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By Rev. Anthony J. Brankin
The topic on which I have been asked to
speak today is The Cult of Ugliness in America. I do
not intend to speak of every possible example of ugliness in our
society. That would be exhausting if not thoroughly discouraging.
We already live cheek-by-jowl in an incredibly ugly culture; we
cannot escape it. So if there is any purpose to this talk, it is
to keep you aware of the very real danger that you might miss the
ugliness entirely and never catch on to the real destruction that
this ugliness is working in your very souls.
Now, what could I possibly mean by the word
ugly? Is it too glib to say that if beauty can be defined
as that which when seen pleases, then the ugly is that which when
seen displeases? Why does it displease? Is there some definable
element that tells us that an ugly piece is ugly? Is there an obvious
line or shape or combination of lines and shapes that screams, ugly!
Is there some definable element that tells
us that an ugly piece is ugly?
What can we make of the modern phenomenon
whereby what is considered ugly nonetheless pleases or what
would be considered beautiful in another era or society is deemed
by ours to be ugly?
For example, when I say that you live cheek-by-jowl
with this ugliness, I mean to say that in coming to and going from
this hall you are surrounded by miles and miles of unyielding ugliness:
McDonalds and Burger Kings sandwiched between Amocos and tenements.
You do not mistake that for beauty, but it is so ubiquitous that
you may no longer recognize it as specifically ugly.
You may never even make a mental note of
the ugliness of all the malls with their false fronts and even falser
interiors, or of the condominiums that are just as empty and sterile
on the inside as they are on the outside. Thats just how everything
looks now.
And, of course, thats just for starters,
for there is likewise in our world a spiritual ugliness no less
all-pervasive than and somehow related to the visual ugliness all
about us.
You will turn on your car radio only to hear
of some new school shooting, and you wont even be sure if
this is the eighth or ninth such massacre in as many months. You
will, however, be able to form a mental image of the alleged perpetrators,
for you have seen the look and the fashions on your own block and
maybe even within your own families: the chopped, colored hair,
the mutilations, the tattoos, the rings in the nostrils and eyebrows,
the baggy clothes, the backward baseball caps, the surly looks and
the sullen grunts. Youve even heard their music God
have mercy on us; weve all heard their music.
Then, of course, when you finally reach home,
you will turn on the television news to hear of our scientific cultures
progress in the harvesting and sale of babies body parts.
You will see news bytes of the political candidates trying to outdo
each other in their dedication to killing babies.
Perhaps then, after supper, you will turn
the channel to a show where you are treated to hour after hour of
actors and actresses spewing vile lines in ever more tawdry productions.
Could television programming be any less accurately described than
by saying it consists of ugly, mean people doing ugly, mean things
to each other? Indeed, the ugliness is so universal, so part and
parcel of our lives, that it hardly registers in our minds anymore.
And having drunk fully of this awful cup, you go to bed.
Now, you might think that at least on Sunday
you could be rescued from all of this visual and spiritual ugliness
by going to church; but ugliness is there, too, for chances are
that your church has already been despoiled by modern Catholic barbarians
who havent even the artistic sense of the Unitarians who sit
on your towns historic preservation boards.
The modernists will already have removed
the tabernacle to a closet and the crucifix to the rectory basement.
They will have torn up the sanctuary and torn down the shrines;
and they will have done their expensive best to ruin whatever vision
of spiritual loveliness the first parishioners and the first architect
possessed. But, again, you are so used to it by now that what they
have done to your church in the name of reform barely registers
anymore in your minds at least not until you have to confront
what they have also done to the Mass ever-perky, ever-childish,
ever-changing, ever-boring, ever-therapeutic, until you are no longer
sure who should be more embarrassed, you for still being there or
the liturgists who invented it all.
No, the cult of ugliness is so pervasive,
so all around us, in every nook and cranny of our lives, that we
stand the risk at every moment of missing it, of no longer being
able to see it or even be repelled by it.
What is beauty?
Our talk will be divided into three parts:
We shall first try to understand what has always been traditionally
understood by the use of the word beautiful by most
people in most eras, and in fact, how traditional Catholic philosophy
was able to sort out that traditional understanding of beauty into
an actual set of principles, the violation of which would yield
ugliness.
