ship in the subject and also promote popular experimenta- •137- Art ^ Religion tion and collate its results. If such a foundation could also be related to university extension work, it would constitute a great aid to one of the deepest needs of the times in the religious and moral world. The ministers are thirsty for help in this department. The character of the subject is such that popular experimentation is insufficient; it requires also scholarship. The historical and psychological studies, to- gether with the philosophical and aesthetic considerations involved, are of such a nature as to call for the cooperation of the centers of learning, as well as the actual practice of ecclesiastical institutions. I do not mean to suggest that a new service book is all that we need in this direction. The worship of the future church will include many varieties of expression not to be com- pacted in any formal liturgy. It will always have need for the free, spontaneous, public meeting style of exercise. It will develop many kinds of specially prepared orders for occasional uses, some of great elaboration. It will call forth gifted individuals, who will devise original usages as they go along. An example of this last suggestion is the work but recently opened in London by Dr. Percy Dearmer and Miss Maude Royden. All these considerations do not render less desirable a service book which can be the steady "Ordinary" of the usage. Such a book, however, should contain a variety of services, both as to form and content. The old Book of Common Prayer does not have sufficient variety in either. Dr. Orchard's book contains a number of services with dif- fering content, but none sufficiently differing in form from the regular service. One of the important needs, demanding a variation in form, is that of the small church, which may be oftentimes without a minister. Some of our home mission churches would be greatly benefited if they could have a service book which contained a simple, practicable order that could be read by one of the elders or deacons. Many of our average churches would not wish to use an order that could be well managed only on a larger scale. The book needed should cover these varied requirements for usual Sunday services, • 138- Technique and Freedom without attempting to provide for the more extraordinary occasions. Meanwhile, there is needed among the free churches more attention to the psychology of the subject, both in the large and with respect to seemingly trivial details. One illustra- tion will suffice to indicate the kind of analysis needed at many points. Not long since, the choir director of our church desired to place a particular solo immediately before the sermon in the regular service. We tried it, but the effect was decidedly unfortunate. And the reason is perfectly clear. There should not be a work of art of this kind immediately before a long address. If the music is not good, it should not be there, any- way. If it is good, if it succeeds in giving to people the imag- inative lift which any work of art should do, the following moment is not the one for the opening of a sermon. An imag- inative preparation of that sort should be followed imme- diately by something impressive, a prayer, a scripture, or a very brief and quiet word of address. A sermon should not begin impressively. It should begin interestingly, but the heavier burden of impression should come with the climax and at the close. Therefore, some more common and ordinary exercise, such as a hymn, should immediately precede the sermon. If the order of worship has developed an imaginative outlook and an emotional power by itself, the cycle of its psychological course should be brought to a certain conclusion before the beginning of the sermon. There should be something to ground the atten- tion after the first emotional lift, something to bring back the whole situation, so to speak, to "neutral clutch." An artistic solo does not do this. It does too much. Something else is required, which will enable the sermon to begin lower down as it were, and then lead to a fresh ascent of the emo- tions. I speak of this in detail merely to indicate the neces- sity for a similarly critical examination of other materials which the artist in worship may utilize as he becomes profi- cient in the technique of his art. These materials of the artist in worship consist of other things besides music, readings, and prayers. They may in- •139- Art & Religion elude also any little physical exercises such as receiving the collection plates, and placing them upon a table or treasury; appropriate vestments for minister and choir; a processional movement of singers; or other devices which add objective interest to the service. It is becoming more and more common for churches of various denominations to clothe their choir in some uniform garment. The reasons are obvious. It not only nullifies the disagreeable effect of otherwise discordant colors, or differences of richness in personal apparel, but gives a positive effect of order and harmony, and hence of beauty. There are also an increasing number of churches which appreciate both the dignity and the modesty of having the minister wear a quiet robe. Meanwhile there are some churches in which the beauty of the service is increased, according to their taste, by certain appropriate and interest- ing usages of color. The joy of religion is not sufficiently symbolized if the prevailing note is black. Even the most independent of all the churches have never felt the necessity for discouraging any of these develop- ments. In the "Handbook of Congregationalism," by the Rev. Henry Martyn Dexter, D.D., is the following para- graph: "As already suggested, Congregational ists enjoy a larger liberty in respect to all things which have been in this chapter discussed, than is within the constitutional reach of Christians of other polities. Any Congregational church, whose taste and sense of expediency may so incline it, is at perfect liberty to order its worship by the liturgy of the Church of England, or the Protestant, or Reformed Episco- pal Church of the United States, or by a liturgy of its own. So long as it do nothing which shall give reasonable ground of offense to the other churches with which it is in fellow- ship, it may order its prayers, its praise, and all the methods of its worship, to its own entire content; and its pastor, remaining true to our fundamentals of doctrine and of polity, though enrobed and endowed with 'Chasuble, Albe, Amice, Stole, Maniple, and Zone, with two blessed Towels, and all their Appendages,' would remain, in good faith and entirely, a Congregational minister still." • 140- SILVER ALMS BASIN Made by Arthur J. Stone. ALTAR CROSS IN SILVER, IVORY, AND ENAMEL Made by Arthur J. Stone. CAkVED 'XV t> JGILDEO CANDLESTICK Made by G. Troccoli. Technique and Freedom The very words of Dr. Dexter's paragraph indicate, how- ever slightly, some of the rich things in the past of the Christian Church which Protestants have largely forgotten or have never known. Some of these past riches are wonder- fully worth recovering; other such like riches we may create for ourselves, and indeed are beginning to create. It is not generally known how many works of artistic merit are now being produced by the different societies of arts and crafts for the churches, many of these for the free churches. Excel- lent handwork in silver, precious stones, glass, metals, tex- tiles, oak, brass, and printing is being done in larger and larger quantity. The revival of artistic interest in the older churches has called forth a steady stream of chalices, crosses, pyxes, vestments, teredos, pulpits, altars, windows, altar books. Bibles, and other objects, each of them designed for a definite and fitting place in a finished technique of worship. Not only in ritualistic churches, but amongst the free churches, are there many new buildings where the minor objects are finely and beautifully wrought, although prop- erly subordinated by the simplicity of the larger structural lines and spaces. Symbolic carvings in the stones of doorway arches, pier heads and towers; figures in relief on pulpits, chairs, tables, screens, or pews; candlesticks, candelabra, and hanging lamps; plates, fonts, panels, hardware, and organ cases; embroidered bookmarks and altar covers; pictorial figures or significant designs painted on glass and in some cases on walls; all these are more and more being recognized as important adjuncts to the materials in the hand of the artist in worship. It is easy to condemn this tendency out of hand. It is better to try to understand it and use it aright. The hunger for beauty is a God-given desire in human nature. It may be denied and sacrificed when pressing concerns call for stern and heroic measures : it is to be feared when it becomes glut- tonous: in healthy normal life it must be satisfied. I have not denied that beautiful symbolic objects are dangerous. But they are at once less dangerous and far more refining than other modes of the corporeal display of religious faiths and feelings. If it is possible for a love of beautiful things •143- Art & Religion ] to become debased into merely sensuous pleasure, that same •! love of beauty is for many a religious soul a genuine spirit of 5 reverence. Protestants would do well to recognize a certain j profound piety moving in and through the impulse to I beautify the House of God and all things that have to do | with the setting and scene where people meet to worship \ God. : The necessity for improvement in the art of worship is \ evident to larger and larger numbers of clergymen. There i is on the whole a large amount of experimentation going on j in all these matters. It is not desirable to curtail but rather ; to promote this. Much more is needed before any general ^ unification of forms and usages will be either possible or \ desirable. The broad principle which I have to suggest for the study of the liturgy as a whole is developed in the next two chapters. But improved forms there must be and will be in the great new age before us. The lover of freedom who wants to get on without form is not enough of a lover of freedom for the new day. He needs to enlarge both the scope of his own desires and the price he is willing to pay for their satisfac- tion. Freedom is not derived simply from absence of form, either in prayer or ecclesiastical organization or in any other category: it comes from the mastery of form. Bad form is ugly and tyrannical. To live without form is to live futilely. Good form may be the very vehicle and guarantee of free- dom. Freedom in the experience and in the expression of worship is the gift of technique in the art of worship. 144. Chapter XV : The Mysticism of Isaiah POSSIBLY the experience of beauty is the same thing as the experience of worship. Some of its elements, at least, would appear to be identical with the course of that illumination described by Isaiah as the mystical source of his prophetic insight and power. The experience begins with attention to some object, that body of beauty or reality outside us which induces the ex- perience. I do not pause here for any discussion of what might be called the mystic's preparation, the process of elimination, the cutting away of other objects and interests and desires, both outer and inner, which would prevent entire absorption in the single and supreme object. The great worshipers have always insisted upon this preparation and have themselves practiced the most severe rigors to ensure its character. But we are here, rather, beginning on the lower and ordi- nary plane of the experience of beauty, which may befall without any preparation. The object presents itself; we are passive. "Sir Henry Irving 'presents' Macbeth." So a flower, the light on a wide water, an opera, a poem, a statue, a song, a noble building, a s}TTiphony, a mountain, presents itself to us; it comes forward to meet us, it enlarges, it draws and absorbs, it becomes for the moment our world. So, too, if the object be seen of the inner eye only — humanity, the uni- verse, God. The first reaction or feeling is that of self-abnegation, littleness, humility. You go to the opera and say, I could never write an opera like that if I lived a thousand years. You ride alone over the desert. The weight of years, the spaces of land and sky overwhelm you. This body of loveli- ness, a rose, a sonata, so finished and exquisite, this inde- scribable perfection of form or color or sound, this is of another order and another world than your own. It humbles I 145 Art & Religion ^ and belittles. You are outclassed. You feel small ; your own , life and labor and lot are not right or good to you now that ! you have seen this excellence. You are dissatisfied with your- self and all your works. You have no taste for common life ; now that you have tasted God. Here — say you — here let me | abide; here is life, life desirable and original and sweet, j immortal life; here is my true home and dwelling place, j Your common life seems pale and awry and wrong. You are | ashamed of your achievement in the presence of this perfect | beauty; you are humbled and penitent before the awful : sublimities of the divine presentment. ' Then a strange thing happens, strange for its swift and I powerful force. This body of beauty, this symbolized ideal or truth, this great existence comes into you, fills and pos sesses and enlarges you. You say, No, I could never write ■ such an opera — no, but something I can do, something I, too, can make, with the same finish and power; I, too, can pro- duce a noble work, perfect as this vase or tower or starry heavens. Your humiliation is changed to dignity, your dejec- tion to exaltation. St. Augustine very precisely describes this swift change from penitence to salvation in the experience of worship, the experience of God. "I tremble and I burn; I tremble feel- ing I am unlike Him; I burn feeling that I am like Him." Self-abnegation is followed by self-realization, weakness by power. Your smallness is gone, your shame removed, and your sins forgiven. You experience ecstasy, renewal, salva- tion. Warrior kings have always known and used these power-engendering arts. The pipes and drums and bugles have always gathered troops and led them to the fray; they have put fire in the blood, courage in the heart, and probably actual physical strength in sinew and muscle. I believe that one of the unfailing accompaniments of a genuine experi- ence of beauty or a genuine experience of worship is a heightening of all the vital powers. Swiftly still the experience moves forward to another stage and scene. Between the single object and the fas- cinated eye there moves a screen of memory. Into this holy place obtrudes the common world. That ordinary life from • 146- The Mysticism of Isaiah which you have come and to which you must soon return breaks in upon your mystic hour. But what a strange world it is. It cannot look the same, for now you have new eyes. You see it as from the heights. Your new vitality has given the imagination an unwonted lift and range. Here between the masses and harmonies of a symphony and your rapt sense there floats in the world of practical life, but it floats like clouds with ever changing shapes. Its values shift and change. The unworthy sinks, the true and the good emerge and grow. Faiths and hopes are given new life. Certain realities are freshly freighted with import and significance. Old things pass away, all things are become new. The mystics have always claimed new revelations. Ac- cording to the view we are considering, it is not really a new scene that is given in the experience of worship but a new eye to see ; not new truths but a new seer. The actual increase in physical and imaginative power in the midst of the ex- perience enables men to see their world more clearly and truly. It is questionable whether the experience of beauty as such gives any entirely new world, any improved morality. It seems rather to clarify the world that is brought to it. If that world already contains a noble and adequate ethical principle, it will be revivified and expanded, but not neces- sarily changed fundamentally. This would appear to be the explanation of the very dif- ferent thought content set forth by equally devoted and assured mystics. This would appear also to explain some- what the lack and shortage in the merely aesthetic world. The enjoyment of beauty is sought for its own sake by those who come to it without any previous moral ideal or purpose. To such the experience does not necessarily oifer any moral content. The power and vitality engendered is consumed in its own fire and has no valuable practical issue. Many have defended this very conception as the true and characteristic aesthetic experience. I do not believe that it is, even from the strictly aesthetic point of view, certainly not from the fuller view of a more rounded ethical person. The experience, if true to type, then passes, still swiftly, to its final stage. Not long since you were saying. Here is Art & Religion ^ life, desira:ble and original; this is the moment I desire to j stay, it is so fair. But into that moment came drifting the \ world of common life, faint and shadowy, obscuring the j great object, perhaps to pass and return and pass again. At j length it must remain, changed, clear, alluring, illumined. At | some point comes the choice. You cannot stay in the theater | all night, and soon you will not want to ; the flame dies out i of the western sky and you are ready to let it pass; the ; singers wind out of the sanctuary, the temple courts will be ; silent soon, but not sooner than you are eager to be off on ! the enterprise you have seen to be right and good by the ; mystical light. In your heart is new loyalty and dedication, ; a clear and practical attitude toward the common world. j If this is not good aesthetics, it is good religion. There is i no sufficient reason to deny that it is good aesthetics, save an ■ arbitrary definition and the limitation of the effect of beauty • to the static only. So to limit the content of the experience is ■ to foster aesthetic debauchery and the literal dissipation of \ the noblest human powers. The true experience of beauty \ and of worship would seem alike to have issue in this mood i of consecration and purpose. ■ Just this course of experience is described by the great ! eighth century prophet Isaiah as having been his "in the year ' that King Uzziah died." I know of no other writing which ; so brilliantly, briefly and completely sets forth the nature of \ a human experience of God, its character and consequences. | With few and bold strokes, he draws a picture of religion — i ecstasy, humility, salvation, clarification, consecration. He j reports the power and effect of public worship and the whole | course of his own repentance, cleansing, illumination, and | enlistment. j Isaiah was a man of extraordinary gifts of mind and ] person. He was a leader in the nation, a courtier, close to j the throne and the affairs of state. On the death of his king, i after a long and prosperous reign, he was disturbed and I troubled by internal conditions of wrong and by impending \ perils from without dangerous to the nation and the royal i power. Pondering these things, he went up to the temple of I his God. There, whether it was the smoke that rose from the ; .148. . The Mysticism of Isaiah great altar of sacrifice, or the music of the singers responding from side to side of the temple courts, or the golden figures of the winged cherubim, or all these together, something set his thoughts and imagination rising. He had a sense of the divine. He had an experience of the presence of God, in- effable and awful, like those of Paul and Augustine, Tauler and Saint Theresa. "In the year that king Uzziah died I saw . . . the Lord . . . high and lifted up, and his train filled the temple. Above it stood the seraphims : each one had six wings ; with twain he covered his face, and with twain he covered his feet, and with twain he did fly. And one cried unto another, and said. Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord of hosts : the whole earth is full of his glory. x\nd the posts of the door moved at the voice of him that cried, and the house was filled with smoke." Such an experience few men have in the course of mortal life. Plotinus said that in his lifetime he had enjoyed only four such supreme seasons of divine communion. Bernard wrote that only once or twice could a man rise to such a sense of the mystic union with God as he tried to describe. Yet something like this many men have and many times. Isaiah's first response to this sense of God was a feeling of great humility and sinfulness. He beheld how high and holy God is; how unapproachable and awful and dangerous is his being and presence : "In the year that king Uzziah died I saw . . . the Lord . . . high and lifted up . . . "Then said I, Woe is me ! for I am undone ; because I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips; for mine eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts." Then swiftly — as winds fly to fill the empty space, as waters rush through opened gates, swiftly as the Spirit of the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity ever moves to visit contrite hearts, so swiftly — "Then flew one of the seraphims unto me, having a live coal in his hand, which he had taken with the tongs from off the altar: and he laid it upon my mouth, and said, Lo, .149. Art & Religion I this hath touched thy lips; and thine iniquity is taken away, and thy sin purged." ,1 To have some sense of the universe, to behold the starry 1 heavens, to see the lifted Christ, to think on God, and so to < be overwhelmed, humbled, shamed at the littleness and sin j of your life is to invite the coming of power, the rush of the ] wind of the breath of the Spirit of God to heal and cleanse, I to fill and enlarge and restore and leave the joy of salvation. | And then Isaiah remembered his common world, his city, \ his king, his nation with its troubled and perilous life. It had , become clear to him what word needed to be said and he I knew that he must say it. ; "Also I heard the voice of the Lord, saying. Whom shall i I send, and who will go for US'? Then said I, Here am I; \ send me." I This is the course and order of an experience of worship, , an experience of the sense of God — up from the world of the i many to the overworld of the One, back to the world of the | many to fulfil the will of the One. j Something like the great experience of Isaiah is what the \ worship of the church ought to help people to have. Some- ■ thing like that experience people do have over and again out- | side of the church, not always or even usually complete, but • rich, varied, overwhelming, exalting, enjoyable, vitalizing, in their contact with nature or the arts. ■ We who love the church have ourselves chiefly to blame \ if so large a part of the community finds its instinct and ■ desire for worship satisfied by the theater and the music hall, ; the museum of art, or the free and individual enjoyment of the out of doors. Yet the world of the artist and nature lover is also to blame that its culture of the spirit has so often stopped short of the true heights of the spirit. It has too often been content with an experience of lifted feeling without valuable prac- tical issue. It has tried to persuade itself that its own world is the only real world, a world of refuge from common life, a compensation for common toils. Religion would take up the common world and look at it with new eyes and go back .150. The Mysticism of Isaiah to it with new power and commitment, not compensating for common toils but suffusing them with its own glory. There are important differences between the aesthetic and the religious experiences. We are rather here interested in these points of likeness or perhaps more properly of identity. Entirely apart from the nature of the absorbing object, whether it be finite or infinite, and apart also from the moral or intellectual content of the experience, there would appear to be an identity in course or process or in some of the major elements of the sense of beauty and the sense of God. There is something about the experience, whether of art or of wor- ship, to be enjoyed for its own sake, an end in itself, but also something essentially untrue and wrong in any claim of mystic communion which does not result in new values seen in the common world, cleansing from littleness, sin and isolation, and the definite dedication to some service of that enlarged vitality engendered in the experience. Vision, Humility, Vitality, Illumination, Enlistment — these constitute the experience of worship, and these may all be kindled in the experience of beauty. 