Percival Chubb and the Strays on the Religious Frontier

Percival ChubbYesterday my article at Religion Dispatches about "strays on the religious frontier" was published, and I wanted to add a few follow-up thoughts that didn't fit into the article. Percival Chubb is a gem of a writer for one interested in religious liberalism; his two main books - Festivals and Plays in Schools and Elsewhere and On the Religious Frontier: From an Outpost of Ethical Religion are both very enlightening about religious liberalism at the end of the nineteenth century. In that latter text, he offers some further characterizations about what's being done to stop the flow of people into the "territory of the unchurched."His descriptions, for example, of other "outposts on the frontier" are as telling as his descriptions of the people leaving the territory of the churches.

  • “These small modernist outposts include left-wing Unitarians, Humanists, Ethicists, and others.
  • Mingled with them are smaller cults representing varieties of New Thought;
  • and further to the rear are the advanced churches in which liberalized leaders preach bold and unconventional doctrines, set in liturgies that conflict with them, under the strain of embarrassing compromises.”

I'm fascinated that by 1931, the Unitarians are being lumped with secularists, ethicists, humanists. It's true, humanism was becoming a major strand within Unitarianism (the Humanist Manifesto I came out in 1933, with much input from Unitarians), but it's very telling that the Unitarians don't even count among the "advanced" churches.I am equally struck at his depiction of liberal - ahem, advanced - churches. Bold doctrines! Unconventional, even. But with liturgies that conflict with them, and oh, the embarrassment. I think, for example, of the Episcopal Church, with which I'm most familiar other than Unitarian Universalism.As with the groups of people leaving churches for unaffiliation, the houses of last-resort which attempt to provide some kind of a spiritual, ethical, religious place to affiliate ("there are children with them," as Chubb reminds us, children who might need some kind of foundation) these remain the same ones as today, although today we might have a few more options to throw in the mix. (I think, for example, of Secular Humanist Judaism, or the Harvard's Humanist Community).What Chubb proposes to take the place of traditional religion is really quite interesting. He argues that as "culture becomes more world-minded," more cosmopolitan, churches must do so as well, or become irrelevant. He did not have a way to peer into the future to see the ways in which "Sunday morning" would remain the "most segregated hour" in the week. Religion remains divisive, something to separate people.  But instead, Chubb dreamed of a religious organization -- like Ethical Culture -- that saw something almost holy (maybe, or perhaps not quite) in the gathering together of people of diverse backgrounds for fellowship, a chance to make something larger when "the many are made one in visible presence," as he put it. But that is another story for another time.

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Writing in two directions: Alt-ac and religious studies