Secondly, we shall try to situate these understandings
of beauty and ugliness in the context of culture or cult
or faith to see how beauty and ugliness flow naturally into
the world from the content or emptiness of the soul.
Thirdly, we will make some personal resolutions,
which we hope would take us a long way towards the destruction of
this Cult of the Ugly.
Nature, the matrix for beauty
Ask any child who is drawing something what
he is trying to do and he will tell you that he is trying to recreate
something that he saw in nature, be it an apple, or the sun, or
a tree, or a house. And, invariably, the measure of the success
of the drawing for that child is how closely the drawing resembles
nature.
Accuracy according to nature was always the
standard of reference for artists and societies, for all high civilizations
from the Egyptians and Greeks to the Romans and Europeans. Each
cultures succeeding generations of artists tried to improve
upon, or at least remember, the techniques, lessons, and discoveries
of the previous generations, always seeking a greater beauty of
lines, more solid figures, and truer perspectives.
It was generally accepted that there was
infinitely more to a face than just that face something else
between the proportions of nose, eyes, cheekbones, jawbones, lips,
and mouth and this, of course, would be beauty.
If, therefore, we are to understand anything
about the Cult of Ugliness, we must first understand
what beauty is. Its definition is basic enough. According to the
great saint-philosopher of the Middle Ages, Thomas Aquinas, beauty
is that which when seen pleases.* No more, no less. If colors and
forms and shapes and compositions would please beggars and kings
all at the same time, then that would be considered beautiful.
But why does it please? What would make the
heart delight in that which the eye saw? Well, Saint Thomas said
that if something gives us pleasure then there is always somehow
present in the thing which gives pleasure something that is good,
and the good always attracts us, always pleases us.
Now the good, which a person sees and senses
in some beautiful thing, is its form. That is, its
wholeness, its proportions. If such a thing is complete, right,
and balanced, it is good, and what happens is that we
are attracted to that form because we sense that there
is in the object the same kind of form within us. We see and sense
in the form of the beautiful object a good. And the
good in it echoes the good in us or at least the good that
should be in us. We are fascinated and attracted by that sameness.
It delights us and we want to remain in its presence.
Did you ever watch babies and see how they
are totally taken in by other babies, how they react to those other
little creatures that are so like them? How they stare at other
babies, recognize the similarities, and even reach out to touch
their faces?
The form of a beautiful object is considered
beautiful because it is whole and proportionate, as we would sense
ourselves to be whole and proportionate. We delight in the beauty
of our own being. There is a resemblance between that which is in
us and that which is in the beautiful object. And we are pleased.
But that is not all there is to the story.
There is one more element present without which we cannot achieve
all this pleasant recognition. Just as the eyes of the body need
actual light to see anything, so too the eyes of the soul need a
similar light which Saint Thomas calls claritas clarity
a spark of light, so to speak, that glances off the beautiful object
and actually comes from the beautiful object. It is the very same
spark of being which comes from the Being of God. The very Being
of God is present in the being of the object, and Gods beautiful
Being is therefore revealed in the form and proportions and clarity
of the object. Precisely because a beautiful thing is a reflection
of the Beauty of God, we are naturally drawn and attracted to it
as we would be drawn and attracted to God in our desire for union
with Him.
The beauty of God is somehow mysteriously
reflected in the beauty of being first in nature, then in
trees, sunsets, in faces and forms and figures; and then it is reflected
in art in drawings and paintings and sculptures and even
in architecture (and, somehow, even more mysteriously, in music.)
The closer those artistic forms conform to
nature, the closer they conform to the supernatural, and the more
accurately do they reflect the truth, the beauty, and the goodness
of God.
Beauty is objective
We have been made to believe for generations
now that beauty is in the eye of the beholder, that it is all a
matter of taste and culture, opinion and upbringing, that there
is no true objective beauty out there that can be used as a universal
standard. It all comes from ones mind and what one likes.
So, if you think a horribly skewed, out-of-shape series of smears
and stains is beautiful, then, for you, it is beautiful.
Well, I stand here today to say, along with
thirty thousand years of human instinct and two thousand years of
Catholic tradition, that beauty is not in the eye of the beholder.