151 Chapter XVI : The Order of the Liturgy THE order of service for public worship cannot be much improved until we discover or select a princi- ple to go upon. There has been more or less attempt at defining the functions of different liturgical parts and some analysis of their emotional effects. Here and there much good psychology has been applied to the betterment of ugly and disjointed orders of common worship. There has been discarding, enrichment, elaboration. But on the whole there is everywhere evidence of the merest patchwork and carpentry in the arrangement of the exercises of Protestant worship. What we first require is some guiding theory to help the practical problem of developing a unified, beauti- ful, and effective liturgy. The theory here proposed is a very simple one — that the outward expression in the service of worship should parallel the inner course of the experience of worship. The difficul- ties of this are many and great. The experience itself is com- plex and elusive and largely uncontrollable. It may happen on a sudden and unexpectedly; it may come when desired and prepared for; it may escape just when all the conditions seem most favorable. It may be long-sustained and filled with a variety of intellectual contents; it may be brief and pointed, its whole course finished in a few moments. How, then, give it concurrent expression in any manner so set and prearranged as an order of public worship"? Nevertheless, through all the innumerable variations in stimulus, tone, intensity, content of ideas, recurrence, duration, conclusion, there would appear to be always in its normal course some- thing of each of the elements suggested — Vision, Humility, Exaltation, Illumination, Dedication. If this analysis of the experience is anything like correct, it would suggest, first of all, as applied to our practical prob- lem, public expression of that humility and sense of small- .152. The Order of the Liturgy ness which is the first natural response to the realities that induce the experience. This is precisely what all the old liturgies of the Christian church contain — Confitior, Kyrie Eleison, General Confession. It is true that the "sense of sin" seems not very prevalent, and is in some quarters thought to be an unworthy and un- necessary part of the religous experience. But if we are at this point getting off the track religiously, a study of the artistic experience will speedily restore our spiritual nor- mality. It would appear to admit of no doubt that a sense of weakness, inadequacy, imperfection, is the first and often very powerful reaction to the presentation of whatever body of beauty really succeeds in reaching us. How much more is the same effect induced when we find ourselves set over against a real presentation of the whole of reality, of the being and presence of God. The sense of sin, the sense of personal delinquency and shame, of moral imperfection, of metaphysical smallness, of inconsequential selfhood, of indi- vidual guilt in social tragedy — this sense is neither un- natural nor forced nor weak nor out of date. It is a per- manent element in the spiritual experience of mankind, involved both in the experience of moral evil and the sub- stance of metaphysical limitations. If this be true, the expression of the experience is a proper and necessary part of the exercise of worship. The most of such exercises do include an expression of penitence. Usually, however, it receives too slight attention, a few phrases in the midst of a long prayer including many other feelings and ideas. Such a brief and incidental expres- sion of humility is altogether inadequate and ineffective. It should be one of the principal liturgical parts, — if possible expressed by all the people, rather than by the minister only, — though not necessarily a long part. And so it is in the old liturgies, which are at this point right, as the most of non- liturgical practice is wrong. Some of our recently improved Protestant services have therefore restored the use of the General Confession from the English Prayer Book. Others use the beautiful prayer in the Fifty-first Psalm, either in •153- Art & Religion unison or responsive recital. Others use freshly written prayers of confession. But this prayer should not be the first part of the service. The sense of smallness or the sense of sin or humility is not something you can produce out of your own consciousness; it happens to you. It is induced in you by the contact of something larger which humbles you, something better that shames you. Just here is a weakness of the Episcopal liturgv\ There is nothing sufficiently impressive preceding the Gen- eral Confession to make you feel like confessing your sins. There is commonly a Processional Hjinn, but the value of this is largely its effect as a curtain raiser that serves to focus scattered attention, merge the individuals into a congregation, and generally to warn everybody that the ex- ercise has begun. Following the hymn there is a call to worship and summons to repentance altogether too brief and too slender to work the miracle expected of it. This is probably the point of greatest weakness in most exercises of public worship. It would not be so if some spiritual preparation on the part of the average worshiper could be expected or counted upon, but it cannot be. People do not, as a matter of fact, arrive at church, after a late breakfast and the Sunday morning paper, at all prepared in spirit to fall upon their knees and confess their sins. I have at times felt like devising some sort of ante-chamber to the Lord's House, some place of purgation, some door of leaving behind, in order that people might be prepared worthily to worship and happily to enjoy its benefits, but this is doubt- less impractical. It is altogether possible, however, greatly to improve the opening of the service. A Processional Hymn, as suggested, is the oldest and best means for the very initial matter of unifying attention, without too much demand upon it at first. The usual Protes- tant practice opens the service with three or four items, each too brief or too familiar to be either very interesting or very impressive. They fail to take sharp hold upon the attention or to stir much of any movement amongst the emotive facul- ties of the worshiper. The Invocation is the only opportunity for fresh material, but so brief a prayer must needs be .154. The Order of the Liturgy supremely well done to carry its effect. Not many men can do it supremely well. In the Roman Mass the priest's Preparation followed by the Introit is a more extended and impressive exercise, serving also to prepare the people to offer their own first prayer of confession in the Kyrie Eleison. All these parts are the same for every day except the Introit. This latter is a very interesting number, a curtailed relic of a longer antiph- onal exercise used in the earlier days of the church to open the service, different each day, in general announcing the special character and ideas of the day; this in turn going back to the antiphonal psalms of the Jewish liturgy. Here is something that can be effectively restored, yield- ing the value of ancient usages, but capable of fresh content. Why not displace the three or four ineffective items with which our service is usually opened, by a solid number, longer, more beautiful, more timely, more gripping and im- pressive? Such an Introit has been tried with very decided improvement in the dignity, interest, and imaginative con- tent of the early part of the service. It is a simple responsive service between minister and choir, the minister reading, the choir singing; two or three responses for each. It sets forth the theme of the day, or at least the area in which the theme lies. In actual practice it has been found eminently worth while freshly to select material for the Introit each Sunday, as nearly as possible that which would form an introduction to the thought of the sermon. There is a difference of opinion as to whether the service of worship should revolve about the same theme as the sermon. There are evidently advan- tages in a seasonal development of spiritual themes set forth in a church year arrangement of the liturgy independent of sermon themes. Such a plan assures a comprehensive charac- ter to the worship of the year, perhaps more full and better balanced than the sermon subjects are liable to be. Also it provides for a more or less complete setting forth of helpful spiritual suggestion for the worshipers, no matter what the subject matter of the sermon may be. On the other hand, there is undoubtedly great force in the arrangement of a .155. Art & Religion unified service from organ prelude to benediction, the sermon included. It must fairly be charged that in altogether too many free churches, the service of worship is neither one of these things. It does not form an interesting or a comprehensive course of experience by itself; it does not form a very exact introduction to the sermon. On the whole, it will probably be found that the average preacher covers a fairly wide range of ideas in the course of a year's work. He very natu- rally takes advantage of the more notable seasonal feelings and makes occasions for the presentation of those matters which relate to the practical parish life also. Some sort of church year plan is therefore very natural, if not inevi- table. It need not be rigid, as the old liturgies are, and should not be. It is possible for the most of the Sundays of the year to have a service of worship which fits naturally into a compre- hensive year plan, and which also is in itself, with the sermon, a completely harmonious presentation. I believe that each service should be a dramatic unity from start to finish. It is very difficult for this unity to make itself felt by all the worshipers unless at the very beginning of the service there is a strong, pertinent, and fairly full introduc- tory announcement of the thought of the day. The first value of an Introit is the increase in the sense of unity throughout the service, if this opening number has a sufficiently distinctive intellectual content to be noted at the moment, and later remembered, when the same thoughts appear in Scripture lessons, prayers, and in the sermon. There is certainly great value also in the fresh ideas of such an exercise as compared with the familiar material of the usual opening numbers — Call to Worship, Doxology, Invo- cation, Choir Response, Lord's Prayer, Gloria. The desirable sense of familiarity may be derived not from its content but from its form. In any work of art, form and content work together toward the total impression, the form serving to elevate and intensify the content. It is notable that the brief responses b}^ the choir quiet and attract the hearers so that the intervening portions, as read, carry a more weighty im- ■ 156. The Order of the Liturgy pressiveness. And if the content be fresh and pertinent, its ideas are eagerly attended to. Another great merit of such an exercise is the improve- ment in the dignity of music in the service. Members of the choir, singing in such a responsive service, seem not to be artists rendering a concert number, as too often they do in many church services, but rather ministers in the sanctuary taking part in the service of God. Another more subtle effect of the exercise is the result of its declarative character, the feeling that the Church has something definite to say. The sermon is the minister's word, the word of the prophet; the Scripture reading is the Bible's word; the words of the Introit, though they be taken largely from the Bible, seem somehow to be so set forth as to repre- sent rather the present faith and pronouncement of the Church, proclaiming the reality and nature of God. Such a note and such an impression are in this day of uncertain- ties more than ever needed. In our view, then, the ordinary Sunday service should be opened, not with the several brief and for the most part familiar numbers of the usual usage, but with a longer, more rich, freshly prepared exercise, presented by the minister and choirs, which is at once praise to God and pronounce- ment to the people. If this is successful, it becomes the pre- sentation of that reality over against which the smallness and weakness of human life become evident. It is the neces- sary antecedent to the experience of humility and the expres- sion of penitence. This expression should come next, in some prayer of general confession, as has been suggested. The low point in the experience does not last long, nor should its expression. The mystic alternation moves swiftly; the sense of fulness and the rushing tide of revival flow fast upon the acknowledgment of emptiness and unworthi- ness. Whoever beholds the truth and is humbled by it is speedily enlarged and elevated by it. Nothing is more uni- versally testified by artists and mystics alike than the heightened vitality and increased imagination produced in any real moment of direct and immediate experience of reality. .157. Art & Religion This sense of fulness must find early and rich expression in the service of worship. Only long experiment and patient observation can determine the best manner of this expres- sion. A doxology, a noble hymn of praise, a worthy anthem, may follow the prayer of confession, to give expression to the exaltation which presumably is the concurrent element in the experience as we are following its unfolding course. Henceforth we are on more difficult and complicated ground. For here begins occurrence of the practical world, the process of filling the imaginative forms with a definite intellectual content, the process of the back and forth swing between the One and the many, the peace and fulness of the One, the remembered urgencies of the many. Here lies the inadequacy of the world of the arts without religion and the definite morality demanded by definite reli- gious faith. It has not provided a sufficiently thoughtful moral content. In the order of worship, there should come, therefore, as they usually do, after the expression of exalta- tion. Scripture lessons and prayer. These exercises serve to fill with definite ideas the uplifted consciousness which is nevertheless as yet a vague and unordered one. They serve to call up the world of the many into the illuminated state and to begin the formation of working faiths. Miss Under- bill refers to them as "a group of actions which seem a fitting symbol of the varied powers and duties proper to that illum- inated consciousness, flowing out in charity to God and man, which has now been achieved."* In any case, the nature of the experience at this point is characterized by illumination, clarification, the rearrange- ment of all things as seen in the new light of all things. This is therefore the point in the service for whatever pre- sentation will help to make this experience definite. The reading of ancient Scriptures may serve to continue the declaration of universal or divine truths; or it may serve to set forth the record of previous human experience of the divine realities and powers ; or more probably it may do both for such of the hearers as have made a successful adventure thus far. * Underbill, "The Mystic Way," p. 348. .158. The Order of the Liturgy So, also, the prayers and collects in this part of the service should be largely of a pastoral character, serving to continue the sense of the divine outlook and to express the desires of the worshipers for the world and those whom they love in it, according as those desires have now been purified and inten- sified in the experience. Both of these exercises, presumably begun after the infill- ing and enlargement of the vital powers, constitute the remembrance of the practical world, now changed, revalued, glorified, as seen by the eyes which have been opened to the mystic vision. They fill with a definite moral content the otherwise vague and unreflective imaginative outlook. According to our theory, there should follow next an expression of faith. The worshiper having had presented to him a declaration of truth, or, inwardly, a vision of Divinity; having expressed the humility and penitence that is his natural reaction; having shared the service of praise for the revival and enlargement next swiftly following; having seen with fresh eyes a new earth as well as a new heaven; he is prepared to say what it is that in the light of all these things he now believes. This is the point for whatever Credo the service contains. Protestantism, historically, has made much use of the recital of some creed. Of late larger and larger numbers of churches have omitted any such exercise, moved by the changes in thought and the frequent deprecation of creeds in general. It is, of course, only weak and foolish to be too easily swept off our feet by unintelligent outcry against creeds. You have to believe something or other before you can walk around the block. You certainly have to have some sort of working philosophy of life, however tentative or temporary, to form any kind of society. One of the effects of the artistic experience, as well as the religious experience, is to fix, at least for a time, a sense of whatever seems at the time to be valuable or real or important. This is precisely what a creed is. There is unquestionably very great good to be derived from the attempt to state as definitely and clearly as possible from time to time the central matters of one's belief. And if anyone objects too seriously to this, he may .159. Art & Religion always — after the fashion of Cicero concerning Carthage — : write down as the last clause of his creed his belief that all ; these statements will some day be changed for the better. I At this place in our own order of worship, we are just I now using an arrangement which serves at once two or three ' purposes. After the period devoted to Scriptures and prayers, ' the people stand for a triple exercise, the familiar Doxology, i a Confession of Faith, and the Gloria Patri. One of the uses of this plan is to relieve the recital of a confession from a | certain abruptness and coldness which it might have by ; itself alone. A much more important purpose is the need for , continuing throughout the service the sense of elevation and the praise expressing it which is, so to speak, one of the two \ poles of the alternating experience. Another purpose also i achieved by this simple arrangement is the lessening of the j number of times the congregation is required to stand or be seated during the service. There yet remains a final stage of the experience to be ; expressed in the service of worship, the mood of dedication, I into which both the power and the ideas of the experience ! should be directed. The natural outlet for this mood is the ' offering. By itself, however, this is not sufficient to stand | also for the larger consecration of the whole life, which , should be felt and in some way symbolized in the service. ; There are interesting possibilities for experiment in the ' direction of a more complete expression of consecration than I the most of our services contain, centered about the other- ' wise ugly exercise of taking up the collection. I have not met ! with any usages of this kind which are satisfactory. There i is a fair field for any and all to try their hand at improve- | ment in this particular. I I am in this chapter not attempting to suggest precisely ; what details or features can best be utilized to carry out this \ conception of a liturgy, nor is this the place to discuss the innumerable possibilities of exceptional services prepared | for occasions which contain in themselves rich suggestiveness of material. Nor am I here interested to promote any prac- tices which might be called bizarre, or even to discuss the • 160 • The Order of the Liturgy more brilHant possibilities open to such great churches as have at their command extraordinary resources of artistry. The object of this brief study is rather to propose a simple theory which can be used as a guide in our experiments for a more unified and beautiful order of worship. The changes involved in following this guide might not be so very great in many churches, superficially considered. The matter of particular importance just now is the discovery and applica- tion of such a guiding principle, which, if a true principle, may be applied to modest forms and materials and also to the use of the most difficult and extensive literary, musical, or ritualistic exercises. The theory we have been describing is that the order of worship should parallel the experience of worship. There should be, then, in any liturgy, first of all, some form of Presentation. How this shall best be accomplished is a matter for experimentation. Some will wish to include under this caption such items as Call to Worship, Invoca- tion, Scripture Reading, and Anthem; others may consider sufficient a brief Salutation before passing on to the next main division of the order; others will wish to make further trial of some such exercise as above described and called an Introit. In any case, assuming that we are attempting to follow this theory, the items of the first division of the ser- vice must be chosen for their usefulness as presentative or declarative material. The second main division in the order, if we are to parallel the experience, is a Prayer of Penitence. This may be spoken by the minister only, as representative of all, or by the whole congregation. It may be the same prayer for every service, or several prayers ma)^ be used in order. The third division is Praise. Here also different items may be included, such as a doxology, hymn, prayer of thanks- giving, anthem, or responsive reading. Whether one or all of these are used, the function and purpose are the same, to give utterance to the sense of revival and enlargement which is itself the most notable and characteristic element in the mystic experience. The next section should relate itself to that Illumination .i6i- Art & Religion which presumably has been achieved, in some measure at i least, or else the whole exercise is worthless. Here also there , may be great difference of opinion as to what may best be ] used, both to further the experience and to express it. The | ones I have suggested are Instruction and Petition; the one ] calculated to fill with a definite content of ideas and moral \ ideals the expanded but empty, imaginative house; the other j devoted to setting forth common desires and hopes for per- - sons who now seem more worth saving, and for the preva- \ lence of the forces which now seem the most good. The close i of this division may well be signalized by whatever kind of \ Confession of Faith may truly represent the realities be- lieved and trusted by the people. j The closing element of the cycle is Dedication. This may ; or may not be expressed in the Offering. There is certainly ] much to be desired in the matter of fixing and pointing pur- ; poses and leading on to decision and consecration in our i services of worship. The value of the experience is lost if it : is not successful at this stage. Perhaps someone will write 1 new hymns or responsive exercises of enlistment and self- ■ offering. On special occasions a common vow recital might ; be asked and registered with great power. Here we see that \ the most complete worship requires the sacrament of Com- ' munion. The offering of self in the sacrament of the Euchar- j ist is the climax of Christian worship. i This theory of the order of worship has been the basis of our own experiments for more than three years, with very j modest materials. Its application has resulted in an order i of service which is a dramatic unity, simple and dignified, i interesting and smooth. What has been done in our church ; can be done anywhere, and very much more can be accom- plished with more artists to help. j I have nowhere seen another statement of this simple ' principle, except that of Miss Evelyn Underbill, in her vol- ; ume "The Mystic Way." In the chapter called "The Testi- mony of the Liturg}^" the author analyzes in detail the func- ' tions of each liturgical part in the canon of the Mass, in the , light of precisely this theory. "The mass," she writes, "is a ; mystical drama enacting the necessary adventures of the ; •162- The Order of the Liturgy soul."