For a generation
Peter Gay’s book on the Enlightenment (a text which perhaps
tells us more about the 1960s than the 1760s) informed scholars
that Enlightenment and Christianity were polarities and that the
defeat of dogma and metaphysics were the harbingers of secular modernity.
In the course of the last two decades the Gay perspective has been
modified to the point of being discarded outright: the French experience
of Enlightenment (the Gay paradigm) has been proclaimed the European
exception rather than the rule and that, far from being its foe,
Christianity was the midwife and sustainer of the siècle
des lumières. S.J. Barnett’s vigorous and concise
book builds on this current scholarly consensus and pushes it further:
with examples drawn from England, France and Italy, Barnett’s
Enlightenment is one that cannot be understood outside a Christian
context in a century that witnessed no significant rise in unbelief.
Furthermore, public opinion is deemed central to religious change
(1) (as it had been well before
the 1750s) and the significance of the philosophes and
their writings is declared to be exaggerated, not least because
there was no deist movement. Those churchmen who insisted that there
was were deceiving themselves, but created ‘a very public
antichristian bogey that did not have any substantial reality’
(p. 5).
These are contentious claims (particularly as they affect England),
though at all times Barnett acknowledges his indebtedness to other
historians who have, as it were, paved the way for him. Repeatedly,
especially in chapter 2, ‘Historians, religion, and the historical
record’, he advances with Thomas Munck’s The Enlightenment.
A Comparative Social History 1721–1794 (2000) deployed
as his sword and buckler, usually to convincing effect, as in the
observation that the differences between the enlightened and non-enlightened
‘in various contexts, times and places’ (p. 36) were
never particularly sharp. Yet Barnett does not advance from that
point to query the uses of retaining Enlightenment as a descriptive
term. Rather it remains ‘an intellectually rich and complex
phenomenon’ (p. 36). Yet isn’t this also to introduce
a degree of elasticity into the concept that has the effect, as
Jonathan Clark and Jeremy Black have both noted, of making it teleologically
suspect and confining? (2) Barnett
considers that historians have for too long regarded the production
of controversial theological and philosophical texts as evidence
of influence (with Alan Kors particularly singled out for arraignment).
The point that proof of influence is insufficiently addressed is
well made, though Barnett is obviously keen enough to ensure that
the primary texts he cites – many anticlerical in character
– carry a decent burden of importance. It is a truism that
however dazzled future generations may be, intellectual brilliance
is no guarantee of favourable extended notice in one’s own
time, as some of Hume’s later writings on religion remind
us, in contradistinction to the acclamation for James Beattie’s
An Essay on Truth (1770). However, it may be that Barnett
exaggerates the degree to which scholars in the field are prisoners
of exalted claims for the primacy of print culture, and are actually
rather cautious about assuming that an important and innovative
argument necessarily constitutes an influential text. Barnett rejects
any notion of the inert masses and stresses the importance of non-elite
dissent from the Church. Quite so, but the extent to which opinion
at this level can be recovered is not to be underestimated. Too
many of the scholars who differ from him on this and other claims
(approximately 90 per cent on a rough count) tend to be presented
as misguided.
At the heart of the book is Barnett’s contention that the
battle of orthodox divines against deists was a ‘fictive war’
(p. 68). Who were the members of this movement beyond the usual
dozen or so suspects from Blount to Anet, demands Barnett. What
hard evidence is there that they persuaded thousands more to follow
them and turn deism into a popular cause? He concludes that much
of the clamour was invented, the deists various paper tigers that
never seriously threatened the main confessional Churches or their
grip on national culture. These points are stoutly and efficiently
offered and should give us pause even if they cannot entirely persuade.
Deists may have been few in number and were not very good at co-operating
among themselves let alone begetting a movement or Grub Street imitators,
but the very clamour the clergy raised against them (deism was perhaps
best known from people writing against it) tended to attract attention
to their cause. Deists were proficient in disseminating their views
within the innumerable avenues that a commercial and minimally regulated
print culture held open for them. It created a critical tendency,
a culture coloured (or contaminated, as the clergy might see it)
by what contemporaries loosely referred to as ‘freethinking’
where deism and heresy shaded into each other for perhaps half a
century after the Revolution of 1688. Critical rather than constructive
deism (this is not a working distinction used in this book) could
both upset and rattle the orthodox: the deists’ biblical criticism,
crude as it was, and their observations on the discrepancies of
the Gospels, or the immorality of events like the massacre of the
Amalekites all posed a vague anxiety about accepted ideas of biblical
inerrancy in terms which were sufficiently clear to percolate down
from the intellectual elite to the metropolitan debating clubs,
coffee-houses and even the ale-house. And this is not to mention
(and Barnett doesn’t) the international dimension to deism,
with networks so painstakingly reconstructed by Jonathan Israel
and Ann Goldgar.