Beauty resides in the beautiful thing itself. It will either have
proportion, wholeness, integrity, and clarity in itself and be from
God, or it will not have those qualities and will be displeasing
to the discerning soul and will therefore be ugly.
You see, just as theological modernism denies
the objective reality of the supernatural, saying that all dogma,
all revelation, is just your experience and, therefore, the truth
is what you think is the truth, so too, artistic modernism tries
to convince us that whatever anyone thinks is beautiful is beautiful
for that person.
Indeed, today no one is allowed to say that
anything is ugly, for to call something ugly hints at the possibility
of an actual real standard of reference by which some things can
be beautiful and some things not beautiful. This hints at the possibility
of a claim to objective truth, which is certainly not allowed in
todays society because that would hint at a God.
We are cowed into a moral and cultural silence
before the modern proclamation that a squat, misshapen, mis-proportioned
figure is somehow beautiful and even perhaps more artistic
than the figure that God first created. How could it be said that
that which seemed so ugly to us was still somehow beautiful to them?
Well, they say it still, but now we know that this attitude is simply
a modern intellectual conceit, by which their higher appreciation
of art makes them superior to those not in on the game.
For the same reason, no one today is allowed
to say that anything is wrong, to say that something is evil, or
to say that something is immoral. If there is nothing that is in
and of itself true, then neither is there something
that is in and of itself good or bad neither beautiful nor
ugly.
Indeed, when you walk into some modern monstrosity
of a church and your instinctive reaction is, My God, this
is ugly, you are right. It probably is ugly. And you have
no less an authority than Thomas Aquinas to back you up.
You incur no moral or aesthetic fault if
weird angles and blank concrete walls in a church make you feel
uneasy and uncomfortable. There is no sin in seeing some hideous
deformation of Christ on the cross or some monstrous representation
of Mary and saying that it is hideous, that it is monstrous. Nor
is there virtue in trying to think that, somehow, it is all really
beautiful and that there must be something wrong with you. You need
no longer feel forced into a corner bleating, Well I guess
I dont know much about art. It may simply mean that
your good human and Catholic instincts are still intact and that
they have, somehow, survived this ugly, ugly society.
Now you might be thinking: My goodness,
the world is falling apart and hes talking about drawings.
More than a million babies a year are being sucked out of the wombs
of their mothers and he wants to discuss pretty pictures. Seventy
per-cent of Catholics dont even go to church anymore and hes
giving us lessons on the philosophy of art. If we wanted Sister
Wendy we could have turned on PBS.
This goes much deeper than aesthetic philosophy.
It refers to the way we think about and deal with life itself
all of life, all of nature, all of being. All human activity is
meant by means of beauty to provide us with an access to God, Who
is All-Beautiful.
To produce beauty one must possess beauty
It takes virtue to do virtuous things. Indeed,
it takes virtue to even recognize virtue or to recognize its opposite.
And if you possess this virtue, this grace this natural penchant
for the supernatural, this healthy sense of beauty, you will see,
know, feel, and do things of which the rest are simply incapable.
The same goes for the sense of beauty. Unless
beauty first resides within, it will never be exemplified without
in any part of our society. Nor will it even be recognized.
That remnant sense of beauty in our
minds and hearts by which we can still recognize the ugliness
out there, either in ugly buildings or ugly philosophy or ugly lives,
must be cherished and guarded as our last weapon in the struggle
with No-God.
But how is it that the rest of our world
has become so relentlessly ugly at every level? We seem to wallow
in it. Well, perhaps it is clear by now that our society, no longer
possessing virtue theological or practical no longer
possessing grace or faith or even the dimmest notions of God, has
embraced emptiness. Having forsaken the true God, having blinded
ourselves to His claritas, His spark, His light, we
dwell in ugliness, darkness, and confusion.
We do not see or accomplish virtuous or beautiful
things without, because there is no longer virtue or beauty within.
A society that does not believe in God or super nature or even truth
let alone beauty will do only ugly things.