* "All the way — from the first turn in the new direc- tion — to the final consciousness of world renewal — the changing liturgy- tracks out the adventures of the soul,"f The annual program includes many "partial repetitions of the pattern career — the attainment of sanctity, the ascent to the eternal order and heroic descent in charity to man."i: 'The developed sacramental act presents, in more intimate and detailed drama the Mystic Way trodden by each spirit in its movement from partial to complete life."|| Following out this theory, Miss Underhill applies it in detail to the different exercises of the Mass, separating for this purpose the Mass of the Catechumens from the Mass of the Faithful, suggesting that each of these is a complete cycle in itself, one a preparation for the other. Of the first cycle she says, "On its psychological sicie it recapitulates that sequence of mental states which prepares the movement of consciousness toward new levels; the opening of the eyes of the soul, the leading, as it were, of the self to the frontiers of the Spiritual World." § Her chapter cannot be exten- sively quoted here, nor do I agree with her analysis at vari- ous points. But the theory, I believe, is the true one, both historically and psychologically. A few sentences will dis- play her method. Respecting the very beginning of the order, she goes back to an earlier mystic writer: " 'It is the business of the first psalms and hymns of the liturgy,' says Dionysius the Areopagite, 'to harmonize the habits of our souls to the things which are presently to be ministered, establishing an accordance with things divine.' "j| When the vision has been seen, there follows swiftly the sense of imperfection and sin: "The joy of the discovery of Perfection is here balanced by the sadness of the discovery of self: the drama of the mystical life process moves to that first complete realization of disharmony, of the profound need for readjustment, which introduces the soul to the Pur- * Underbill, "The Mystic Way," p. 335. "^Ibid., p. 339. t Ibid., p. 340. Ibid., p. 341 § Ibid., p. 344 H Ibid., p. 344 163 Art (S Religion gative Way. . . . The Confitior is the ritual equivalent of this backward swing; of the sudden vision of self, perceived in the light of reality."* As the experience moves forward, so also its expression in the liturgy. The Gloria in Excelsis is the "fit image of the joyous vision of the universe which is characteristic of the illuminated state, the abrupt dilation of consciousness, the abrupt reaction from pain-negation to the positive emotions of approbation and delight." f In the Scripture readings she finds the expression of that desire to publish the good news and consecrate the life above suggested as a necessary part of the normal experience. I have not myself had exactly this feeling, and question whether it is associated in the mind of the ordinary wor- shiper with the Scripture lessons. Details, however, are un- important, as compared to the truth of the principle that the mystic experience, and also its expression in the liturgy, should include the outgoing desires for the good of the world, as well as the enjoyment and adoration of the moment. The complete exercise is "a compact image of the illuminated life in its wholeness; its attitude of rapt atten- tion to, and glad adoration of, the Transcendent Order, its perpetual effort to share with others the secret which it has received." :|; There are undreamed possibilities of noble worship before us. Our opportunities and advantages are many. At the opera, at the concert, the people are given no share in the production. The experience, more or less stifled within itself, tends to grow less and less in its most valuable elements, and to center itself on the enjoyment of the technical and formal merits of the work of art. The church has a chance to present its great conceptions in forms of beauty no less en- chanting than any others and to enhance the imaginative grasp of those conceptions by the vivid processes of their popular expression and celebration. I believe that it is not only possible for the church to offer higher and better enjoy- * Underbill, "The Mystic Way," p. 346. t Ibid., p. 346. tibid., p. 348. •164- The Order of the Liturgy ments than any of the arts, but also to chiim the moral supe- riority of its exercise of worship as having a definite intel- lectual content and suggesting a definite practical issue. Anyone who has attempted to improve an order of wor- ship is well aware of many practical problems involved. People do not wish to stand up and sit down too many times in a service. There must be opportunities for late comers to be seated with the least possible intrusion upon the attention of all. The order must be easily followed. Strangers and visitors do not enjoy the embarrassment of intricate cere- monies which can be followed easily only by those familiar with them. Whatever forms are used, their purposes and functions should not be too critically understood by the people. They should get the effect without being called upon to notice the management that produces it. It is easy for the planners of public exercises to produce an artificial effect. This is the risk of all analysis and of all painstaking. But the lack of analysis and of painstaking has in many churches brought about usages which are ugly and unendurable to larger and larger numbers of people. I am not claiming that the most beautiful order of wor- ship can cause everybody to worship. The experience is in- effable and awful, mysterious and blessed always. But very much can be done to help people to have it. The experience may not move concurrently with its expression in the service. But I am entirely persuaded that no other suggestion will so help us in arranging better exercises of public worship as this principle to which details can be referred and by which simplicity and unity may be maintained — the parallel ex- pression in the order of worship of the most significant elements in the experience of worship. 165 Chapter XVII : Introit and Antiphons THERE is needed a brief further word about the usage of an Introit as- suggested in the last chapter. The logic and function of its place in the service was perhaps made sufficiently clear there. It is calculated to do what a prologue or first act of a play does. It sets forth the theme of the whole service with sufficiently rich material, carried by beautiful antiphonal music, to capture attention and begin the process of the total presentation of the hour. Such an exercise should be confident in spirit and declara- tive in manner — a work of art never argues but simply pre- sents. In style and diction it should be preferably archaic or poetic, though not metrical. In tone of utterance it should not be modulated nor weighty, but straightforward and clear and even, confidently declarative. In form, a tripartite arrangement seems to be a natural one, each of the three readings of the minister being fol- lowed by the antiphonal response of the choir. A reexamina- tion of a considerable number already used discovers a marked tendency in the character of the three parts. The first reading sets forth some statement of faith or some attri- bute of Divinity. The second relates to the corresponding human obligation, some statement of the moral implications of the divine character previously testified. The third read- ing then expresses the hope of triumph for the truth pro- claimed or reward for the virtues admonished. Materials for these parts should be taken largely from the Bible. Some churches will, at least occasionally, be willing to have other religious writings drawn upon for such declara- tive statements as they regard to be truthfully and beauti- fully set forth. One of the best collections of material of this character has been made by Mr. Stanton Coit and published in the volumes on "Social Worship." Good music for responses is hard to find. We use some- • 166- Introit and Antiphons times that which is included in the "Selected Readings" published by the A. S. Barnes Company. Most of it is very unsatisfactory, although the plan is good. Mr. Clarence Dickinson has prepared similar antiphonals for use in the Brick Presbyterian Church, New York, which are being pub- lished. Our own organist is composing new ones, according as we are able to develop the material in harmony with the services. Two of these are presented below in this chapter. It is hoped that these can sometime be published in fonn suitable for choir usage. If any church desires to make use of such an introductory number, it should possess, sooner or later, a sufficiently large variety of music to cover the main themes of the Christian year. Oftentimes the same musical response will serve tor somewhat different selections for the readings. It is less difficult to find readings more fully pertinent to the theme of the service. If the words which are sung are reasonably in accord, the spoken material will sufficiently carry the burden of more precise introduction. There is nothing in this general plan to make it impracti- cable, even with very modest resources. Even without any music at all, there may be an Introit in the service, though it consist of nothing more than two or three verses carefully selected for their pertinence as a preliminary announcement of the theme of the day. It is, at least, far better to have such an introduction, fresh for every formal service, than to use a familiar stereotyped call to worship. There will always be some people who will try to be in their pews on time simply to hear what those introductory verses are, knowing that they will be fresh and appropriate. Sometimes even a single well-selected verse declaring some divine truth will secure an interest and be fixed in memory better than a longer reading or antiphonal exercise. Such a practice makes all the worshipers feel that the service has been well pre- pared and tends greatly to increase their expectation of getting genuine good from it. It will sometimes be found valuable to use an antiphonal exercise in the midst of the service rather than as an Introit. Particularly is this suggestion applicable to special occa- • 167 • Art © Religion sional services or celebrations. The future artist in worship will find many opportunities for impressive recitals of this character, including responses by two choirs and responses between two portions of the congregation, as well as between minister and people or rninister and singers. The exercises here presented were used in the regular morning service at the Wellington Avenue Congregational Church in Chicago. The music was written by the regular choir director, Mr. Leo Sowerby. The first was prepared for the service at which the sermon topic was "The Son of God," the second was introductory to a sermon on "The Communion of Work." INTROIT ON CREATIVE SONSHIP Minister: Thus saith the Lord: I am the Lord, and there is none else; beside me there is no God. I will gird thee, though thou hast not known me : That they may know from the rising of the sun, and from the west, that there is none beside me : I am the Lord, and there is none else. I form the light, and create darkness; I make peace and create evil ; I am the Lord, that doeth all these things. Choir: Slowly ; — Ho-ly, Ho-ly, Ho iiE — ©> — ©>- ■A e -(Z- ly, Lord God of Hosts. A -men. J / ^ P ^^ ^ 168. Introit and Antiphons Minister: As many as are led by the Spirit of God, these are the sons of God. For ye received not the spirit of bondage again unto fear; but ye received the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father. For the earnest expectation of the creation waiteth for the revealing of the sons of God. For the creation was subjected to vanity ... in hope that the creation itself also shall be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the liberty of the glory of the children of God. Choir. Moderately E=^z^=±::£ £ P -s*- :^=^ t -^ The Heavens and the earth are full, Are full of Thy glo-ry, /i -.^ i_.^-^ J I J ^ rJ J.-f- -•- . -\ — t— I iiBEO* -v—^^ ^sz- p. ^s*l -•— ^- -=]: Ho - san-na in the Higrh P- -^ -0 PJ^ • • -^- -•- -■- -•- -&- -m- est, Ho-san-na in the High-est. Minister: And I saw the heaven opened : and behold, a white horse and he that sat thereon, called Faithful and True : And his eyes are a flame of fire and upon his head are many diadems: And his name is called the Word of God. • 169- Art & Religion And the armies which are in heaven followed him upon white horses. Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we shall be : But we know that when he shall appear, we shall be like him : for we shall see him as he is. Choir: fe Fast / i^ -^r t Bless - ed is He Who com- eth in the Name of the U ii!i*e^ -t9 — • ^—9- i= %S^-^ p- — =Fi Lord, . of . . ts^i p :3^S^ the Lord. Ho-san - na in the mt :p=t '^J^^.f— f-^^- the Name of the Lord. *«: ^-0- High ri=^-^' E5^r t^- ^ :^=±M: est, Ho - san - na in . the High - est. :F=t =F=t I— k— »— * — h-'-^ ;j-» — H— ^ .(Z. fi^ '^ ^ -v-^jg- n r- INTROIT ON THE FELLOWSHIPS OF WORK Minister: Come and see the works of God. His work is honorable and glorious. • 170- Introit and Antiphons He hath made his wonderful works to be remembered: the Lord is gracious and full of compassion. The works of his hands are verity and judgment: O that men would praise the Lord for his goodness, and for his wonderful works to the children of men ! And let them sacrifice the sacrifices of thanksgiving, and declare his works with rejoicing. Choir: fe Rather fast fefet 9 -•— =t -JtL -=ti^ Bless the Lord, all his works, in all pla - ces of s^ m t f -^ i ^^ :*=P^ ±i: 9 his do - min - ion. Bless the Lord, O my -(S-. - soul. /-•-J :•- :^_ ZZZZf (2_ :E ■f5>- \ 5"— I -V' Minister: God is no respecter of persons : But in every nation, he that feareth him and worketh righteousness is accepted with him. For it is God which worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure. Faith, if it hath not works is dead, being alone. Surely my judgment is with the Lord, and my work with my God. .171. Art & Religion Choir. # Moderately -G^-r -\—l P :^: ^3^ -•-7- Bless the Lord, 9M -G>-^ m -«^-^- all ^- ye his hosts : ye min - is - ters of :^=!i: =t=^F -^ r his that do his pleas -ure. Bless the Lord, O my soul. -#— •- -•- S P 4-.J^r. :r=^ ^-p-^ =^=t=^ -^■i - Jt^Jt^t-m J> -f- \ /^- ^ .i^^- J2^ his face. Bless the Lord, . . all 9 i=?= hosts. Bless the Lord, bless the Lord, O my soul. -r — ^ -V H B -©i- I 173 Chapter XVIII: Music MUSIC is the most universal and possibly the high- est of the fine arts. It is the most formal and the least representative of all. It is the only one which appeals to the ear, all the others being addressed to the eye. Although some music approximates other arts in definiteness of ideas, the most of it is representative of moods and feelings rather than of concepts. It is pure beauty, of harmony, of m^elody, of rhythm, like a tree, a vase, a flower, or the movements of the dance. Just as all peoples have loved music, so to the religionist, music is the most commonl)^ acceptable art. Churches which are prejudiced against painting and sculpture and which have, seemingly, little appreciation of the importance of beautiful architecture, insist upon having good music. There is no need for argument by way of persuading even Protest- ants to utilize the art of music. There is much need of many very definite improvements in the ordinary use of music among us. Forgoing the desire to discuss the general aesthet- ics of the subject, I am confining these remarks to a few very practical matters. First of all, the music of a church service should contrib- ute to its unity. Often it does not do this. The words of the anthems, usually, and frequently the words of the hymns, have little or no connection with the general theme of the service. That this is difficult to avoid is no excuse for it. Although our hymn books are not sufficiently rich in express- ing many modern religious sentiments, the best hymnals will yield numbers which will reasonably accord with most of the subject matter desired. It is unexceptionably worth while for ministers to take pains in the choice of hymns. Far more difficult is the question of the anthem. Not only is the range of ideas in anthem literature more limited, but it is harder to prearrange the sermon and service themes •174- Music sufficiently early to enable the choir preparation to be per- tinent. Nevertheless, especially in the larger churches, the attempt should be made to fit the anthem as accurately as possible into the definite unity of the day. As already suggested in a previous chapter, some general church year system of themes may be made the basis of the usual preparation. Even if not always followed, such a sys- tem tends to increase the number of services in which a suc- cessful unity can be developed. Our usual Protestant usage accomplishes this for the more notable seasons, such as Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter. It can be extended by adding seasonal themes in Advent, Lent, Whitsuntide, and other seasons. Where it is difficult, on particular occasions, to find suit- able words for the musical parts of the service, anthems may be omitted entirely in favor of organ music. This is a very impressive usage in any case. There is an abundant musical literature for such purposes. An organ number in the midst of the service may sometimes be far superior to an anthem. It may be made just as interesting, and has some distinct advantages. Having a less definite mental suggestion than the anthem, it calls more richly upon the imagination of the worshiper. If the theme of the service has already been clearly presented, that theme the more easily becomes the imaginative content of the musical presentation. Especially nowadays, when people expect so much to be done for them, it is valuable to have them drawn into this kind of share in the good of the service. Also, in this day of nervous move- ment, it is valuable to have in the service such moments of quietness as are effected by a purely musical number. Not every organist is skilful in the selection of his num- bers with respect to the service unity. He should not use martial music when the theme of the service is quiet and devotional, nor contrariwise. At every possible point all the music of every service should be made conformable to the prearranged theme of the hour. The next most important manner of regarding music in public worship is its worth as the general matrix of the service. It should be used not only for its own sake, at espe- •175- Art & Religion cially assigned places, but all the way through to bind the parts together. It should fill the chinks and make the transi- tions. It is the underlying warp upon which the pictures of the woof are woven. If minister and organist understand each other and work together, many rough places may be smoothed by a little musical transition. Not only such items as prayer responses, but also short bits of playing while stragglers are being seated or while people are changing their postures, or where the impression of one portion of the service needs for a further moment to be continued or slightly altered before another begins. As an instance of the last point, in our service the organist takes up the emo- tional level of the close of the Scripture lesson and plays a little climacteric interlude sweeping up into the Doxology. It does not take long and greatly assists the people to the feeling of praise they are about to express. There cannot, of course, be good music in the church unless there are people properly fitted to produce it. The conduct of the church choir is often a vexed and difficult question. It is well to begin with a high regard for its work. The possibilities of the influence of noble music are so great that it is hard to overestimate the importance of a successful choir. If any chorister should chance to read this chapter, let him be assured of the dignity and worth of his contribution to the service of God; let him understand, also, that it is more important for him to have a truly religious spirit and reverent bearing, and to be unexceptionably faithful in attendance, than that he should be possessed of extraordi- nary talent. A so-called chorus choir, even a small one, is far better than a quartet. The quartet may produce superior music; it is usually inferior in devotional feeling. The chorus is less professional and more worshipful, both in appearance and style of singing. Altogether too much church music, espe- cially as produced by the quartet, somehow has the aspect of concert numbers. Music in the service should rather give the impression of an indispensable and closely woven part of the service as a whole. No music