Yet Barnett virtually accuses Anglican apologists such as Bishop
Edmund Gibson of creating deism as a McCarthyite scare tactic in
the 1730s ‘to encourage loyalty and bring waverers back to
the fold’ (p. 30), and lambasts a whole train of historians
from Norman Sykes onwards for swallowing this propaganda hook, line
and sinker. Authors of the calibre of Gerald Cragg, J. A. Herrick,
and W. R. Ward are taken to task for their gullibility in accepting
the scale of the clash between the Church and the deists despite
the ‘paucity of evidence’ (p. 103). Barnett may be justified
in forcefully reminding scholars that insufficient allowance has
been made for the possibility of clerical fabrication and exaggeration
in the matter of deism, but the latter, as Barnett well knows, was
hardly an invention of the 1730s. His depiction is hard to accept
not because Gibson was worried about an impecunious old age or because
the clergy were incapable of such cynical self-defence, but because
it required a degree of conspiratorial planning and presentation
among them that was unlikely given party divisions within the Church
of England: for Gibson to have said nothing in the face of provocative
challenges from the likes of Collins, Wollaston and Tindal would
have been a dereliction of duty from the leading prelate in the
Church. The deist alarm, like most moral panics, had its periodic
ups and downs, and the 1730s was undoubtedly one of them when many
clerics – and not just the numerous Tories among them –
were very gloomy indeed about what might happen if things went on
as they were and got even worse. Of course, Barnett is right to
say that there was no necessary link between deism and natural religion.
The latter could be entirely compatible with Athanasian orthodoxy.
Nevertheless, the emphasis on natural religion was such that, by
the 1740s, many clergy (and by no means just those participating
in the evangelical revival) were alarmed that revelation was being
downplayed for sinister purposes.
Instead of deism as the main challenge to the Churches, as one
might expect from the author of the interesting Idol Temples
and Crafty Priests. The Origins of Enlightenment Anticlericalism
(1999), Barnett wants us to consider anticlericalism as the principal
goad to organised religion in the eighteenth century. As he notes,
‘permanent, institutionalised anticlericalism’ (p. 50)
had existed in the 150 years before the Enlightenment, often comparative
in theme and popular in style, and it was by no means incompatible
with enlightened piety of the sort displayed by Sir Robert Howard
in the 1690s or, half a century later, by many of the Commonwealthsmen.
It is refreshing and useful to have this counter-emphasis reiterated,
though it is also disappointing that Barnett does not fully explain
his preference for ‘anticlericalism’ over the more usual
contemporary usage of ‘priestcraft’. Yet if deists were
few in number in early eighteenth-century England, Barnett could
conceivably have done more to show us the range and depth of his
anticlericalist challenge. Although this may have repeated some
of the ground already mapped out in Idol Temples and Crafty
Priests, it would have been appropriate. He might also have
broached the question of how far one can accurately separate anticlericalism
from scepticism, or infidelity from a vague commitment to free-thought.
The chapter on France is somewhat less contestatory. The principal
subject is Jansenism as a dissident group, with Barnett drawing
on recent work by scholars such as Catherine Maire, Dale Van Kley
and William Doyle, and generously acknowledging his debt. Whether
that company would then proceed to identify Jansenism as a more
vigorous and numerically significant challenger to the Gallican
Church than anything the philosophes were capable of mounting
must be a moot point. As a summary of the ups and downs of French
eighteenth-century Jansenism it will do well enough. The refusal
of the sacraments crisis in the 1750s is usefully linked with existing
Parisian anticlericalism and Barnett attempts a comparison between
Jansenism and the struggle of seventeenth-century English Protestant
dissenters that might have been more clearly articulated. Barnett
has a strong case in saying that the philosophes were a
small band without the numerical strength possessed by the Jansensists
and that their claim to the credit for securing the exiling of the
Jesuits from France in 1762–4 was downright cheeky. Barnett’s
sympathies are occasionally too conspicuous. (3)
Thus we read of ‘Roman tyranny’ (p. 139) and Jansenism
as the ‘revolt of democratic Christianity’ (p. 137)
with Unigenitus marking the ‘final erosion’ of Bourbon
prestige (p. 137). However, phrases like ‘democratic Christianity’
do not withstand close scrutiny, and it is surprising that Barnett
abandons the more appropriate ‘constitutionalism’ and
‘conciliarism’ favoured by Van Kley. Outside the capital
and some other urban centres, Jansenists were a relatively small
minority of the French laity (heavily concentrated in the upwardly
mobile professional classes) throughout the eighteenth century,
and were actually in sharp numerical decline from the mid century.