Tragically enough, our world does not even
know that it is ugly. We have already said that beauty is that which
when seen pleases, and therefore we would know that the ugly would
be that which when seen displeases. But look at our society, where
it has become the macabre, the strange, the twisted, and the deformed
that please. Where the most popular piece of cinema in years
number one for weeks is a movie about a cannibal. It is the
evil and ugly that now delights.
Well, welcome to the Brave New World,
where that which in another era would have been called bad is now
called good, and that which was once considered ugly is now considered
beautiful.
The cult of ugliness targets God Himself
and our perception of Him
This discussion is hardly about pretty pictures.
It is about the ever-ancient assault on His beauty the original
affront to His very existence and to the nature and the life that
He created. The cult of ugliness in our land is no less than Satans
rage against God. It is no less than the gleaming spear-point of
the culture of death.
Moreover, the cult of ugliness is so utterly
pervasive and thorough in its celebration of the fruitless, the
sterile, the weird, and the ugly that it pushes to the margins all
other faiths above all the True Faith.
The subliminal message in every confused
and misshapen piece of modern architecture, art, music, or drama
is that there is no God. The subliminal message in every deliberate
mutilation of natural forms, in every tribute to physical and personal
perversion, is that there is no God. The subliminal message in every
celebration of the weird and deathly is that there is no God. This
subliminal message is as surely the Illuminated Gospel of
Death as any culture could have ever proclaimed, and by virtue
of its omni-presence in every aspect of modern life, we are constantly
encouraged to accept this gospel.
Sadly, even much of the clerical caste, whose
task would certainly be understood to include fostering the cult
of the beautiful as part of its proclamation of the Gospel of Life
and whom we certainly imagine would defend us from the ugly
allurements of the No-God, is often too dense to see what is going
on, and itself has surrendered in so many ways to the Cult of Ugliness.
This is demonstrated every time we walk into
a church to see some splayfooted, goggle-eyed Christ on a cross
or some rude, crude cement Madonna. The poor priest thought he was
simply purchasing a nice piece of contemporary art for his flock.
In all innocence and ignorance he assumed he was simply obtaining
some fresh interpretation of traditional religious themes and was
never conscious that what he was looking at and what he was filling
the eyes of his flock with was actually the human form exploded,
exploited, and degraded reduced to its individual and impotent
parts and slapped together again in a unsettling imbalance
all for the purpose of revealing and teaching the modern loathing
of living forms, the modern loathing of a Creator.
No, the poor priest never thought he was
doing that. I dont think he thought it through at all. I dont
think he ever questioned the spiritual source of such strange shapes,
or ever wondered from what terrible fonts such new forms sprang.
Perhaps he never suspected the existence
of a Cult of the Ugly. Perhaps he just assumed that it was all a
matter of taste, and that his taste, like that of his flock, was
simply old-fashioned and ready for a little jarring now and then.
Well, we have all been jarred.
Look at some of our newest churches and cathedrals.
Many of them are stunning and awesome no, not for their homage
to tradition and the Catholic sense of beauty. They are stunning
and awesome in their utter inhumanity, their complete lack of scale,
their thorough and total sterility, and their horrifying proportions.
There is not an angle that could please nor an arch that could comfort.
Not a piece of molding that could hold us in its shadow. Not even
a little statue before which we could light a slender taper. Like
the gaping mouth of the pagan, child-sacrificing furnaces of Moloch,
some of our new churches will consume their people in holocausts
of visual horror. I venture to say that one or two of these ecclesial
worship spaces are some of the most terrifying pieces
of architecture to have ever been accomplished by and for modern
Catholics. I shudder at what harm this ugliness may accomplish in
the souls of those who try to pray there. They are the clearest
possible examples of the nihilism, the emptiness and nothingness,
of which modernity constantly speaks the relentless message
that there is nothing out there neither nature, nor beauty,
nor God. And will we surprise ourselves to discover one day, by
means of such architecture, that there is nothing left in our souls
either?