in a service of worship should ever impress one as a program number. • 176- Music Sometimes, where it is hard to maintain a purely volun- teer choir, and too expensive to pay many singers, a paid soloist may be engaged as a voice teacher for the chorus. All the members then receive as a kind of payment or spur to their interest valuable instruction which at the same time improves the choir. A children's choir is often possible of development as an adjunct to the work of the regular chorus. In any case, it is vital to the service of worship that the work of the choir be considered not merely from the point of view of artistic singing, but also from the point of view of its appearance, and with regard to an effect of simplicity and reality as compared with professionalism. The chorus choir is far superior at both these points. It makes possible a processional movement of singers and at the same time a less conspicuous impression. The children's choir, also, though their musical rendition be extremely modest, may be made beautiful to look upon and so a great addition to the sweetness and joy of the service. In line with the importance of the worshipful character of the music, there should be a greater development of responses and antiphonals. The ambitious and elaborate anthem has its place in the music of the church, but it is greatly overestimated. It is often top-heavy with respect to the rest of the service. It is often "lugged in." Frequently it stands apart, valuable in itself, but not intimately con- nected with the total psycholog}^ of the hour. Brief responses, on the other hand, may serve a definite psychological func- tion when properly placed. Some churches have developed short antiphonal exercises between people and minister and choir, composed of read- ing and musical responses. Such exercises are especially valuable for occasional services. They may be made very impressive at the opening of the service, as has been sug- gested. Such usages leave no doubt as to the character of the music. It is obviously worshipful and not merely artistic. It is far removed from the impression of concert program character. In the performance of such exercises, the singers do not appear to be professional artists, but genuine servers in the House of God. There is not a large musical literature • 177- Art & Religion to be drawn upon for such antiphonal singing. It is to be hoped that composers will develop work of this character. It will undoubtedly be more largely called for in the early future. The use of music for special occasions of the church year is often very successfully developed. There is an abundant store of good music for such uses. Yet here, also, there is large opportunity for further development. The future church, especially the cathedral-like city organization, ought to make provision for an organist who is also an able composer. The leaders of the worship of such a church will wish occasionally to arrange services to celebrate great events or set forth in a new way great themes of the Chris- tian career. They ought to have a musician capable of pro- viding the fresh compositions necessary for such occasions. Sometimes even a modest and brief composition that is new in form and content is extremely effective. For example, in our own church, on last Palm Sunday, the organist pre- pared music for the words of the Palm Sunda)' story. The account was presented at the vesper service. It began with the bright morning appeal of the Day of Palms, brilliantly sung by a solo voice. Then followed a reading by the minis- ter setting forth a reconstructed story of the day, recounting the failure of the leaders and the people of Jerusalem to accept the appeal, this reading being accompanied by organ playing. After a transitional paragraph, the keynote of the first bright passage was resumed and the words of praise by the throng sung, to express, as it were, the final judgment of history on the events. This was not an elaborate production, but it was pertinent, beautiful, and spiritually suggestive. It illustrated quite precisely the kind of thing that should be attempted much more frequently as there is developed amongst us a growing sense of the possibilities of noble and beautiful music in the worship of the church. Some churches, especially those located on the crowded thoroughfares, realize the value of organ playing at fixed hours on week days. If people know that they may step into the church for rest and meditation at noontime or in the .178. Music late afternoon, and at the same time find good music, many will be drawn to make avail of it. Two very simple matters need attention, perhaps more than these difficult aspects of the subject. Choirs should be trained to sing their words clearly, and always to give care- ful attention to the hymns. Because things seem small, they are the more neglected. Many organists play difficult works better than they play hymns. And the value of much music is lost because the words are unintelligible. As in other arts, it is the little things that count. We are often too ambitious musically. It is far better to have simple, plain music, sin- cerely and successfully rendered all the way through, than to have occasional brilliant productions in the midst of slovenly and irreverent work in general. 179 Chapter XIX : Architectural Style EVERYONE who has to do with the planning of a church building should have some acquaintance with the principal historic styles in architecture, together with some general impression of the spiritual meaning of each. Two very special facts about the artistic situation of the present day make these particularly important at this time. The first is that we are in the midst of a period of style revivals more marked and more heterogeneous than at any previous time. The second is that there is a battle of wits on amongst the architects themselves concerning this very matter of style revival. Great architecture requires originality or genius, as does any other great production. It also requires scholarship. It is just as unfortunate for architects to be planning buildings that are not scholarly as it is for men to lecture upon phi- losophy without knowing Plato, Plotinus, Descartes and the other great contributors to the stream of philosophic learn- ing. It is just as valuable for the architect to know how the Greeks built and why, and how the monks built and why, as for the preacher to be familiar with Isaiah and Paul and Luther. There is much scholarly building going on these days, and also much extremely ignorant building. Many unfortunate buildings are constructed because committees, as well as artists, are ignorant. It would be worth while for the members of every building committee to make a brief historic excursion before selecting the style of their struc- ture. These paragraphs are intended as an extremely simple introduction to such an excursion. GREEK They would wish to go first to Greece. There they would find remains of the great prototypes of thousands of build- ings in the western world. On the Acropolis in Athens alone .180. Architectural Style they could see enough to give them some sense of the glorious life that produced the fragments which still remain there, and some vague comprehension of the great qualities in these constructions which have again and again drawn back to them the artistic imagination of the race. There is a curious paradox just here. Some likeness to something in the Parthenon may be discovered in many structures in many countries over centuries of time, yet the Parthenon is a finished product, complete and perfect, with no possibilities of further development in its own mode. A rectangular building, of simple post and lintel system and of absolute symmetry, quickly comes to the limit of develop- ment in its own line. No structure of this kind in the world is so satisfying as this Parthenon, with its seventeen columns upon each side and eight at each end ; every question of scale and proportion nobly disposed; the opposing elements of weight and upbearing force exactly balanced; every line of force and every stress of weight beautifully expressed in the structure; lavish of decorative detail, yet ample of broad light and shade; amazingly fine in niceties of construction, especially as involved by the curvatures of stylobate and columns: a complete, elegant, commanding house of wor- ship. This building is the symbol of the very essence of Greek life and genius. We cannot understand it without under- standing that life, and yet, from it alone, we might almost reconstruct that life. Many things are to be read from the structure itself. Without yielding to the temptation to analyze them, perhaps the most important thing to say is that the building typifies in its very nature the intellectual mastery and the spiritual poise achieved, though it were for but a brief moment in the history of human life, by the great race whose genius flowered so wonderfully in the fifth cen- tury B.C. It is no derogation to them to say that they remained untroubled by many of the problems which inter- est us. We could not express our lives in a building anything like the Parthenon. We have not reached any such mastery or unity of life. We are troubled by the enslavements of the world as the builders on the Acropolis were not. .181. Art ^ Religion All the writers agree in a general way in the interpretation and meaning of the Greek style. Coventry Patmore calls it a rational style, "weight of material force mastered by the mind." Irving K. Pond calls it an intellectual style, "final poise and repose," by its horizontal lines intimating restraint and restfulness. Henry Osborn Taylor describes it as ex- pressing these elements — limit, proportion, order, finitude, perfection, simplicity, unity, intellectualism, poise. Lyle March Phillipps emphasizes its tranquillity and lucidity. He says that one "puzzled by the obscure in life, baffled by the nothings that crowd his days will find a restorative in Doric architecture, as though the great temple should speak — 'Resist the importunities of the passing hours ; he who has diverted man's purpose by the fugitive impulses will accom- plish nothing; proportion your ends to your means and instead of frittering away energy in a thousand caprices, direct it to the proportions of some worthy design.' "* I do not myself feel satisfied with these phrases. Nor is it fair to quote them as the complete word of these critics. If the Greek temper was poised, it was not a quiet poise : if it was intellectual, it was not unemotional or inactive. The calm of the Parthenon is not the oriental calm, but rather the self-possession which includes both enthusiasm and energy. Its godlike stateliness is not that of indifference and aloofness, but rather of comprehensiveness. Moreover, the Greeks built other buildings more common and human; on this same Acropolis, the Propylaea, the temple of Nike Apteros, and the Erectheum. We are so accustomed to think- ing of Greek architecture in its practical and definitive, luxurious, Romanized modifications that we do not give sufficient credit for the mysticism that is in it. If for a brief time the Greeks seem to have reached an intellectual repose, for a brief time also, in the age after that of Pericles, they appear to have been stirred by fresh uncertainties, until the Hellenic life of the spirit was more or less quenched by the Macedonian ambitions and the Roman administration. The Greek mysteries, the Greek nature poetry, and the Greek sculpture in the post-Phidian age all represent a more Ro- * Phillipps, "Art and Environment," p. 120. .182. Architectural Style mantic and searching spirit than is displayed in the clear-cut and definitive Roman world. Yet chiefly the intimations of the purest Greek work are intellectual. ROMAN Roman architecture seems at first sight to be merely Greek, more elaborated and larger in scale. In reality, how- ever, not only did the Romans apply Greek methods of structure and Greek motives of decoration in a greater variety of ways, but they created a new architecture by the use of the arch. The round arch enabled the Romans to vault wide spaces in their great baths and basilicas and to carry heavy loads as in aqueducts and amphitheaters. It also enabled them to beautify facades and develop arcades of great charm in both public and private structures. The Christian churches began to build in the national and prevailing style. Although very different in some aspects to the civil buildings of the same name, the early Christian church was called a basilica, an oblong building with an interior colonnade on each side; with a high roof over the middle portion so that light and air might come from win- dows in the clerestory walls above the rows of columns; and with a half circle wall at the end of the nave inclosing the apse or sanctuary. Some of the very ancient basilicas still remain in very nearly the original form, and with most of the original materials. In Rome, St. Paul's Without the Walls is perhaps the most distinguished and representative of all. It was originally built in 386, once restored by Valentinian and again in modern times. Santa Maria Maggiore was built in 432, and although it has a Renaissance ceiling, it retains its original appearance. Buildings in this Roman style were constructed for Christian churches until the Gothic Age, San Clemente in Rome having been built in 1108. Two great buildings at Ravenna, San Appollinare in Classe and San Appollinare Nuovo, constructed under Byzantine influence and containing notable Eastern mosaics, are none the less basil ican in form. Many basilicas were built in Syria, some of them remaining in ruins, others as the one in Beth- lehem still in use. These buildings are not only stately in .183- Art & Religion their proportions but they form an excellent audience room for hearing the preacher, and an excellent composition, by their length, for drawing attention to the altar or the com- munion table and to the symbolic decorations in the apse. All Roman architecture seems to be touched with the spirit of practical competence and administrative ability. Probably the modern American business man would find himself more at home and at ease in the society of Romans than he would in the company of Greeks or of mediaevals. Possibly the American woman would discover a genuine kinship with the Roman matron in personal and domestic life, in virtues and in ideals. Yet the Roman had power and wealth and intelligence by which he could command a cul- ture and a sensitiveness which he did not of himself quite possess. All this is accurately represented in his buildings, the structures of an eminently practical race. BYZANTINE After the division of the Roman Empire, the Greek city of Byzantium, later known as the city of Constantine, be- came the center of governmental vitality and so also a dominating influence in building. Byzantine architecture is an admixture of oriental and Hellenic ideals. Its greatest achievements were accomplished by the builders of Jus- tinian, in a structure which some have regarded as "the noblest church Christians have ever built," Haggia Sophia in Constantinople, begun in 532 A. D. The building rests upon four great piers or towers forming a square of about a hundred feet on each side. From pier to pier are flung great arches. Upon the arches, spanning the wide nave and sup- ported by huge curved triangular walls or pendentives, is the great dome, one hundred and eighty feet high. The side arches, above a two-storied colonnade of great beauty, are walled. The other opposite arches are open to receive the vaulting of two semi-domes at either end of the structure. The whole amazing space is clear to the eye as one steps through the inner portals of the narthex. The interior is splendid in the display of rich parti-colored marbles, and originally possessed extensive mosaics. Other Byzantine .184. Architectural Style buildings which the traveler may have opportunity of seeing are San Vitale, Ravenna; the Church of the Apostles, Salon- ica; St. Mark's, Venice; the Church of the Chora, and St. Irene, Constantinople. St. Front in Perigueux, France, has a Byzantine dome and the church which Charlemagne built at Aix-la-Chapelle is an octagon, like the works in Ravenna or their prototypes in Syria. The brilliant color of Byzan- tine decoration is on the walls and not in the windows as in Gothic buildings. The best-preserved of these structures are characterized by an oriental and almost barbaric splendor that suggests an exuberance of vitality in the life which produced them. Their structural triumph still makes us realize the intellectual genius of the Greek builders who designed them. "It is the clearness of the art of Greece itself.""^ Their wide spaces and comprehending domes dispel any inclination to narrowness or provincialism in the be- holder. ROMANESOUE After the barbarian invasions had destroyed the imperial power in the West and broken down the civil unity, the power of the church remained, and great churches were still built. But the Dark Age, roughly 500 to 1000, was in gen- eral a nondescript period. The builders of churches no longer had such fine artists or competent workmen to depend upon, nor could they find so many old pillars and capitals from earlier structures to use in their new ones. They began, there- fore, to use heavy square piers instead of pillars, and archi- volts instead of architraves between the piers. Some of the basilicas had used the archivolt but could not develop it because of the inadequate support of pillars. The cathedral at Torcello is a ruder church than the older basilicas, but its arches are wider. San Pietro at Toscanella, 740, still pre- dominantly Roman and basil ican in plan, has round arches, the greater spread of which is the presage of change. When, however, arches were used over the nave and then a cross vault added, as at St. Ambrose in Milan, tenth century, we have a building that stands not at the end of an old process but at the beginning of a new. * Lowrie, "Monuments of the Early Church," p. 158. .185. Art & Religion In Lombardy and in Tuscany are to be seen many churches which may be called Romanesque because founded upon the basilican idea, yet modified profoundly by the increasing use of the arch. Many of these are augmented by campaniles, lofty, free-standing square bell towers, some of them of great beauty. In this modified Roman style were constructed also, north of the Alps, many monastic churches. In Germany are many notable buildings in the later Roman- esque period, such as the Church of the Holy Apostles, Cologne, the cathedrals of Speyer, Mainz, Trier, and others. In Southern France, particularly in Auvergne and Poitou, are many notable Romanesque churches. Many people are familiar with the beautiful doorway of St. Trophime at Aries. Concerning the style typical of this period Professor Maurice de Wulf spoke recently at the Lowell Institute. "It was a form, or a collection of forms, which were quite new, in which the rational and logical character of the church and its functions shines forth with great clearness. For the first time were seen two towers serving as the frame for the fagade, large doorways, choirs with their surround- ing ambulatories and radiating chapels, high walls orna- mented within, a cruciform ground plan, and above all, a barrel vault in stone, instead of wooden vaults for ceil- ings."* In the hands of the Normans the same mode of structure was rapidly developed in the energetic days of early medi- aevalism with brilliant results. The length of structure was increased and the height. Such buildings as the church at Jumieges and the Abbaye aux Hommes at Caen, Norman buildings with high vaults and clerestories, might be called early Gothic by some, so far has the process developed from the earliest movement of change. In England, Iffley Church, for a small building, and Durham Cathedral, for a great structure, are well-known Norman churches. For the most part, in Romanesque and Nonnan construc- tion, the arch is still a weight-carrying rather than a bal- anced member. In general, also, the wall of the building, rather than its pillars and arches, is emphasized. Sobriety * Quoted from the American Architect, April 7, 1920. .186. Architectural Style and simplicity and strength are intimated by the plain and solid masses and wall stability of these buildings. They have left behind the finish and authority and surface polish of the Roman world; they have not yet achieved the daring and logic and brilliance of the Gothic Age. There is a sense of masculine dependability about them that is protective and noble. They are not the structures of an effeminate or ele- gant age. Whether ponderous, as in some cases, or high and light, as at the close of their period, they are all suggestive of a well-composed power to endure, a sturdy virtue and good will, not reflective or clear of mind, but stout of heart and strong, GOTHIC Probably the average uninstructed notion of a Gothic church is of a building having windows with pointed arches. Nothing could be more inadequate or, for that matter, far- ther from the truth. To say just what does constitute a Gothic structure, however, is not so easy. Certainly the late Norman buildings with round-arched windows and vaults are more nearly Gothic than many modern so-called Gothic churches, which are nothing but hall auditoriums, though the windows be narrow and pointed. The astonishing abbeys and cathedrals of the high Gothic age came both swiftly and directly from the Norman buildings of Northern France and England after the Conquest. The transition was effected, most of all, by the construction of rib vaulting. This at once lessened the amount of masonry required to vault the aisles, and also the quantity required for the walls, by concentrat- ing the load upon the piers. The solid stonework was still further reduced in the buttresses, as it was found that an exterior half arch or flying buttress would carry the outward thrust as safely as a right-angled wall. These devices, together with the pointed arch and sexpartite vaulting, also enabled the builder to carry the structure to greater heights. The result at last was a building in which the walls all but disappeared in favor of pillars or clustered piers and windows. At last, also, the buildings left far behind the broad and •i87- Art & Religion horizontal forms of the classic world : they became long and high, the vertical lines dominant. Almost every important city in Europe can show a mediaeval Gothic building, and almost everyone with any acquaintance in architecture at all, knows the names of some of the most celebrated of early or late Gothic cathedrals. / As in all architecture, the building itself tells its own story of its own age. The Gothic structure is instinct with energy and aspiration and unrestrained emotion; it is active and unsleeping and unlimited. As the weight of the Greek entablature is carried by the columns gracefully and easily, in a Gothic building it is "totally vanquished, borne above as by a superior spiritual power."