The Catholic Thing

The Key to History


Listen Later

By John Barry
Three-quarters of a century ago, one of the greatest Catholic minds of modern times, praised by numerous secular thinkers as much as by his fellow believers, and whom T. S. Eliot called "the most powerful intellectual influence in England," identified a truth that has only become more evident since he wrote: "Religion is the key to history. We cannot understand the inner form of a society unless we understand its religion. We cannot understand its cultural achievements unless we understand the religious beliefs that lie behind them. In all ages the first creative works of a culture are due to a religious inspiration and dedicated to a religious end."
The new year marks the 75th anniversary of Christopher Dawson's Gifford Lectures at the University of Edinburgh. For over 130 years, the Gifford Lectures have been one of the most prestigious scholarly forums dealing with religion, science, and philosophy. Adam Lord Gifford, a Scottish judge and intellectual, established the series in order to "promote and diffuse the study of Natural Theology in the widest sense of the term - in other words, the knowledge of God." The lectures began in 1888 and, with the exception of the intervening years during World War II, have been delivered continuously ever since.
Many pre-eminent thinkers in various fields delivered these lectures over the years, including philosopher Hannah Arendt, physicist Niels Bohr, French philosopher Etienne Gilson, mathematician and philosopher Alfred Lord Whitehead, the late contributor and friend of TCT Ralph McInerny, political philosopher Roger Scruton, and British evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins (a figure for treatment another day).
Christopher Dawson (1889-1970), inimitable Catholic historian of religion and culture, delivered his widely prized Gifford Lectures on Christianity as the driving force behind the development and emergence of Western culture.
Dawson expanded on these lectures in his book titled Religion and the Rise of Western Culture which further elucidates, in contravention to popular thinking, the vibrant and fertile intellectual and spiritual history of the so-called "Dark Ages" which filled the cultural void created after the fall of the Roman Empire. It's a great loss that many people today, even many Catholics, are unaware of his vital work.
Dawson makes the case that religion is the great impetus behind history and a decisive factor in the rise and fall of civilizations. For the West specifically, he writes that "Christianity was the first universal religion to unite men of all races and nations in a common faith." His sweeping account describes the emergence of Western Christendom from the ruins of the Roman Empire to the age of Dante.
According to Dawson, this began with the conversion of the various Northern European "barbarian" tribes who formed a new spiritual community from the remnants of the Roman Empire through the amalgamation of Roman law and organization, Christian culture and tradition, and missionary zeal. Moreover, the rise of monasticism preserved classical culture and writings, fostered new scholarship, and created Medieval centers of learning which influenced the intellectual development of the West.
Chief among the innovations of monasticism was the emergence of a type of free society, "independent of external control and based on voluntary membership," which sanctified work and poverty as the spiritual and economic heart of rural life.
Dawson ties together the history of Christian learning throughout the Medieval period by distilling other pivotal aspects of the era, including: the Byzantine cultural and religious influence; the emergence of the papacy as a unifying political and spiritual force; the classical and artistic achievements of the Carolingian Empire; the religious and cultural significance of the Crusades and of Medieval reform movements; chivalry and courtly culture in the feudal world; and the establishment of schools and universitie...
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

The Catholic ThingBy The Catholic Thing

  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6

4.6

28 ratings


More shows like The Catholic Thing

View all
Dr Taylor Marshall Podcast by Dr. Taylor Marshall

Dr Taylor Marshall Podcast

4,045 Listeners

The Thomistic Institute by The Thomistic Institute

The Thomistic Institute

747 Listeners

First Things Podcast by First Things

First Things Podcast

713 Listeners

Pints With Aquinas by Matt Fradd

Pints With Aquinas

6,576 Listeners

All Things Catholic with Dr. Edward Sri by Ascension

All Things Catholic with Dr. Edward Sri

1,343 Listeners

The Catholic Current by The Station of the Cross

The Catholic Current

384 Listeners

The Road to Emmaus with Scott Hahn by Scott Hahn

The Road to Emmaus with Scott Hahn

37 Listeners

Return To Tradition by Anthony Stine

Return To Tradition

351 Listeners

American Catholic History by Noelle & Tom Crowe

American Catholic History

823 Listeners

Godsplaining by Dominican Friars Province of St. Joseph

Godsplaining

1,229 Listeners

U.S. Grace Force with Fr. Richard Heilman and Doug Barry by U.S. Grace Force

U.S. Grace Force with Fr. Richard Heilman and Doug Barry

569 Listeners

Evangelization & Culture Podcast by Word on Fire Institute

Evangelization & Culture Podcast

202 Listeners

The Pillar Podcast by The Pillar Podcast

The Pillar Podcast

650 Listeners

Catholic Saints by Augustine Institute

Catholic Saints

1,045 Listeners

The LOOPcast by CatholicVote

The LOOPcast

723 Listeners