Apart from the notorious Saint-Médard congregation of the
early 1730s, historians have yet to turn up evidence of popular,
let alone democratic, Jansensism. If they had a significance disproportionate
to their numbers then couldn’t one say much the same for the
philosophes too (and possibly for the English deists)?
The General Assembly of the Clergy of France certainly thought so:
from the 1760s onwards their remonstrances to the Crown repeat the
constant complaint that philosophe literature is corroding
the religion and morals of the kingdom and that the Crown must act.
Sources are scarce, but the memoirs of Jacques-Louis Ménétra,
the Parisian artisan, certainly suggest the existence of a popularised
deism at that social level. (4)
The reality of the Grub Street-style challenge and the polemical
counter-challenge has been splendidly analysed recently by Darrin
McMahon in his account of the Counter-Enlightenment (5)
but neither text nor author figure here. But then if, even in France,
the main threat to the ecclesiastical establishment came from within
a recognisably Christian context, anything resembling a Counter-Enlightenment
is superfluous to Barnett’s requirements. The fact is that
by the time of the Maupeou coup in 1770–1 Jansenism had achieved
its purposes and had become a political irrelevancy for younger
clerics and lawyers, except in as much as it had transmitted the
spirit of opposition to these ‘Patriots’ (and that claim
can be exaggerated, as Barnett does here).
As Barnett notes, Jansenism and the Catholic Enlightenment were
closely linked, and this persuasion is reflected in his chapter
on Italy. As with France, the author hunts out polemicists opposed
to papal pretensions, men pushing at an open door thanks to the
pattern of great power politics and the growth of national churches
within Catholicism. Anticurial thought was not necessarily either
deist or Jansenist, as the case of the Neapolitan lawyer, Pietro
Giannone, author of the influential Istoria civile del Regno
di Napoli (1723), reveals. Such publicists were concerned less
with securing a form of Church government in which the laity and
lower clergy might have more importance than with the more conventional
aspect of conciliarism that stressed the supremacy of the secular
prince. Thus the celebrated Muratori was happily acting as a paid
client of the duke of Modena. One finds few signs in Italy under
the flag of Jansenism of the kind of ‘democracy’ that
Barnett apparently identified in France. It was an aspect of elite
intellectual culture that made few friends among lowly and less
talented Catholics, for whom the predominantly historiographical
concerns of the pro- and anti-curiatorial parties impinged not at
all. Not much sign here, then, of Barnett’s (and Munck’s)
broad Enlightenment affecting the lower orders.
There are a few slips that, taken cumulatively, detract from one’s
confidence in Barnett’s handling of labels: Isaac Newton is
referred to as a ‘dissenter’ (p. 122), David Hartley
becomes an oxymoronic ‘dissenting Anglican’ (p. 123),
Louis XVI’s accession year is predated by 20 years to 1754
(p. 154), there is an allusion to John Lindsey when Theophilus is
intended (p. 97) (it further mutates into Lyndsey in the index)
and there is a mysterious reference to Lady Drummond, the wife of
the duke of York, having the last rites refused her in 1755 (p.
146). Barnett’s occasional resort to the few scholars ‘on
his side’ in the debate on deism strikes a rather unfortunately
self-conscious note and, as well as the reflectiveness one finds
in The Enlightenment and Religion, there are a few too
many assertions. Thus he tells us that the Sacheverell affair of
1710–11 was the ‘most serious challenge to the English
Enlightenment’ (p. 111). He never tells us when the Enlightenment
occurred in England (or anywhere else for that matter), or refers
to its components stages in as much as they can be identified; it
assumes a degree of intellectual direction (anti-Sacheverellians
as an early counter-enlightenment party) to the case that it never
possessed because it had nothing to sustain it beyond a nostalgia
for the departed days of tight confessionalism in the 1680s. Barnett’s
point is that public opinion was to the fore in the affair. The
point may be admitted but doesn’t that leave the popular Jacobitism
of the 1710s as far more worthy of attention as a challenge to the
‘English Enlightenment’? More generally, his insistence
that public opinion was a significant force in the public life of
England, France and Italy throughout this era is unexceptionable,
but one could have wished for more discussion of changing perceptions
of its composition in the course of the century. In an English context,
Barnett (p. 94) is inclined to homogenise Protestant dissenters
and underestimate the gap between the orthodox and liberal among
them on doctrinal questions. The Calvinists might agree with some
of the deists’ anticlerical views, but usually remained strictly
Athanasian in their theology.