* The arch is not so much a carrier of dead weight as an active member of a logical fabric nicely balanced by an equilibrium of forces. How these incomparable works of art were raised by the com- munalism, the rising nationalism, and the piety of the great period which produced them is a great historic study. The story of the Cistercian monks alone would throw needed light upon many matters artistic, social, and religious dur- ing that energetic age. Students of the history of religion or of art may be well assured of the benefits to be derived by delving deep into the surging tides of life and feeling, strong enough to have set so high a mark in the artistic annals of the race. Modern would-be builders might find it profitable to engage in another kind of imaginative effort. I could almost recommend that a church building committee secure a great quantity of wooden blocks and go down upon the floor and try to build a church in order to get ever so faintly some- thing of the feel and thrill of composing a true structure, and some far-off sense of the builder's fierce joy in the mastery of his problem. Anything we can do to give us a dramatic entrance into the spirit of the builders would be beneficial to the art of building among us. A very short experience with our blocks upon the floor would soon show us that it is comparatively easy to build a basilica with architraves. And it would soon convince us, also, how far we * Patmore, "Principle in Art," p. 20i. .188. Architectural Style should have to go before we could produce anything like a Gothic structure. The intimations of Gothic building, then, are not chiefly intellectual, though its structural character is logical above all others; nor chiefly practical, though its structural princi- ple is active and never passive; but emotional and mystical. The long and narrow spaces do not spread out to compre- hend a many-sided experience, but point the attention, with a singleness of concentration, upon the highest experience: the high vaulted aisles do not rest assuredly upon the finite and the known, but lead the imagination to find some com- munion with the infinite unknown. THE RENAISSANCE In the fifteenth century another great change began to pass upon all the western world, that combined revival of classic learning and of timeless humanism which we call the Renaissance. Beginning in Italy, it spread to the north and, architecturally speaking, came to America at the time when the most notable churches of the colonial days were built. Without presuming even to suggest the complex feelings and movements of the age, it is for our purposes sufficient to recall two or three of its most significant notes. It was a revival of interest in the classic grandeur and the classic learning both of Rome and of Greece. Perhaps more pro- foundly, it was a fresh interest in nature and in man, a reassertion of individualism and humanism as over against the authority and austerity of the mediaeval church. Mr. Symonds calls it the emancipation of reason; Mr. Phillipps, the natural succession of an age of thought after an age of action, an intellectual civilization with naturalism and realism in the arts. Professor Frothingham says that archi- tecturally the meaning of the Renaissance is "the revival of the classic orders, and of the Roman decorative system, combined with Roman and Byzantine forms of vaulting, under the influence of an artistic sense less constructive than it was decorative and with a degree of free interpretation that often degenerated into license."* Professor Hamlin * Sturgis and Frothingham, "A History of Architecture," vol. 4, p. 106. .189. Art & Religion says that "the Italians of those days, dissatisfied with the foreign and Gothic manner which they had for more than a century been seeking to assimilate, longed for the stateliness and dignity, the largeness of scale, the breadth and repose of effect which they now recognized and admired in even the ruins of the Roman monuments."* Mr. Thomas Hastings writes that "the forms of architecture which had prevailed for a thousand years were inadequate to the needs of the new civilization, to its demands for greater refinement of thought, for larger truth to nature, for less mystery in form of expression, and for greater convenience in practical living."f The first great architect of the Renaissance was Brunel- leschi, who completed the great dome of the cathedral in Florence in 1436, who built San Lorenzo, and Santo Spirito, the Pitti Palace, the Hospital of the Innocents, and other works. His low, round arcades upon single columns were delightful and much copied. The name of Bramante stands for the higher Renaissance, with its revival of pier and pilaster construction characteristic of ancient Roman build- ings. Many palaces and churches in Italy were built in this splendid age, about 1490 to 1550, including St. Peter's Cathedral. After this came baroque and decline, although contemporaneous with the beautiful and influential work of Palladio. North of the Alps the classic revival became one of the influences in the rapid development of the Reformation, particularly through the learning of such Humanists as Erasmus and Zwingli. The architectural effects were not so prevalent. Castles in German)^, chateaux in France, and manor houses of Jacobean England are all variant forms of Renaissance influence. The churches of St. Sulpice and the Hotel des Invalides in Paris are differing forms of French Renaissance, and the palaces at Versailles, a later form. The movement in England began with Inigo Jones, its greatest works being those of Sir Christopher Wren, who completed St. Paul's Cathedral in 1710. Wren's London parish * A. D. F. Hamlin in the Architectural Record, July, 1919, p. 62. t Hastings, "Modern Architecture," p. 6. • 190- Architectural Style churches, with their slender spires, especially St. Bride's, Fleet Street, and St. Mary le Bow are the direct prototypes of our early American houses of worship, such as Park Street, Boston, and the North Church in New Haven. The intimations of the Renaissance mode of building are, like the movement itself, complex and therefore varied. At their worst, they suggest secularity, triviality, vulgarity, superfine elegance — though for that matter the decline of any artistic movement reveals these same things. At their best, they seem to convey something of the dignity of Roman Stoicism, and as carried out in a few of the finest wooden Colonial meetinghouses, a lucidity that is almost Greek, together with a Gothic aspiration in the spires. At the aver- age they are secular and administrative. STYLE REVIVALS In planning a new church, shall we use one of the historic styles, and if so which one, or try to find something new? In the first place, it is most important to be aware of what we are actually doing in the matter in America just now. We are passing through a period characterized by a fresh interest in all these historic styles and a revival of them all. Every- one is perfectly familiar with the facts of this revival in domestic architecture and in house furniture. In the late nineteenth century we were producing about as bad an out- put in furniture as possible. It is only within the last fifteen or twenty years that Grand Rapids and other furniture head- quarters have been turning out "period styles." Precisely the same thing has occurred in church architecture. On the one hand, there is a fresh usage of the Gothic tradition, gen- uinely informed with a real Gothic spirit. On the other hand, there have been many buildings whose mode traces back to the classic tradition at some point or other, Roman Basilican, Romanesque, Renaissance, or Colonial. Few people are aware of the magnitude and excellence of the new Gothic churches recently constructed in America. By far the most notable works in this movement, both as to character and quantity, are those of Mr. Ralph Adams Cram and Mr. Bertram Goodhue. Amongst the most important of .191. Art & Religion these churches are the Episcopal Cathedral, Detroit; St. Thomas's, New York; Calvary, Pittsburgh; The Euclid Avenue Presbyterian, Cleveland; The House of Hope, Presbyterian, St. Paul; the First Baptist, Pittsburgh; the First Presbyterian, Oakland, California; the Military Chapel at West Point ; the South Reformed, New York ; the First Congregational, Montclair, New Jersey; the Chapel of the Intercession, New York. These works vary somewhat in method and in feeling according as to which artist dom- inated in their design and decoration and according to the requirements of the parishes themselves. But they are with- out exception distinguished buildings, which taken together constitute an architectural influence that is likely to persist in American life for generations. To see any one of them is to be immediately aware of the paucity of noble architec- ture over the country generally, and to be stirred with the undreamed of possibilities before us as a rich nation begin- ning to be capable of expressing itself in the noblest forms for the highest enjoyments of the spiritual life. The contributions of Mr. Henry Vaughan to this Gothic movement in the buildings of Christ Church, New Haven, the Chapel of Groton School, the Chapel of Western Re- serve University, Cleveland, and others, are no less signifi- cant in their character. Allen & Collens have built the chapels of Union Theological Seminary, Williams College, and Andover Theological Seminary; the Congregational Church, West Newton, Massachusetts; and the Skinner Me- morial Chapel, Holyoke, Massachusetts — all interesting and excellent examples of the Gothic revival. A structure which will draw visitors is that now slowly rising at Bryn Athyn, Pennsylvania, lovingly built by the Swedenborgian community there. On a larger scale than any of these are cathedrals designed for New York, Baltimore, and Wash- ington. Stirred by this movement, many other churches have set out to build in the Gothic style, some of the small buildings having great charm. Others have not come very near the Gothic spirit. Many possess excellent detail of tracery or other decoration, but are too wide or low in their proportions • 192 • ^ X o X o Q O o ■ S'S ^ V < > l-l >< . H "^ ew R Ci a a u cj> a! 1-. ■y Ck Ci «J -ii '-' -2 -^ -2 ^t-^ 'K-s s R ^ Structural Tone although it may have a certain repose of commanding lines, has also a vigorous activity in the spring of high vaults. The historic solution of this requirement is, of course, the altar, which, with the decorations upon it, or those of the reredos back of it, or ciborium over it, constitutes an object intensely stimulating to the imagination. Without this, however, it is still possible for the artist to develop decorative motives, either massed or scattered, which will promote a mental activity. The use of windows, murals, mosaics, statues, or symbolic designs in the focal part of the structure may accomplish what is needed in this direction. Three other matters have always a powerful effect upon the structural tone of any building, the matters of propor- tion, scale, and materials. The relation of height, breadth, and length has immediately to do with the feeling one gets from a building. In a general way, as already intimated, breadth of structure is characteristic of the classic heritage and feeling, intimating an intellectual inclusiveness. If the latitude is too great, it suggests a too matter-of-fact view of life. The longer and higher structure is the more emotional and active and perhaps the more mystical. A genuine Gothic building is very long and very high in proportion to its width. It is possible to choose a classic style of detail and build with a spirit almost Gothic, by the increase of length and height. Just so, Gothic details may be applied to a building so wide as to become uncharacteristic in structural tone. In such cases, it is obviously better to use the style which more truly comports with the desired proportions and tone. In any case, an oblong space is superior to a square one. There are few successful equilateral churches in the world and the most of these are strongly modified as to interior proportion by the addition of an apse or choir, as in San Vitale, Ravenna, or by the extension of semi-domes, as in the ancient Byzantine churches. The square interior makes a focal point of interest almost impossible. It hinders con- centration of attention or of action. Even although we may not wish to use the Gothic style, our age probably needs a corrective to its scattering and individualistic effort and • 211 • Art & Religion more of the spirit of concentrated ideals and common devo- tion, which may be greatly assisted by buildings more nearly Gothic in their proportions. Other important matters hinge upon the problem of scale. A large building where, also, all the apertures and all the decorative designs are large, will appear to be smaller than { it is, as, for instance, St. Peter's in Rome. A small church : may be made to appear larger if the doors and windows are ' minimized and if the furniture of the interior is designed \ as small as possible in scale. Oftentimes the uncomfortable ! agitation of a moderate-sized building is due to faulty scale. | A change in the scale of all details would yield in many a j church a tone of dignity and repose which it now lacks. ; Very much can be accomplished for the structural tone of 'i a building by the right choice of materials. My own feeling j is that bare stone or bare brick is far superior for the interior \ of a church to anything else. The desirable austerity of the t building cannot be so directly accomplished in any other . way. These surfaces, however, will produce a sense of cold- ] ness unless the builders are willing to introduce strongly con- \ trasting elements of warmth or brilliance such as have been •> suggested. Some of the recently built churches with stone | interiors, amongst non-liturgical bodies, are decidedly cold ; because of insufficient color in other ways. They need altars, j or murals, or banners, or bright vestments to give them fire I and warmth. A building committee need not be afraid of the cheaper ' grades of material. It is more important to employ a compe- \ tent artist who will produce a successful design of the right ! proportion and scale than it is to spend the money for costly j materials. A very beautiful church may be made of the i cheapest brick, unplastered outside or inside, if the structure \ is well designed. I have often seen church buildings overly] fine and elaborate, the surface finish running ahead of struc- j tural invention and tonal character. Apartment house brick i in a building well designed is better than marble badly | fashioned. Pine boards, simply stained, if well cut, are better ■. than rosewood, varnished and polished, in shapes inappro-^i priate to a church. ; •212- I Structural Tone No one but an artist can solve these questions of structural tone. This does not always mean a professional artist. There are humble parsons who have more artistic feeling than some conspicuous architects. As a general rule, however, only the very best professional architects know enough about all these matters of light and shadow, color, texture, scale, propor- tion, and design to put together many elements into a simple and successful composition for a church, A church building casts its influence upon a community for years, sometimes for generations. A noble building seems to have an almost living air and spirit, and may become a benign power in the lives of the people round about it. It is a great blessing to any town to possess such a structure. It is to do one of the most certain of public goods to have a hand in the erection of a beautiful church. •213 Chapter XXI: The Chancel THERE is an outstanding fact respecting church building in America which is remarkably significant. It is the fact that numbers of buildings have been erected for the use of so-called non-liturgical churches with the communion table as the center of the interior composi- tion. Although strictly speaking the word chancel refers to the railing which separates the space allotted especially to the clergy, there is no better word to use in describing the separated space that is formed in the apse of the church when the communion table is placed at the head of the build- ing, somewhat elevated, the pulpit upon one side forward, and the lectern on the other side forward. Such an arrangement, even by historical usage of the term, may properly be called a chancel, though in a larger church this space may incorporate also the choir. This is, of course, the arrangement used in the early Christian basili- cas. It has been perpetuated in the West in the Roman Catholic, Anglican, Lutheran, and to some extent in other bodies. Now it is being revived with remarkable rapidity among the free churches. The illustrations of this volume display some of the most successful of those recently con- structed. I am sure that I do not know of all of them, but I do have information of more than fifty of these churches outside of the Roman Catholic, Episcopal, Lutheran, and Reformed Communions. This is a sufficient number to constitute an architectural tendency of note. A few of these are not recent. The First Parish Church and the Central Church, Boston, are older buildings with this arrangement. The latter was built by Upjohn in 1867. The Central Church of Provi- dence, Rhode Island, and the Central Church of Worcester, Massachusetts, also follow the ancient usage. Not all of the Reformed churches have kept the plan, but a large number • 214- The Chancel of them, especially in Pennsylvania, have not only a chancel but an altar in them. Most of the others are altogether twentieth century buildings. It is extremely significant that this movement has been developing not merely in one body but in several and in widely scattered communities. And it is altogether too ex- tensive a movement to be laid to the door of any small coterie of artists or of ministers. It is rather a growing ex- pression of dissatisfaction with present forms, of an expand- ing culture, and of the spirit of experimentation. Presby- terian, Congregational, Unitarian, Baptist, Methodist Epis- copal, and Universalist churches are represented in the list. The reasons for this development are several and in several areas — artistic, ecclesiastical, religious, and prac- tical. Probably the chief feeling which has prompted the move- ment is artistic. Every work of art is a composition in har- mony. Every artistic composition has some clearly selected method of unity, some plan of bringing together diverse and manifold elements into the single accord of the whole. In painting, there is a point of "high light" upon which the lines of light and shadow converge, and to which the eye turns naturally and easily. Pictures which do not possess excellence of composition are unsatisfying to the physical sense and thus aesthetically weak. Just so, an architectural interior is satisfactory according as the physical composition is so unified as to assist the com- posure of the feelings of people in it. It needs a "high light," a point of commanding interest, in precisely the same way as does a painting. The communion table or altar at the head of the apse is artistically a far better center for the composi- tion than a pulpit. The pulpit is usually an upstanding vertical object set in such a manner as to split up the space and divide the atten- tion rather than center it. You may go into almost any annual exhibition of painters' societies and you will find very few vertical compositions. Portraits are often such, but the peculiar elements of interest in a portrait make it a more successful vertical composition than a pulpit can ever be. .215. Art & Religion The pulpit is not especially interesting unless there is some- one in it. It is therefore not a successful "high light" during all the parts of the public service other than the sermon and for all other uses of the church building. Perhaps more profoundly still the artistic advantage of the chancel arrangement is its depth. Attention is not only scattered but blocked and limited by a great unrelieved wall space. By the more remote chancel, and its smaller area, attention is gathered together, led forward, and concen- trated. These and other artistic reasons are in themselves sufficient to demand the change which is taking place in the present-day architectural treatment of the church interior. The religious and ecclesiastical reasons are more impor- tant to some than the artistic. The pulpit at the center cer- tainly tends to throw the chief dependence of the service upon the sermon, and in such a manner as greatly to mini- mize the possibilities and values of other exercises of wor- ship. A successful chancel far better creates an atmosphere of worship before ever the service begins. And after the ser- vice has begun, it fosters reverence through all the parts. It tends to minimize the personality of the minister and to merge him into the background as a voice and messenger of the historic church and the communal faith. Moreover, it differentiates his priestly and prophetic func- tions, thus enriching and clarifying the aspects of the reli- gious experience. Strangely enough, it accomplishes all this without losing the vitality or function of the pulpit. Leaving the chancel and ascending the pulpit, the minister thus selects it as the appointed station for his own free utterance and whatever prophetic word has been given him to speak. The sermon is not minimized, while other parts of the ser- vice may be greatl}^ improved by the greater significance of the objects of visual attention and by the greater variety of movement in the conduct of the service rendered possible by the central chancel plan. It is harder for any man to conduct a loose, flippant, or formless service in such a building. For special services the arrangement is far superior, freed of the awkward and immovable pulpit platform. The com- munion service is greatly enhanced in dignity by the phys- •216- i The Chancel ical aids and evident honor of such a setting. The com- munion table and all that it represents in the devotional life of the Christian Church is not assigned to a narrow space and passageway below the pulpit platform where it is diffi- cult to conduct the service without the sense of constriction or awkwardness or the feeling of its being after all an inci- dental affair. Special public exercises involving large num- bers of persons are more impressively managed. Organ reci- tals with no persons at all visible may be made much more effective in a building which itself conveys the Christian message and helps to supply a varied yet pertinent content to the imaginative experience engendered by the music. Such a church building is far superior as a place for silent meditation and prayer, as it is open during all the days of the week. In addition, the value of retaining excellent traditions is worthy of consideration. It is the traditional plan of the Christian Church, so arranged long before any of the con- troversies, in the midst of which the arrangement was changed, were developed. One may be eager to be rid of mediaeval ideas that do not comport with modern religion, and zealous to go forward to the free thought of the future, and yet be a lover of excellent and beautiful traditions established by the fathers. This physical setting for the service of Christian worship is one of the traditions