Oh, what a series of ironic tragedies. We
Catholics, thinking that we were opening the windows to dialogue
with modernity, never had a clue that we were being used. Having
spoken for so long in the language and in the forms of the modern
world, we thought that we could put a Christian interpretation to
the philosophy of the atheistic Enlightenment. We thought that now
they would love us and come to our side. But we have found ourselves
saying and meaning things we did not want to say or mean. And we
do not even know how to unsay those things anymore. There it is
for all the world to see our newly acquired evangelical impotence
and spiritual paralysis so clearly shown in the confusion of our
renovated churches, the foolishness of our experimental liturgies,
and the emptiness of our new cathedrals. Why indeed would anyone
be attracted to the beauty of God, if this is what it looks like?
And we will find one day that we ourselves are growing distant from
God because His fascinating beauty is no longer to be found even
within our own buildings.
What to do?
So what do we do? What is the answer? Should
we spend our remaining energies and spin our wheels trying to convince,
to change, to convert our culture? And we really do sometimes think
that, dont we? We think that if everyone would see that one
beautiful statue, or that one beautiful church, or would hear that
one perfect argument or one beautiful Mass chant, then they would
all be converted.
But how many converts came streaming into
the Church after hearing the Gregorian chant recording from Spain?
Sure it sold millions, but most, Im sure, regarded it as little
more than mood music to accompany them on the treadmill. The moderns
had no idea about what these monks were singing and Latin
was not the problem.
How many of us thought, twenty-five years
ago, that if we could just show everyone photos of the developing
fetus, the pro-life cause would triumph conclusively? No one cared;
and now we find ourselves fighting the battle against infanticide.
Well, is it all over? Do we throw our hands
up in total discouragement? Do we resign ourselves to the physical
ugliness and spiritual vacuum of our age? Do we surrender to the
No-God of our era, place ourselves on the dung-heap of modernity
and, like Job, wait for a merciful death?
No, I dont think we have to. First
among all our tasks is that we remain converted and committed to
the God of our Fathers, the God of all beauty and all being. And
then, naturally and unself-consciously, we will share among ourselves
the beauty that we have interiorly experienced.
True Catholic culture has been left to us
to create anew and afresh with precious little reference
either to our modern society or even to the clerics panting so faithfully
after modernity. We ignore it and them and, taking a tip from the
purveyors of the cult of ugliness, we proceed to fill our minds,
our hearts, our families, our children, and our world with as much
beauty as possible that by dint of the quantity and quality of our
efforts there will be no room for that which is inhuman, ungodly,
or ugly.
If this sounds like a clarion call back to
the catacombs that we withdraw from our modern culture
then so be it. Yes, that too is heresy in our contemporary Church
culture where we are constantly encouraged to engage and embrace
the modern world. But in doing so as we have seen over these
last tragic decades, we stand to gain nothing and lose all in such
a poisonous encounter.
But where are those catacombs? Where are
those refuges from the human and spiritual horrors of our Brave
New World? They are in your very homes, your front rooms and
bedrooms, your home schools and private academies. That is where
the true culture of the New Millennium will take shape, for, undistracted
by the pomps and pleasures, the flashy arrogances and fleshy superficialities
of the ugly world around us, mothers and fathers can form and mold
and guide their children with unadulterated faith and inculcate
into their souls every form and example of beauty.
And in isolating and insulating your children
from the moral squalor about them, you are only strengthening them
in their eventual confrontation with it. Fill the walls of your
homes with beautiful art, fill the ears of your family with beautiful
music, fill the souls of your children with beautiful stories, and
there will be no room left for the insipid, the warped, the ugly,
and the faithless. If you can make of your family a little Church,
you will not have to be engaging constantly in rear-guard action
to counteract the toxins of the media and schools or that of your
childrens strange new friends down the block. They will not
be forced to unlearn at home the lessons they have just learned
outside.
Your families will come to know and appreciate
that there is only one thing about which to be busy, around which
to revolve, only one thing to cultivate, and that is their souls,
the beautiful gift from God. This realization will then help them
do beautiful things, create beautiful things, and appreciate all
the beautiful things that issue forth from beautiful grace-filled
souls.
And if we do this, then, little by little,
as modernity continues to die as surely it must, for is not
death its very theme? it will be replaced by life, in fact
a new Culture of Life whose healthy hallmark will be the celebration
of the beauty of God in the beauty of the life around us.
Oh, indeed there is a Cult of Ugliness in
our society, but it is not our cult and we will have nothing to
do with it.
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