Throughout, Barnett assumes a ‘chronicle of Enlightenment’
in a rather old fashioned, no-nonsense way, endorsing the notion
of ferment on a Hazard-like scale c.1680–1720. There
is no recourse to ‘Counter-Enlightenment’ as a working
concept, one that scholars such as Cadoc Leighton have recently
found useful. (6) One can readily
see why. Since Barnett’s Enlightenment is such a ‘big
tent’, capable of containing a variety of contented opinions,
he has no need to evaluate the possibility of emerging opposition
to its emphases. From this book one gets very little sense of the
cultural shift at mid century, in which both the ‘long Reformation’
and the ‘long Counter-Reformation’ were played out,
and Church establishments in France and Italy, under unprecedented
pressure from princes and philosophical opinion (both tinged with
anticlericalism), dropped their pastoral guard. Confident that the
rural masses were with the Church, religious propagandists (with
unimpressive results) poured their efforts into denouncing the insidious
effects of ‘philosophy’ as deleterious to the faith
and encouraging no more than nominal belief in the wider culture.
Of course defenders of the Church thought primarily in terms of
orthodoxy and heterodoxy, but one finds very little reference to
such categories in The Enlightenment and Religion. This
is a surprising omission given Barnett’s persuasion that factions
inside the Churches were the main vehicle of opposition to the ecclesiastical
status quo in all three countries; he might have built on James
Bradley’s studies which have shown that it was ecclesiology
rather than theology that was the main arena of dispute between
the orthodox and their adversaries in the eighteenth century. (7)
If Barnett is anxious for historians to admit that interesting texts
are not necessarily influential in their generation, and demands
care and caution in measuring influence (what he calls the ‘holy
grail’ of scholarship (p. 104)), the challenge in turn to
him might be to concede that intellectual propagandists can occasionally
be prodigiously and disproportionately influential in demarcating
the culture of their time. He might also consider revisiting his
assumption that the conflicts over deism (and the associated growth
of religious liberalism) were primarily socio-political, and investigate
the genuine theological issues involved. If much eighteenth-century
religious conflict was about politics, the reverse was also true.
Notes
* I am very grateful to John Walsh for his comments on an earlier
version of this essay.
1. J. Van Horn Melton, The
Rise of the Public in Enlightenment Europe (Cambridge, 2002).
2. See, most recently, Jonathan
Clark’s axiomatic presumption that ‘“the Enlightenment”
is a polemical term devised in the nineteenth century to place interpretations
on what had happened in the eighteenth; the term did not therefore
correspond to any clearly demarcated eighteenth-century phenomena,
and could be made to mean whatever its nineteenth- and twentieth-century
users wished’. J. Clark, ‘Providence, Predestination
and Progress: or, did the Enlightenment Fail?’, Albion,
35 (2003), 559–89. J. Black, The Eighteenth Century
(2nd ed., Basingstoke, 1999), 226.
3. See, most recently, H. M.
Scott, ‘Religion and Realpolitik: the Duc de Choiseul, the
Bourbon family compact and the attack on the Society of Jesus, 1758–1775’,
International History Review, 15 (2003), 57–72.
4. See J. -L. Ménétra,
Journal de ma vie: compagnon vitrier au 18e siècle,
ed. D. Roche (Paris, 1982).
5. D. McMahon, Enemies of
the Enlightenment. The French Counter-Enlightenment and the Making
of Modernity (Oxford, 2001).
6. C. D. A. Leighton, notably
'The Enlightened Religion of Robert Clayton', Studia Hibernica,
29 (1995–7), 157–84; 'Hutchinsonianism: A Counter-Enlightenment
Reform Movement', Journal of Religious Studies, 23 (1999), 168–84.
See also, for instance, G. Garrard, Rousseau’s Counter-Enlightenment:
A Republican Critique of the Enlightenment (SUNY series in
Social and Political Thought) (New York, 2003); eds. David Berman
and Patricia O’Riordan, The Irish Enlightenment and Counter-Enlightenment,
(Bristol, 2002).
7. James Bradley’s forthcoming
book on the English Enlightenment and religion is much awaited.
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