of the early church worth reviving. As in the case of the artistic reasons, the religious considerations also strongly favor the tendency already developing in this direction. Practically, also, the plan has many advantages. It saves space, easily utilizing the corners of a rectangular building for organ, choir room, choir benches, and minister's study, or vestry. The placement of the choir stalls or benches on either side of a chancel in the traditional manner enables at once a more beautiful and a more practical management of the choir. For processional hymns the singers may be more prominent, as they should be; and when not standing to sing, they are desirably less conspicuous. The chancel plan is practically more manageable for wedding ceremonies, •217 • Art & Religion funeral services, for pageantry of any kind, and for special exercises of children. These and other considerations have been in the minds of clergymen and architects in their plans. The Rev. Shepherd Knapp of Worcester, Massachusetts, has written: "From a practical point of view the chancel arrangement is especially advantageous for special services, such as The Communion, funerals, weddings, and any festival service when proces- sions and floral decorations come into use. The pulpit in the middle is much in the way for such occasions. The pulpit itself insists upon being the focus instead of some special feature of interest. In effect you have to discard all that lies behind the pulpit in weddings, for instance, and the space in front is usually restricted. The chancel arrangement is beautiful at the Communion Service — the table in the middle on the higher level where all can see it, the minister and deacons occupying the chancel seats." The Rev. Charles E. Park of the First Church in Boston speaks of the architectural propriety of the plan: "Ours is a pure Gothic church, a dim and very ecclesiastical interior, with steep trussed roof and high narrow stained glass win- dows. To my mind, such an interior rather predetermines the chancel arrangement. Anything else would be architectur- ally, or at least traditionally, incongruous, and hence it would not be beautiful." Concerning the Central Congregational Church of Boston the Rev. Willard L. Spe'rry suggests its symbolic value: "I like the general arrangement. The value of the whole scheme seems to me to lie in the opportunity given for some sjTnbolic suggestion as to the several functions, priestly and prophetic, in the conduct of public worship. To have a little area in which to move, gives added interest to the general fabric of the service, and seems to me to dignify the various items in the service, giving each a certain distinctiveness of its own. We have a big communion table which I suppose may be called an 'altar.' At the celebration of the Communion it is moved out from the wall and the minister sits behind it. I suppose that is unecclesiastical and would shock any high churchman but in the Communion it preserves something of .218. Cram, Goodhue & Ferguson, Architects. SOUTH CHURCH • NEW YORK CITY • REFORMED Impressive stonework in piers, vaulting, and altar. The light comei through the lofty clerestory windows above low side aisles. The Chancel the dignity of the old Congregational idea. The deacons sit in the chancel seats on either side of the table." In a letter from one of the officials of the Presbyterian Church of Englewood, New Jersey, is the following testi- mony: "About two years ago our church was remodelled from the stereotyped kind of pulpit and choir arrangement common in many Presbyterian Churches into what every member of our Church now feels is a satisfying result. There was a little question at the outset as to the propriety of the chancel arrangement in a Presbyterian Church but Examples of this style of ecclesiastical architecture in Congregational and Presbyterian churches that were submitted by the archi- tect soon overcame any question. The result has more than justified the prediction and our entire congregation is rejoic- ing in the very beautiful and appropriate result accomplished. I am enclosing under separate cover photographs showing two views of the chancel and a view of the nave. If you could compare these with a photograph of the church in its previous arrangement, you would see what a great improve- ment has been made from every standpoint." There yet remain certain difficult problems, both reli- gious and artistic, respecting the ideas and symbols of cen- tral prominence in the future church. Artistically, is the communion table itself a sufficiently interesting object of visual attention? Not, I think, unless the setting is very successfully handled. This has been the chief problem of the architects who have used this plan. I have nowhere seen as yet a wholly successful solution. In the building designed by Cram, Goodhue & Ferguson, for the South Reformed Church, New York, now the Park Avenue Presbyterian, the communion table itself, made of light-colored stone, and faced with a mosaic, is a clear-cut and strongly attractive center of interest, and is particularly well surrounded, — by tessellated flooring, choir benches, the stone arches of the octagonal chevet and exquisite though restrained clergy stall carvings. As a whole, this chancel is one of the most successful solutions of the problem under discussion. In other instances, as at the First and Second churches of •221 • Art & Religion \ Boston and the Church of the Divine Paternity in New York, there are mosaic compositions in the wall immediately behind the communion table, which in these cases is placed against the wall. In the most of the new buildings with chancels there is 1 not much difference in tone or light value between the table [ and its background of clergy stalls or minister's chair and | deacons' seats. Some have used a strongly colored fabric or j dossal for the space behind the table, as at The House of i Hope, Presbyterian, St. Paul. Still others have failed to j make a "high light" out of the table at all because of the ] strong character of the chancel windows at the head of the : apse and the placement of the table in such a way as to fall J within the shadow. The eye is thus constantly lifted away ^ from the center of liturgical and symbolical interest to the < place which should be the secondary point of light in the j composition. It may be replied that the painted glass figures , of the window ought to be the primary "high light." There i is much to say for this. I strongly incline, however, to the \ other view. Exactly this problem of a sufficiently prominent center of ] interest led to the development of the ciborium, or pillared \ canopy over the altar of the early church. Mr. Walter : Lowrie has clearly explained this: "With the construction \ of great basilicas there arose an architectural necessity for ; this or for some similar device. The altar, no matter what : might be the size of the church, retained always the same ; very limited dimensions. Of itself, therefore, it was ill fitted j to constitute the architectural centre of a huge basilica; it J needed then as it has always needed, some architectural j adjunct which might vary in size with the proportions of '■ the building. . . . The reredos of the Gothic church was ' another solution under changed conditions. It can hardly be i accounted so successful a one."* I The problem is largely solved for an ordinary building ^ if a cross is placed upon the table or candles are used. A ' white cross against a dark background, or contrariwise, at i once constitutes a compelling point of visual interest and ^ * Lowrie, "Monuments of the Early Church," p. 123. ^ . 000 . i The Chancel becomes the artistic as well as the symbolic center of the whole structural composition. This is the reason for its historical development and for its continued usage in all the old churches and this is the reason for its recent revival by some of the free churches. One of the most simple and beautiful altars I have seen is that of the Second Parish Church of Newton, Massachu- setts, an orthodox Congregational Church. In this church there is no question as to where the look of the eye will center. There is very little except sheer prejudice in the way of a more widespread adoption of this solution. Many of the Reformed churches, although meanwhile developing a thoroughly modern theology, have never abandoned the traditional symbol of Christianity. The fact that the churches most notable in its revival are those of liberal thought is evidence of their view that it is not incompatible with a modern theology. In discussing the question with a friend of mine who is a man of international repute, an orthodox minister, and one of the most typical Puritans of the present day, I was surprised to hear his warm commendation of this procedure. He feels it to be a great assistance to reverence and dignity much needed in these days, to have a definite altar in a Christian church. There is no essential reason against the placing of a wooden cross in the most prominent place of the church building, unless that reason applies equally against placing the idea of the cross in a prominent place in theology or hymnology, or in decorating other parts of the building with many crosses of wood or of glass. If we are to use symbolism at all, it is better to do it heartily. Assigning the cross to inconspicuous decorative positions looks as though we were half ashamed of it. There is no great danger of mistaking symbols for realities now. No one regards Dante's great symbolic portrayals as facts. Long ago the great Protestant painter, Albert Diirer, said, "A Christian would no more be led to superstition by a picture or an effigy than an honest man to commit murder because he carries a weapon by his side."* * Quoted from Crouch, "Puritanism in Art," p. 310. .223. Art ^ Religion If the new religion is to be a composite and the future church a community church in the most inclusive sense, it would be an impropriety to make any such use of the cross. If it is to be definitely Christian, there are many reasons for the central prominence of the cross, even to the liberal thought which does not accept traditional views of atone- ment. It is a symbol of uttermost love, a symbol of personal salvation, an ever present call for personal acceptance of the law of love even to the extent of self-sacrifice. It is possible, on the other hand, that the next generation will be moved by a strong sense of the value of the com- munion service because of its suggestion of brotherhood. The service will be for many not so much a memorial of the sacrifice which historically was the tragic end of a beautiful brotherhood, as a memorial of that brotherhood in its vital- ity and hope. It will commemorate for them the fellowship of a band of young men under the spirit of an incomparable leader, eager and determined to reform the whole structure of the national faith of his people, and set going new and liberating principles in their moral life. I hope to live long enough to see some church of noble and brotherly people build a great building for the worship of their community in which a physically large table of com- munion set in an ample space may be the center of the public exercises which most movingly celebrate and reenkindle the ideals of brotherhood. The use of candle light is one of the historic solutions of the problem of artistic "high light" for an interior composi- tion. Some of the Dutch churches which do not use a cross upon the altar, place candles there. Psychologically, there is much to say for it. The eye, however much it may wander to other beauties in the building or distract the mind with other thoughts, is always brought back to the strongest light. The effect speedily becomes more than physical and tends to empty the mind and make it ready for the message of the service or of the preacher. This is no more than the logic of the aesthetic experience in general. It is the reason why you go out of doors for a long walk to think over an important matter, despite the •224- S ^^ 2 « *5 53) The Chancel fact that you may be unable to proceed with the thinking because of the obtrusion of trees or sky or water, the physical charm which these exert and the empty-headedness which at lirst they seem to induce. But that empty-headedness is the first thing you need, the preliminary condition to the clear-headedness you came for. Just so, the physical beauties of the house of worship should tend to produce this desirable condition of readiness for the positive message of the hour. Some of the churches which have moved the pulpit from the central position have made an ineffective compromise. They have moved it and not moved it, building a prominent pulpit from which the sermon is delivered, retaining a less prominent desk in the middle of the platform. Such is the plan in the Fourth Presbyterian Church of Chicago. The pulpit proper is very beautiful and placed in a most com- manding position on the great pier of the crossing, but the point of the central visual interest is weakly handled. It is an uninteresting mass of chairs, tables, and choir screening. There is nothing religiously appropriate in the prominence of a choir collected in a gallery behind the preacher. In this building especially, the long lines of a majestic nave strongly lead the attention toward the focal point, but when it gets there, there is nothing there. The whole effect is as if you were to look upon the Sistine Madonna after someone had pasted blank paper over the face of the Virgin. Shall the average church, then, build with a chancel or not'? It depends upon what kind of exercise is to be con- ducted in it, and partly upon what the people go there for. If the building is to be merely an auditorium, that is, a place to hear in, then it makes little difference. But more and more, modern churches are not being considered as meetinghouses or auditoriums. When the church spends its money to make a more beau- tiful structure, it does not do so in order to improve it as a place to hear in but as a place to look in. But so soon as you desire to make a successful appeal to the eye, you must fol- low the canons of looking and not those of hearing. If the dependence of future church worship is to be chiefly the sermon, the central pulpit is sufficient. But if there is to •227 • Art & Religion be developed in any kind of genuine sense an art of worship, then there is demanded a more manageable space and a more symbolic differentiation of parts. The possibilities of liturgi- cal and ceremonial improvements are greatly obstructed by '; high platform and central pulpit; and this entirely apart | from any question of reviving any ancient ritual. The tradi- < tional chancel plan is just as desirable from the point of j view of the invention of new kinds of exercises. It is adapt- j able in almost unlimited ways. There are no sound objections | against it. It dignifies a very small chapel : it is necessary to a | great cathedral-like church. It is beautiful, practical,'! churchly, and positively suggestive to the religious imagina-ji tion. 228. \ I Chapter XXII : Practicable Matters IT is always advisable for persons who wish to build beautifully to be sure that they are also building prac- tically. The parish life of most modern churches in- cludes a greater variety of other concerns than those of wor- ship. These must not be forgotten. And, also, any movement to improve the beauty of church buildings in general should be concerned for the small parish as well as for the larger. The suggestions must be practicable on a small scale. First of all, educational facilities are required. It is no longer considered important for this purpose that there be an assembly hall. The younger scholars need separate de- partmental rooms, the older should meet for assembly in the main church. But all the junior, intermediate, and adult classes should be provided with separate classrooms. These rooms may be also utilized as clubrooms. The Church School building should have very much the character of the regular public school building, on a smaller scale. Some of the recent church plants with an elaborate provision for the Church School have more halls and large rooms than they need and not enough small classrooms and clubrooms. The social life of the modern parish requires at least one large space for church suppers and other large gatherings. It ought also to have, wherever possible, smaller rooms that are particularly attractive in their furnishings, one or more clublike rooms for men, and one or more pleasant parlors for women. If there is a gymnasium, the same space may be arranged for dramatic presentations such as are not suitable for the main church. The placement of the building, large or small, deserves the greatest consideration. If possible, the floor of the main church should not be too far above the ground. An easy and inviting entrance is very difficult when too many stair steps are necessary. Whether the church be in the city or in the •229. Art & Religion country, passers-by should be able at times to get a glimpse of the lighted interior, and to hear the sounds of the organ. All the educational and social rooms should be placed above the ground if possible. The smaller church and its equipment needs to be given more attention on the part of architects. There is a too common feeling that only the large and rich church can have a beautiful building and adequate parish equipment. It is true that most of the significant illustrations of current usages as to architectural style relate to large and costly buildings. Whatever is done in the large, however, sooner or later affects the style and manner of the small. Precisely the same canons of good artistry apply to the most modest buildings. It is no more costly to build a very small church beauti- fully than it is to build an ugly one. On the contrary, my own observation leads me to think that much of the unneces- sary expense in many small churches has detracted from the beauty of the buildings rather than added to them. Far too many small churches are not sufficiently plain, direct, and simple. Success in this matter is not a question of materials nor of size but of taste and artistry. Yet there are especial problems in the small building. It is difficult to design a small church so that it will intimate big ideas. It is hard to secure sufficient dignity in a structure that does not have an amplitude of scale, but it can be done. Mr. Cram's little chapel at Arlington and Mr. Goodhue's little side chapel at St. Bartholomew's in New York are scarce twenty feet wide, but they are more dignified and im- pressive than some of the biggest churches in the country. They prove conclusively that the small building need not lack dignity. By the right proportions and something to give the interior a religious tone, a very small church may be just as inducive to reverence as a large one. On the whole, no single feature of the plan besides these matters of proportion and tone will so help the small building in dignity as a chancel. The simple arrangement of placing the communion table centrally in the interior composition at once specifies the religious character of the building. Immediately there is •230. Ralph Adams Cram, Architect. ST. ANNE S CHAPEL • ARLINGTON HEIGHTS • MASSACHUSETTS Unplastered walls are treated with whitewash directly upon the stones. The tone is at once barren and cheerful, a festive note being added by the bent-iron candelabra. Practicable Matters conveyed a sense of dignity far superior to that of any structure of the purely auditorium type. Some of the denominational church building societies are still permitting extremely unfortunate practices in the erec- tion of small church buildings. Others have made great advances and are prepared to offer detailed designs for small churches that are at once practicable and beautiful. The Bureau of Architecture of the Methodist Episcopal Church has published some highly creditable plans and designs. It is no longer necessary for the small church to engage an expen- sive architect. It is usually desirable to avoid an inexpensive one. Another very practical question in church building is that of partial construction. Many church committees are en- amored of the so-called unit system, and proceed to erect a parish house long before they are prepared to build the church. There are many cases in which this is desirable. In many others it is gravely unfortunate. Particularly is this true now that the Church School assembly hall is not so desirable as it used to be considered. What is the advantage in erecting a Church School house with a large assembly hall and having an ugly building until the main church is built, and thereafter possessing a useless assembly hall*? It is especially unfortunate if the parish house unit is built in such a way as to be later located on the flank of the main church building, arranged to be an addition to the seating capacity of the church. This very procedure is one of the most common and certainly the worst possible plan. The final result in such a church is an ugly interior, whether the doors of the Church School hall be open or closed. And with the growing tendency for the conduct of the Church School worship in the main church the flanking hall is more or less unnecessary in any case. It is far better to build the principal structure first. The only objection to this is on the part of those who wish to wait until they can afford to build the church more elaborately and beautifully. The only reply is that it need not be more costly than the other plan. To begin with, a building can be given churchly proportions and erected with cheap materials. •233- Art & Religion Later it can be beautified by rich furniture, by decorative murals or windows, by the addition of a tower or spire, by covering the outside with plaster or better faced brick. Meanwhile, the outlines of the structure tell their own story and make a churchly appeal in a way that is impossible for a nondescript-looking building at the back of a lot. One of the most simple plans for such a structure is that of a plain rectangle about twice as long as broad. The social room may be in the basement. At the front of the church may be a chancel with two small rooms in the two corners, one for the minister's study or Church School classroom, the other for stair hall and choir. At the other end of the build- ing may be two crosswise rooms one above the other, for primary scholars and for classroom space, or for small meet- ings. When the time for improvement comes, the lower of these rooms becomes a foyer, yielding also some space for more pews. The upper room becomes the gallery of the church. Further Church School classrooms and social rooms will be built as an additional parish house equipment. Some such procedure as this is scarcely more expensive and far superior, artistically, to the plan of erecting a parish house first. It provides very creditably for the Church School, while the public worship of the church is far better encour- aged than when conducted in a temporary and ill-propor- tioned hall. More important than anything else suggested in this chap- ter is the practicable character of structural beauty. No building can be artistically satisfactory if a preconceived design or style is foisted upon the structure to the detriment of its practicable character. The sense of the appropriateness of the structure with respect to its materials, location, and uses is essential to the aesthetic enjoyment of it. The artistic forms, both structural and decorative, must be fashioned, at least in part, out of the utilitarian demands of the situation. The use of concrete developed in modern times, and still more the use of steel, adds to the structural methods of modern buildings. As time goes on, there will be increasing skill in the mastery of the aesthetic possibilities of these materials. •234- Practicable Matters To recognize the aesthetic worth of that which is also practicable is not to admit that every practicable building is beautiful. The elements of scale, proportion, decorative design, and other factors must constantly be remembered, particularly in the attempt to build beautiful churches for the worship of God, Nevertheless, these elements may be in every other way satisfactory without yielding the shy secret of beauty, unless also the structure be evidently recognized as practicable. 235 Chapter XXIII : Religious Ideas for the Architect ON the whole, the architects are less to blame than the churches for failing to make of church buildings successful symbols of religion. They have been quite as zealous as the churches in the reestablishment of a nobler conception of the church building. In a recent letter, Mr. William Orr Ludlow has discussed this point. "There has been a very distinct tendency on the part of some of the Protestant denominations to consider the church building an auditorium and to make comfort, acoustical qualities and clever arrangement of plan the criterion of excellence. These things are all essential but after all are merely the good body and unless the spirit is conserved, the best part is wanting. "A building is an expression of purpose and the church building is something more than a comfortable and conven- ient place for the worship of God. It may be unfashionable in these days to speak of the 'House of God,' but that very fact indicates the lack of appreciation of the real purpose and real ownership of the building. "If then it really is God's House and not merely a conven- ient place in which to worship Him, any true architectural expression must recognize the qualities and character of the real owner. If someone builds a house for me and builds it without recognizing anything of my character and tastes, to say the least, he is an unfaithful steward of my funds. To build the House of God and make beauty, dignity and spirit- uality, as expressed in architecture, entirely secondary to good heating and acoustics is to build God's House without God." The first religious idea, therefore, for the architect to bear in mind, in planning his church, is that it is to be a House of God. The building as viewed from without or from within should be definitely recognizable as standing for .236. K. "SJ 3J H ~- Religious Ideas for the Architect religion, an ever present reminder of God. There should never be any question as to whether it might possibly be a post office or any other secular structure. Forms, styles, pro- portions which have been commonly in use amongst the people for other public purposes, though perhaps in them- selves appropriate, should not be used for a church. For the clear representation of religion, probably no structural feature is so important in the exterior aspect of the church as a tower or spire. Some churches in the Gothic style have been so designed as to produce the aspiring effect without a tower. By the lofty and narrow proportions of the facade, and the prominence of tall, pointed windows, they give an impression of lift and upward reach. But it is diffi- cult to do and not often successful. The typical church should have a spire or tower. Just what interior elements can be utilized to convey the feeling of religion is for each artist to decide for himself. On the whole, probably nothing is so tangibly effective at this point as the planning of some kind of chancel, as already suggested. But the desire and the spirit of the builder is more important than the forms he chooses for his expres- sion. It is in the nature of the case difficult for an ungodly man to build a House of God. Whatever the style the first demand of the building is that it somehow convey a sense of God. In such a church, sometimes at least, men who have come to admire will remain to pray. In this connection it is worth suggesting that the concep- tion of a church building as a House of God relates itself to two important religious faiths, one ancient and one modern. The Eastern Church has always emphasized the Christian doctrine of the Incarnation. Present-day religious faith emphasizes the conception of the Immanence of God. These are only different forms for solving the same religious problems. The architect should understand something of the present vitality of this present thought of the immanence of God, in its two most important aspects. First, it means that present religion conceives of God as at work creating and recreating the world, especially as actually an energy and influence in the spirits of men. The second aspect is the Art & Religion ■ thought of God as ever revealing the truth. A House of God \ should in some sense be a record of the historic triumphs ] of religion, a statement of old faiths which are more and ] more confidently held to be true, together with a genuine , expectancy of larger light and nobler success yet to come. : A church should have Man in it as well as God in it. It ■ should be a strong and manly structure — honest, depend- : able, vigorous in all its structural character. It should not be i overly decorated nor too delicate. If possible, the structural i principle of the building should be clear and evident, rather j than obscured or covered up. It is, for instance, to me a very < great regret that the heavy masonry arch over the crossing ' in the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, New York, cannot | be seen. It has been covered with lesser slabs and stones. In \ an age which has developed so little of such structural sta- \ bility, I would like to see the very stones that hold the great \ building up. Let the architect reveal the structure wherever ■ it is possible. '■ In its symbolism, also, it should have something to glorify ! the achievements of man and express confidence and hope ] in the development of man. Without worshiping the saints, ] we can enlarge and brighten life by vivid recollections of j the leaders of the human race. It is not possible or desirable ^ to make of any church a Pantheon or a Hall of Fame. It is i possible to put in every church something to connect the ' religious experience of the present with the spiritual achieve- \ ments of the great and good in the history of the human ' conquests of mind and heart. j Tablets, windows, portraits, statues, may be utilized, i many or few, according to the scale of the building and the interests of the community, to memorialize those spiritual achievements considered to be especially inspiring by the particular church. The brilliant new reredos of St. Thomas's Church, New York, contains figures of the early political heroes of American life as well as saints of the church. This is one definite way of putting Man into the church. i It is perhaps more diflficult to express the other great | present conception of man, the ideal of brotherhood. But it i must be included in some way. If the theological analogy of \ •240- I Religious Ideas for the Architect God as a father means anything practical, it means that all human beings are in some sense children of God, and should learn to practice the brotherly life. Everything autocratic must come out of the church. It is for the artist to put his imagination at work to design something expressive of this vigorous, modern conception of the human person. As the Eastern Church has stood for the Incarnation, the Western Church has stood for Salvation. The church must still be a place of refuge, forgiveness, cleansing, healing, and joy. It must ever be a place where there is experienced the joy ot release from failure, shame, injury, and trouble of every sort, and the joy of the abundant and creative life. In seeking to symbolize these things the architect needs to remember some important changes in theology. If it is still true that the cross is the great symbol of salvation, it is also true that its interpretation is very different from that of mediaeval or Reformation faith. The cross is still a symbol of the uttermost character of the Divine Love, which may become the inspiration and the power of its human imita- tion. It is no longer a symbol of something accomplished for the believer entirely outside himself, to be appropriated by a formal act of faith: but rather of that which must be accomplished inside himself and appropriated by imitation in the actual life of the practical world. Nowadays it is seen that men are saved according as they become saviors. Also the life of the world and the character of human nature is not now conceived as formerly. We are not saved by withdrawal from the world, but by living the divine life in it. We are not saved in spite of the flesh, but by under- standing and developing the gifts of the bodily powers. Salvation, in other words, is positive and not negative. It is the developing transfonnation of human nature. It is the living of an abundant life. It is living the productive and creative life, and receiving the immediate rewards of such a life. It is a life freed from sin and failure by the positive spirit of Christ-like good will. I do not just now see how the architect can say these things in his building. I do believe that as we acquire more and more mastery of our new view of life and more and more .241. Art & Religion \ facility of expression there will be discovered appropriate \ forms for celebrating the beauty of nature and of human \ nature, for assuring people of the goodness of life and of ' God, and for assisting the process of their own participation i in this life. These new forms will not exclude some of the ] old forms. Perhaps they may be only modified manners of : setting forth the old solution. It is for clergyman and artist | alike to consider and develop how the church building may \ best serve to help people to the Joy of Salvation. | These things we have been discussing may be perhaps ! more clearly specified to the artist as Truth, Goodness, and ; Beauty. Modern religion desires to make earnest with all ' these three. It desires to have ever fresh discovery, practice, ' and enjoyment of all these three. It desires constantly to 1 minister these to all men. Let the architect do his best to ! build a House of God which men will feel to be open to All ' the Truth, where men may be led to live according to the , Highest and most Brotherly Goodness, and enabled to enjoy i the Beauty of the Whole of Life, and he will have been , most highly successful. j 242 Chapter XXIV : The Future Church THE Reformation age has been marked, amongst other things, by the extensive delimitation of the functions of the church and widespread specializa- tion of social agencies. There was a day when the church school was the only school. There was a day when the church charity was the only organized charity. There was a day when the only drama was the church drama, when the only public art museum was the church, when the noblest musical productions were those of the church. The Reformation age has witnessed the severance of the arts as well as many com- munity services from the ecclesiastical institution. The new age will be characterized by new integrations. The discursive temper of the old age will be greatly modified by new popularities and new commonalities. The analytical temper of today will give place to the synthetic efforts of tomorrow. It is not necessary, economical, or efficient to develop too many institutions for the functioning of life. Moreover, and vastly more important, it is not good psy- chology to divide up the human person and his interests into too many categorical expressions. I like to think that it may be possible to reunite in the church some of its dissevered members, especially in the region of the arts. I am definitely hopeful that in some great community there can be formed a company of men, some of them artists, some of them sociologists, some of them labor- ites, some of them patrons of the arts, some of them priests, and most of them plain people, who will unite to establish a great Community Church — a Church that will in itself be a great museum of art, a great music hall, a great scene and theater for the pageantry of new representations of life, a great school of morals, a great forum of new thought, a great expression of brotherhood, a great temple of worship. I do not mean to say that any great variety of community •243- Art & Religion organizations ought to be reunited in the church. Yet organ- ized religion must ever be one of the chief centers of thought, must ever perform certain vital community services, and constitutes the only opportunity for the joint expression of all the arts. There are some who would set too narrow limits to the functioning of the ecclesiastical institution. Perhaps there are many who would fear the compressing effect of anything placed under the governance of religion. But the true religious life^ is the all-comprehending life. True reli- gion never compresses but rather enlarges everything it touches. It gathers to itself and fuses in the fires of its own j supreme experience all discoveries, all purposes, all appre- hensions, and then upon all quests and aims and joys it throws the illumination of its own great light. This play and interplay between historic religion and fresh, natural, human experience, just intimated, is precisely the thing that will create the church of the new age and describe its character. The future religion will not be a vague eclecticism. It will be specific, historic Christianity. But it will be a Christianity ever freshly tested and ever newly enriched by a conscious relation to the categories of truth, goodness, and beauty. A pagan standard as a test of revealed religion? Partly, yet the only standard comportable with a spiritual concep- tion of revelation. We are at last face to face with a revived demand and possibly with a revived opportunity to do what they did in the earliest days of the Christian faith and to do it better. Into the pagan world went forth the gospel of the Hebrew prophet and Christ. But the forms through which the gospel was passed on to the later generations were the forms of Greek thought and Roman polity. Historic Christianity was fashioned by the mergence of Hebraic and pagan elements. Retaining great moral and spiritual ideals from their own religious heritage, the early Jewish Christians left off their allegiance to the Jewish Law. But their disciples were not supplied with an adequate intellectual furniture nor an adequate practical organization until they met with the pagan world. Christian theology very early began to be .244. The Future Church formed to the moulds of Greek thought, and almost as early Christian polity was cast into the mould of the Roman imperial administration. A similar mergence is now required. It is for Catholics and also for Protestants to abandon their legalistic character. Both are in bondage to the Law, the one to the legalistic con- ception of the Church, the other to a legalistic conception of the Bible. Retaining the spiritual authority of the historic Jesus, the root of specific Christianity must be grafted afresh with the new growths of rational, ethical, and artistic faith. And this great process ought to be better achieved than ever before. What in the former time was accomplished largely out of the pressures of practical life, could now be done self-consciously and deliberately. We have behind us the modern scientific and analytical studies of religion. It is now time to transform the academic survey of the psy- chology of religion into applied psychology of religion. Only a great priest can perform the marriage of na'ive popular religion with critical and rationalized experience. Only a great artist can weld the components of historic faith with seething, aspiring, naturalistic humanism. It has been done before, it can be better done again. The materials for a great comprehensive reconstruction are at hand, and those who do the work will discover all but inexhaustible resources for the task in the world of the Arts as well as in the worlds of Science and Reform. This has been impossible under the old dualistic view of human nature, which afforded no legitimate basis for the fleshly appeal of art. The new studies of experience and the newer views of nature and of human nature not only constitute a sound basis for artistic progress but, vice versa, open the gates that the rivers of faith may be freshened from the springs of art. What is needed, therefore, is not so much a Reformation as a new Formation, comparable in comprehensiveness with the early formulations of Christianity. The reformers thought they could do without forms : we know that we must create forms for realizing and propagating our faiths. We have been thinking of the new age in contrast with the .245. Art & Religion Reformation age. If human life is to be successful, possibly the next hundred years will rather be of such a character as I properly to be called the time of the great Formation, i The Church of the Future will be the Church of the Open i Mind. We are here interested in this only as it relates to the j arts and to worship. We have already endeavored to see that i the artist is not only not inimical to new truth, but that his f own perennial tendency is to break away from outworn | ideas. The artist, always seeking new modes of utterance, | thereby ever transforms the thing that is uttered. And we \ have already sought to appreciate also the aids of art to the i rationalizing process. Arriving at an apprehension of the ' truth is not wholly a matter of science and philosophy, but < in part a mystical process. A great art of worship would j foster a great theology. ' The Future Church will be the Brotherly Church. It will I not only teach advancing ideals of human relations, but ■ practice them. It will not only discuss the problems of right i and wrong, but call men to definite and sacramental dedica- j tion to the right. It will resolve the tragedy of culture by j carrying it forward out of the realm of the mind by a cul- ture of the will. A great modern art of worship will not j merely display a tangible brotherhood realized in the com- \ munion of the saints, but it will fire the resolution of friend- ; ship until the whole community is absorbed in that fellow- ■ ship. ! The Church of the Future will be the Church Beautiful, i It will value and enjoy beauty, any beauty, the beauty of i anything, the beauty of the whole of life. Most of the artis- ' try used by religion is symbolic in character and classic in : method. It begins with definite religious concepts and seeks ■ to express these ideas in forms of beauty — musical, liturgi- i cal, architectural, decorative, or ritualistic. The Church of I the Future will utilize also the romantic method. It will ; value forms of beauty in painting, music, and dramatic i action not specifically symbolical, but realistic, poetical, or s lyrical productions. That is to say, it will set forth the one- \ ness of life not only theologically and ethically but also ^ aesthetically. j • 246 • I The Future Church What does all this mean practically'? Briefly, it means for the average church or the small church that it will be fur- nished with a beautiful building and supplied with far superior materials for all its work and worship. It will be assisted to the development of a noble liturgy. It will from time to time be visited by superior preachers connected with preaching orders. Freed from the burden of much unprofit- able sermonizing, the minister will be enabled to improve the religious education of the young and of the old and more richly perform his priestly and pastoral functions. For the extraordinary church in the city, it means a more elaborate cathedral organization, where a dean and his canons constitute a chapter of specialized clergy. The staff will include teachers, preachers, dramatists, musicians, visi- tors, directors, and evangelists. The intellectual life will be developed from the pulpit as freely as in the past age, much more freely in the church school, and more democratically in the open forum. Practical service to the community will develop according to the needs of differing situations. The heart and core of this community service, however, will be the pastoral work of good cheer in the homes of people, and the personal, priestly ministry of consultation. The public worship will be founded upon the normal great ritual drama of the spiritual life. Other public exercises will be more varied, including great evangelistic appeals, free and informal discussions, noble musical presentations, and I think also pageants and morality plays in the choir of the church. We cannot have this Future Church, we cannot have church union, we cannot have a new age until we acquire a new psychology about practical religion. Nothing is more important in this attempt than to reexamine the categorical relations of the religious organization in its ordinary con- stitution. The background of our consciousness in these mat- ters is unnecessarily divided. The mediaeval church, think- ing of the minister under the category of the priesthood, has never genuinely admitted the prophetic category. The Protestant body, thinking of the minister as a prophet, has hindered his usefulness in his ordinary capacities by assign- .249. Art & Religion ing him a role which in the nature of the case is extraordi- nary. So also in less sharp contrasts we have spoken of public services as "going to meeting," "going to Mass," "going to hear Dr. So and So." None of these things is primary. The way out of this confused background is the plain recognition of the primacy of religion. The religious experi- ence is the human experience of the living God. Art is not religion, but only the stepping-stone to it. Theology is not religion, but only the description of it. Morality is not reli- gion, but the resultant issue of it. The culture of the reli- gious experience itself is therefore the primary function of the practical religious institution. If the primary category of religion is the religious experi- ence, the primary category in describing the function of the church is the Cultus. The public worship of God is the reason for the being of the organized church. It does not attempt chiefly to provide a cult of ideas as do scientists and phi- losophers; nor a cult of ethics as do sociologists; nor a cult of beauty as do aesthetes; but the culture of religion, the all- embracing life. It is for this primary function that the church is chiefly valued, even by the outsider. Entirely typical of this estimate is the word of a modem artist and philanthropist, Mr. Allen Bartlett Pond. "The pulpit as a doctrinaire platform may pass away; creeds may come and go; but the church as a house of worship must remain, its liturgies and its rituals, purified and refined, voicing for men their deepest feelings, their loftiest aspirations, their noblest ideals."* The Future Church will maintain a great cult of religion itself, personal and social, the stabilizing background of change in theology and in morals, the great ordinary over against which the extraordinary has significance, the under- lying being out of which there always flows that which is becoming. The corporeal character of this great cult,.'The nature and method of its apparatus^will not be that of creedalism, noij the personal rousing of^ hedonistic emotions for their owrl sake,! but that of great symbolic acts and objects of beauty. * Quoted from the Brick Builder, vol. 8, p. 174. • 250- The Future Church This great cult will be administered by priestly officers who will organize a scientific school of moral and religious educa- tion; keep themselves in readiness for personal consultation; devise exercises in public worship, simple and quiet at times, at other times brilliant and majestic; and keep open welcome to the prophetic voices of the day, whether of scientist, reformer, or artist. This great cult will be the record and consummation of the national ideals, the pictured description of the national life, the supreme and harmonized utterance of the voice of the age. This great cult will be rooted firnnly in the primary sensa- tional approach to human nature, but it will flower in the spiritual and sacramental realization of the divine nature of persons. This great cult will be housed in a building made with hands but which by its very style and tone will intimate both the near and far presence of Divinity. The time draws near when it should be possible to con- struct such a great Cultus, on the one hand freed of authori- tative and legalistic formularies; and on the other free, by competent technique and the mastery of its joyous forms, to spread the influence of the noblest ideals in the social life. The Church of the Future will heal the breach between religion and the ancient categories of truth, goodness, and beauty. Yet the worship of the new age will be not less but more religious in spirit, not less but more Christian in essen- tial character. If the spur of the scientist is the love of truth, the joy of the Christian is the Truth of Love. If the zeal of the moralist strives to achieve some association or brother- hood of goodness, the joy of the Christian is the Goodness of Brotherhood. If the satisfaction of the artist is the life of beauty, the joy of the Christian is the Beauty of Life, all life, man's life, the Life of God. 251 Appendix IT would require a volume properly to collate and criti- cise in detail the various orders of worship amongst the free churches. I am appending therefore only the simple orders used in our own church, the regular Ordinary, and the order for the celebration of the Lord's Supper. The usual Sunday morning order, as will be readily ob- served, is very simple. It is designed to follow the course of experience as outlined in chapters fifteen and sixteen. The Organ Prelude and Processional Hymn are, as sug- gested, introductory in character. The burden of Presentation is entirely carried by the Introit, which for every service has about the character of those printed in chapter seventeen. The second principal liturgical division, the Prayer of Penitence, is the Prayer of Confession taken from the Fifty- first Psalm. The third element, that of Praise, is chiefly expressed by the Anthem. Sometimes a hymn of praise takes its place. This note of Praise, that is, the upward swing of the pendu- lum of attention, in the swift alternations which so typically characterize the mystic experience, is further impressed and sustained a little later by the Doxology and the Gloria Patri. The definite mental and moral content to be realized and readjusted in the experience of Illumination, is suggested in the Scripture Readings and pastoral Prayer. The illumined outlook is then led to congregational expression in a Confes- sion of Faith. Our present material is taken from I John and from Romans. A definite suggestion of personal Dedication is made in connection with the Offertory by a Scripture verse, freshly chosen for each service, and by a consecration prayer as the offering is received. The emotional course is then more or less neutralized by • 2 C2 • Appendix the hymn preceding the sernion, which thus prepares the way for fresh attention to the explicit thought of the day. This thought has already been prepared for or intimated by the Introit, Scriptures, and Prayers. Two other items should be mentioned, which indeed are extremely important. The little responsive benedictions and ejaculations after the prayer of confession, serve to graduate the mood between penitence and praise. A brief gradual of organ playing leads from the mental interest of the Scrip- ture lessons to the reiterated praise of the Doxology. The Communion Order is in part about the same. In the one herewith published the traditional words were sung in the Gloria in Excelsis, Benedictus, Te Deum, Sanctus, Agnus Dei and Nunc Dimittis. Although most of the prayers are free and extemporane- ous, usually the ancient Communion Collect is used at some place. Sometimes a traditional prayer is said at the Off ertory. The Communion Admonition commonly includes the sug- gestions contained in the Orate Fratres and Sursum Corda. The Prayer of Thanksgiving opens and closes with the words of the traditional Preface. . 9. 253 Order of Worship ORGAN PRELUDE PROCESSIONAL HYMN INTROIT PRAYER OF CONFESSION Have mercy upon us, God, according to thy loving kindness. According to the multitude of thy tender mercies, blot out our trans- gressions. Wash us thoroughly from cur iniquity, and cleanse us from our sin. Agai?ist thee have we sinned and done evil in thy sight. Create in us clean hearts, God; and renew a right spirit within us. Cast us not away from thy presence; And take not thy holy spirit from us. Restore unto us the joy of thy salvation; And uphold us with thy free spirit. — Amen. Minister — The Lord be with you. People — And with thy spirit. Minister — Praise ye the Lord. People — The Lord's name be praised. ANTHEM PRAYER SCRIPTURE READING THE DOXOLOGY CONFESSION OF FAITH God IS love; and every one that loveth, is born of God, and know- eth God. We have beheld and bear witness that the Father hath sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world. And this commandment have we from him, that he who loveth God love his brother also. The Spirit beareth witness with our spirit, that we are children of God; and if children, then heirs ; heirs of God, and joint heirs with Christ: if so be that we suffer with him, that we may be also glorified with him. THE GLORIA PATRI OFFERTORY HYMN SERMON THE BENEDICTION— The Congregation Seated. RECESSIONAL HYMN ORGAN POSTLUDE 254 Order of Worship for Holy Communion ORGAN PRELUDE PROCESSIONAL HYMN INTROIT PRAYER OF CONFESSION Have mercy upon us, God, according to thy loving kindness. According to the multitude of thy tender mercies, blot out our trans- gressions. Wash us thoroughly from our iniquity, and cleanse us from our sin. Against thee have we sinned and done evil in thy sight. Create in us clean hearts, God; and renew a right spirit within us. Cast us not away from thy presence: And take not thy holy spirit from us. Restore unto us the joy of thy salvation: And uphold us with thy free spirit. — Amen. Minister — The Lord be with you. People — And with thy spirit. Minister — Praise ye the Lord. People — The Lord's name be praised. ANTHEM— Gloria in Excelsis. PRAYER EPISTLE GRADUAL— Benedictus. GOSPEL THE DOXOLOGY CONFESSION OF FAITH God IS love: and every one that loveth, is born of God, and know- eth God. We have beheld and bear witness that the Father hath sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world. And this commandment have we from him, that he who loveth God love his brother also. The Spirit beareth witness with our spirit, that we are children of God: and if children, then heirs : heirs of God, and joint heirs with Christ: if so be that we suffer with him, that we may be also glorified with him. THE GLORIA PATRI RECEPTION OF MEMBERS ANTHEM— Te Deum. SERMON OFFERTORY COMMUNION ADMONITION PRAYER OF THANKSGIVING and SANCTUS THE WORDS OF INSTITUTION PRAYER OF CONSECRATION and the LORD'S PRAYER THE HOLY COMMUNION— Agnus Dei. — Nunc Dimittis. THE BENEDICTION— The Congregation Seated. CHORAL AMEN— Silent Meditation. .255. Index AARON, 99 J~\. Abbaye aux Hommes, 186 Abydos, 92 Acropolis, 180, 182 Adams, Herbert, 11 Advent, 175 Adventism, 61 "Aesthetic," 25, 29, 33 Agnus Dei, 253 Aix-la-Chapelle, 185 Allen, Alexander V. G., 121 Allen & Collens, 123, 192, 225 Alps, 186, 190 Amaziah, 82, 84 America, 14, 17, 38, 52, 122, 128, 135, 189, 198 American, 3, 12, 15, 40, 42, 45, 66, 73, 114, 120, 127, 128, 200, 202 American Academy of De- sign, 1 1 American Architect, The, 186 American Journal of Theol- ogy, The, 118 Ammon Ra, lOO Amos, 58, 82, 84 Andover Seminary, 192 Angelo, Michel, 12, 25 Anglican, 34, 90, 120, 130, 200 Anglican Church, 38, 109, 214 Apocalypse, 61 "Approaches toward Church Unity," 131 Aquinas, Thomas, 196 Architectural Record, The, 7, 190, 196 Arizona, 9 Aries, 186 Arlington, Mass., 230, 231 "Art and Environment," 12, 54, 182 "Art and Ritual," 18 "Art of Worship, The," 137 Assyrian, 19 Asylum Hill Church, Hart- ford, 206 Athens, 13, 180 Augsburg Confession, 59 Auvergne, 186 BALDWIN, Simeon, 34 Balfour, Arthur, 27 Baltimore, Md., 79, 192 Bangkok, 10 Baptism, 102 Baptist, 14, 41, 102, 125 Baptist Churches, 130, 215 Baptistery, Florence, 93 Basilican, 191 Bellini, 94 Benedictus, 253 Bennett, C. A., 30, 117 Bethel, 57, 82, 84 Bethlehem, 183 Bible, 81, 90, 133, 157, 245 Bohemian, 130 "Book of Common Prayer," ^^ 38, 81, 122, 125, 137, 138 "Book of Worship of the Church School," 109 Bosanquet, Bernard, 26 Boston, Mass., 45, 125, 193, 214, 218, 222, 247 Bragdon, Claude, 7 Bramante, 190 Breton, 97 Brick Builder, The, 250 257 Index Brick Presbyterian Church, New York, 167 British, 39 Brittany, 7 Brooklyn, N. Y., 195 Browning, 98 Brunelleschi, 190 Bryn Athyn, Pa., 192 Bucer, 130 Buddha, 65 Buddhist, 19, 65 Bureau of Architecture, 233 "Burghers of Calais," 97 Byzantine, 183, 184, 185, 189, 195 Byzantium, 13, 184, 196, 199, 201, 211 CAEN, 186 Calvary Church, Pitts- burgh, 192 Calvinist, 59 Cambridge, 14 "Can the Church Survive *?" 7 Canaanitish, 57 Carthage, 160 Catholic, 9, 57, 59, 86, 131, 206, 245 Central Church, Boston, 214, 2 18 Central Church, Providence, 197,214 Central Church, Worcester, 214 Chaldean, 19 Chapel of the Intercession, New York, 192 Charlemagne, 7 Cheshire, Conn., 43 Chicago, 111., 195, 227 Chinese, 19 Christ, 74, 100, 105, 129, 132, 244 Christ Church, New Haven, 192 Christendom, 116, 118, 130 Christian, 37, 42, 60, 105, 117, 127, 153, 198, 217, 224 "Christian Institutions," 121 Christian Science, 61, 201 Christian World, The, 120 Christianity, 35, 39, 69, 114, 127, 128, 198, 244, 245 Christmas, 78, 175 "Christmas in Heaven," 95' Chrysostom, 62 "Church at the Cross Roads, The," 119 "Church in the Furnace, The," 39 I Church of the Apostles, Sa- ■! lonica, 185 \ Church of the Chora, Con- stantinople, 185 ^ Church of the Divine Pater- nity, New York, 222 j Church of England, 140 J Church of the Holy Apostles, j Cologne, 186 i Church School, 109, no, 229, 1 .233' 234 1 Cicero, 160 ;l Cistercian, 188 ' Civil War, 85S Classic, 9, 40, 106 ( "Classical Heritage of the ] Middle Ages, The," 12 I Classicism, 97, 202 1 Cleveland, Ohio, 20, 192, 195 ! "Cloud," The, 25 j Coe, George Albert, 109 Coit, Stanton, 54, 166 » Cologne, 186 ] Colonial, 45, 191, 195, 199, 201 "Community Church, The," 128 ,' Confiteor, 152, 164 Congregational, 14, 41, 125, 140 Congregational Churches, 215, < 221, 223 Congregational Union of Great Britain, 119 Congregationalist, The, 65 Constantine, 184 Constantinople, 184 Coptic, 37 Corinthians, 56 ^58 Index Cram, Ralph Adams, 7, 191, 195, 196, 230, 237 Cram & Ferguson, 193, 247 Cram, Goodhue & Ferguson, 193, 209, 219, 221 Croce, Benedetto, 25,29,33,51 Cross, George E., 115 Crouch, 223 "Crucifixion," 91 DAN, 57 Dante, 11, 19, 223 Davies, J. W. F., 1 10 Day of Atonement, 57, 77 Dearmer, Percy, 137, 138 Declaration of Independence, 101 della Seta, Alessandro, 19 Demeter, 97 Des Cartes, 180 Detroit, Mich., 192 Deuteronomy, 58 de Wulf, Maurice, 186 Dexter, Henry Martyn, 140 Dickenson, Clarence, 167 Dionysius the Areopagite, 163 Doric, 182 Doxology, 156, 160, 176, 252 "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," 24 Diirer, Albert, 223 Durham Cathedral, 186 Dutch, 224 "Dying Gaul," 97 EASTER, 78, 175 Eastern Church, 239 Eckel & Boschen, 195 Edward VI, 38 Eg>^ptian, 19, 92 Elijah, 81 Elizabeth, Queen, 12, 38 Elizabethans, 38, 40 Emerson, 28 Emmanuel Church, Balti- more, 79 England, 12, 38, 66, 130, 186, 187, 190 Englewood, N. J., 221 . 1 English, 9, 38, 65, 130 Ephraim, 10 Episcopal, 14, 39, 125, 130, 154, 192 Episcopal Church, 38, 122, 137, 200, 214 Erasmus, 190 Erectheum, 182 Ethical Culture Society, 68 Eucharist, 103, 162 Euclid Avenue Presbyterian Church, Cleveland, 192 Europe, 9, 188 Evanston, 111., 205 FIJIS, 10 First Baptist Church, Pittsburgh, 21, 23, 192, 193 First Church, Boston, 214, 218, 221 First Church, Cheshire, 43 First Congregational Church, Montclair, 192, 237 First Congregational Church, Riverside, 195 First Congregational Church, St. Louis, 137 First Methodist Episcopal Church, Evanston, 205 First Presbyterian Church, Englewood, 221 First Presbyterian Church, Oakland, 192 First Presbyterian Church, St. Joseph, 195 Fitch, Rev. Albert Parker, 7 Flanders, 12 Flemish, 20 Florence, 12, 93, 190, 195 Florentine, 1 1 "Folkways," 108 Fortesque, Adrian, 37 Fourth Presbyterian Church, Chicago, 227 Fra Lippo Lippi, 9^ France, 12, 185, 186, 187, 190 259 Inde] "Freedom of the Faith, The," 66 Freemantle, Archdeacon, 27 French, 9, 130 Frothingham, 189 37 108 14 37 153 37. 199 186, 190 97 97 164, 253 GALLICAN, Galton, Garrett Biblical Institute, Gelasian, General Confession, Georgian, Germany, "Gleaner," The, "Gleaners," Gloria in Excelsis, Gloria Patri, 156, 160, 252 God, 24, 27, 70, 74, 87, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 117, 129, 144, 146, 148, 149, 150, 157, 177, ^^ 235, 236, 239 "Gold, Frankincense and Myrrh," 7 "Golden Calf," 100 Goodhue, Bertram Grosvenor, 21, 191, 230, 237 Gothic, 9, 19, 37, 45, 186, 187, 188, 191, 192, 196, 197, 199, 200, 201, 211 Grand Rapids, Mich., 191 Graeco-Roman, 196 Greece, 12, 180, 185, 189, 201 Greek, 19, 24, 182, 183, 185, 188, 191, 197, 198, 244 Greek Church, Greek Rite, Greeks, Gregorian, Groton School, 34 120 9, 93, 180, 182 37 192 84 240 HADLEY, Arthur T., Hall of Fame, Hamlin, A. D. F., 189, 190, 196 "Hand of God," The, 51 "Handbook of Congregation- alism," 140 Harrison, Jane, 18, 30, 77, 103 Hartford, Conn., 206 Hartshorne, Hugh, 109 Hastings, Thomas, 190, 196, 197 Hebrew, 57, 64, 76, 127, 244 Heidelberg Catechism, 59, 94 Hellenic, 182, 184 Henderson, Charles R., 7 "Hermes," 93 "History of Architecture, A," 189 Hocking, William E., 1 1, 29, 104 Holmes, John Haynes, 128 Holyoke, Mass., 123, 192 Hopis, 9 Hosea, 58 Hospital of the Innocents, 190 Hotel des Invalides, 190 House of Hope Presbyterian Church, St. Paul, 192,209,222 "Human Nature and Its Re- making," 11, 29 Humanists, 190 Huss, John, 84 IFFLEY Church, 186 International Journal of Ethics, The, 30, 117 International Studio, The, 28 Introit, 5, 37, 155, 157, 166, 252 Irving, Sir Henry, 145 Isaiah, 5, 58, 145, 148 He de France, Israel, Italian, Italians, Italy, JACKSON, Jacobean, Jacobite, Japan, Japanese, Jehovah, Jeremiah, Jeroboam, Jerusalem, Jesus, 60, 64, 83, 99, 127, 129 133. 245 Jewish, 57, 133, 244 13 77 12, 19 93 9> 190 189 128 190 37 16 64 84, 57 57. 57 127 82 84 • 260 Index Jews, Jones, Inlgo, Judea, Jumieges, Justinian, 126 190 186 184 KINGDOM of God, 35 King's Weigh House Chapel, London, 118, 122, 137 Kioto, 10 Kirchmayer, I., 79, 95 Knapp, Rev. Shepherd, 218 Kyrie Eleison, 153, 155 ''T AST and First," 93 J^ Latin, 12, 37, 39 Lenten, 78 Leonine, 37 Lloyd, Alfred H., 7 Lombard, 195 Lombardy, 186 London, 20, 190, 195 Lord's Prayer, 156 Lorenzo de' Medici, 12 Lowell Institute, 186 Lowrle, Walter, 185, 222 Ludlow, William Orr, 198, 236 Luther, 58, 83, 127 Lutheran, 40, 45, 125, 214 51. 147 182 119 186 MACBETH, Macedonia, Maclaren, Ian, Mainz, Mansart, 45 "Manual for Training in Worship," 109 Mars, 86 Mass, The, 37, 41, 58, 70, 120, 155, 162 Massachusetts, 1 1 McAfee, Joseph E,, 129 McClure, Sir John, 119, 120 "Meaning of Architecture, The," 10, 12, 13, 30, 198 Medinet Habu, 77 Mens Creatrix, 27 Messianism, 74 Methodist, 14, 78, 125 Methodist Episcopal Church, 125, 215, 233 Mexican, 19 Micah, 58 Michel Angelo, 12, 25 Middle Ages, 7 Milan, 185 Military Chapel, West Point, 192 Millet, 97 Milner-White, Rev. E., 39 Milton, 19 Missionary Education Move- ment, 46 "Modern Architecture," 190, 197 Mohammedanism, 108 Montclair, N. J., 192, 237 "Monuments of the Early Church," 185, 222 Moody, Rev. Dwight L., 62 Moore, Rev. Edward C, 197 Moorish, 12 Mosaic, 60 Mozarabic, 37 Munger, Rev. Theodore T., 65 Mycenean, 19 "Mystic Way, The," 158, 162, 163, 164 NEW England, 65, 134, 195 New Haven, Conn., 78, 91, 192 New Testament, 84 Newton, Mass., 125, 223, 225 New York, N. Y., 14, 23, 192, 219, 222, 230, 240 Nicene Creed, 94 Nike Apteros, 182 Nippon, 13 Norman, 186, 187 North Church, New Haven, 191 Norwegian, 130 Nunc Dimittis, 253 261 Index OAKLAND, Cal., 192 Oath of the Tennis Court, 101 Oberammergau, 10 Old Testament, 75, 84 Olympia, 93 Omar Khayyam, 61 Orate Fratres, 253 Orchard, Rev. W. E., 118, 122, 136, 138 "Order for Divine Service, The," 136, 137 Ordinary, 120 Outlook, The, 53 "Outlook for Religion, The," 118 Oxford, 10 190 64, 178 77 181 PALADIO, Palm Sunday, Panathenaic, Pantheon, Paris, 190 Park, Rev. Charles E., 218 Park Avenue Presbyterian Church, New York, 221 Park Street Church, Boston, 191 Parthenon, 9, 240 Passover, 100 Patmore, Coventry, 182, 188 Patton, Rev. Cornelius H., 65 Paul, 149, 180 Pericles, 11, 182 Perigneux, 185 Persons, Rev. Frederick T., 199 Peruvian, Pharasaic, Phidian, Phillipps, Lisle March, 12, 24, 182, 189 Phillips, Wendell, 83 Pisa, 93 Pisano, Nicola, 93 Piti Palace, 190 Pittsburgh, Pa., 21, 23, 192, 193 Plato, 180 Plotinus, 149, 180 Poitou, 186 19 59 182 Pond, Allen Bartlett, 250 Pond, Irving K., 10, 12, 13, 30, 182, 197 Porter, Mrs. Frank E., 78 Portland, Me., 126 Praxiteles, 93 Prayer Book, 9, 39, 42, 120, 130, "Prayers, Ancient and Mod- ern," 81 Presbyterian, 41, 125 "Presbyterian Book of Wor- ship," 137 Presbyterian Church, 215 "Principle in Art," 188 Propylaea, 182 Protestant, 3, 14, 34, 38, 41, 45, 71, 103, 117, 119, 130, 131, 197, 206, 223, 236 Protestant Episcopal Church, 38, 122 Protestantism, 3, 4, 5, 36, 40, 54, 62, 67, 75, 86, 107, 114, 126, 132, 197 Providence, R. I., 197, 214 Psalms, 53, 58, 136, 153 Puritan, 40, 64, 134, 202 Puritans, 40, 223 "Puritanism in Art," 223 Puvis de Chavannes, 97 UAKERS, 69 RAVENNA, 183, 185 Reformation, 1, 3, 36, 59, 62, 121, 126, 135, 190, 197, 241, 243, 245 Reformed, 41, 45, 125, 130 Reformed Church, 130, 137, 214, 223 Reformed Episcopal Church, 140 "Religion and Art," 19 Renaissance, 9, 20, 93, 189, 190, 191, 195, 196, 197, 199, 201 "Revolutionary Function of the Church, The," 128 • 262 • Index Rheims, 11 Richardson, 45 Ritter, Waldemar H., 79 Riverside, Cal., 195 Rochester Seminary, 117 Rodin, 51 Roman, 182, 183, 184, 186, 189, 190, 191, 195, 244 Romanist, 37, lOi Romans, 184 Roman Catholic, 37, 120, 122, 126, 129 Roman Catholic Church, 34, 37, 38, 130, 195, 197, 214 Roman Empire, 7, 184 Romanesque, 185, 186, 191, 195, 196, 197, 199, 201 Romantic, 106, 182 Romanticism, 97, 202 Rome, 38, 183, 189, 212 Royden, Maude, 140 Russell, Bertrand, 92 SACRAMENTALISM, 97 St. Agnes's, Cleveland, 20, 195 St. Ambrose, Milan, 185 St. Anne's Chapel, Arlington, 231 St. Augustine, 146, 149 St. Bartholomew's, New York, 230 St. Bernard, 149 St. Bride's, London, 191 St. Catherine's, Somerville, 195 St. Clement's, Chicago, 195 St. Front, Periguieux, 185 St. Gregory's, Brooklyn, 195 St. Irene, Constantinople, 185 St. James, 37 St. John the Divine, New York, St. Joseph, Mo., St. Mark, St. Mark's, Venice, St. Mary le Bow, London, 240 195 37 185 191 St. Mary's of the Lake, Chi- cago, 195 St. Paul, Minn., 192, 209, 222 St. Paul's, London, 190 St. Paul's Without the Walls, Rome, 183 "St. Peter," 95 St. Peter's, Rome, 190,212 St. Sulpice, Paris, 190 St. Theresa, 149 St. Thomas's, New York, 23, 192, 240 St. Trophime, Aries, 186 Sakkara, Egypt, 92 Salem, Mass., 1 1 Salonica, 185 San Apollinare in Classe, Ravenna, 183 San Apollinare Nuovo, Ra- venna, 183 San Clemente, Rome, 183 San Lorenzo, Florence, 25, 190, 195. San Pietro, Toscanella, 185 San Spirito, Florence, 190 San Vitale, Ravenna, 185, 211 Sanctus, 253 Santa Barbara, 9 Santa Maria Maggiore, Rome, 183 Santa Sophia, Constantinople, 99, 184 Saracenic, 9 Sarum, 37 Savonarola, 62 Scopas, 97 Second Church, Boston, 125, 137, 193, 195, 221, 247 Second Church, Newton, 125, 192, 223, 225 Seti, 92 Shakespeare, 9, 20 Shakespeare, Rev. J. H., 119 Shelley, 25 Shintoist, 65 Siam, 16 Sistine Madonna, 227 263 Inde X Skinner Memorial Chapel, Holyoke, 123, 192 Smyth, Rev. Newman, 130, 131 "Social Theory of Educa- tion," 109 "Social Worship," 55, 166 Society of Friends, 69 Socrates, 84 Solomon, 57 Somerville, Mass., 195 South Reformed Church, New York, 192, 219, 221 Southwark Cathedral, 39 Sowerby, Leo, 168 Spain, 12 Spanish, 20, 195, 199 Sperry, Rev. Willard E., 218 Speyer, 186, 2 18 "Spoon River Anthology," 97 "Star-Spangled Banner, The," Stoicism, 191 Stone, Arthur J., 141 Strassburgh, 130 Sturgis & Frothingham, 189 Sumner, William Graham, 108 Sunday School, 107 "Supper at Emmaus," 79 Sursum Corda, 253 Swedenborgian, 192 Swiss, 130 Symbolism, 97 Symonds, J. A., 93, 189 Syria, 183, 185 TANNHAUSER, 24 Tauler, 149 Taylor, Henry Osborne, 12, 182 Te Deum, Temple, William, Thanksgiving, Thirty-nine Articles, Thomae, Charles, "Three Lectures on Aesthe- tic," Tileston, Mary, 26 175 59 95 26 81 Torcello, 185 Toscanella, 185 Trier, 186 Troccoli, G., 141 Turner, 24 Tuscan, 195 Tuscany, 186 Trinity Church, Boston, 45 UNDERBILL, Evelyn, 156, 162, 163, 164 Union Church, Winnet ka, 125 Union Seminary, 14, 192 Unitarian Church, 215 Unitarian Hymnal, 137 United States, 38, 41 Universalist Church, 215 University of Chicago, 14, 114 Upjohn, 214 Uzziah, 148, 149 TT-ALENTINIAN, V Vaughn, Henry, 183 192 Venice, 185 Versailles, 11, 190 Virgil, 12 Virgin, 59, 227 264 WALKER, Williston, 131 Washington, D. C, 192 Wellington Avenue Church, Chicago, 168 Wesley, John, 59, 60 Wesleyan, 40 Western Church, 241 Western Reserve University, 192 Westminster Cathedral, Lon- don, 195 Westminster Confession, 59 West Newton, Mass., 192 West Point, N. Y., 192 Whitfield, 62 Whitsuntide, 175 Williams College Chapel, 192 Index Winnetka, 111., no, 125 Woodward, Rev. C. Salis- bury, 39 Worcester, Mass., 214, 218 Wren, Christopher, 190 YALE University, 14 Yewdale, Merton Stark, 28 'y WINGLI, Ulrich, 58,190 265 PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ^ n 1 u^. r RETURN MOFFin TO ><^ s? ^ ^ >?"