<p>This peculiar sexual differentiation, which tends to delegate devout
observances to the women and their children, is due, at least in part, to
the fact that the middle-class women are in great measure a (vicarious)
leisure class. The same is true in a less degree of the women of the
lower, artisan classes. They live under a regime of status handed down
from an earlier stage of industrial development, and thereby they preserve
a frame of mind and habits of thought which incline them to an archaic
view of things generally. At the same time they stand in no such direct
organic relation to the industrial process at large as would tend strongly
to break down those habits of thought which, for the modern industrial
purpose, are obsolete. That is to say, the peculiar devoutness of women is
a particular expression of that conservatism which the women of civilized
communities owe, in great measure, to their economic position. For the
modern man the patriarchal relation of status is by no means the dominant
feature of life; but for the women on the other hand, and for the upper
middle-class women especially, confined as they are by prescription and by
economic circumstances to their "domestic sphere," this relation is the
most real and most formative factor of life. Hence a habit of mind
favorable to devout observances and to the interpretation of the facts of
life generally in terms of personal status. The logic, and the logical
processes, of her everyday domestic life are carried over into the realm
of the supernatural, and the woman finds herself at home and content in a
range of ideas which to the man are in great measure alien and imbecile.</p>
<p>Still the men of this class are also not devoid of piety, although it is
commonly not piety of an aggressive or exuberant kind. The men of the
upper middle class commonly take a more complacent attitude towards devout
observances than the men of the artisan class. This may perhaps be
explained in part by saying that what is true of the women of the class is
true to a less extent also of the men. They are to an appreciable extent a
sheltered class; and the patriarchal relation of status which still
persists in their conjugal life and in their habitual use of servants, may
also act to conserve an archaic habit of mind and may exercise a retarding
influence upon the process of secularization which their habits of thought
are undergoing. The relations of the American middle-class man to the
economic community, however, are usually pretty close and exacting;
although it may be remarked, by the way and in qualification, that their
economic activity frequently also partakes in some degree of the
patriarchal or quasi-predatory character. The occupations which are in
good repute among this class and which have most to do with shaping the
class habits of thought, are the pecuniary occupations which have been
spoken of in a similar connection in an earlier chapter. There is a good
deal of the relation of arbitrary command and submission, and not a little
of shrewd practice, remotely akin to predatory fraud. All this belongs on
the plane of life of the predatory barbarian, to whom a devotional
attitude is habitual. And in addition to this, the devout observances also
commend themselves to this class on the ground of reputability. But this
latter incentive to piety deserves treatment by itself and will be spoken
of presently. There is no hereditary leisure class of any consequence in
the American community, except in the South. This Southern leisure class
is somewhat given to devout observances; more so than any class of
corresponding pecuniary standing in other parts of the country. It is also
well known that the creeds of the South are of a more old-fashioned cast
than their counterparts in the North. Corresponding to this more archaic
devotional life of the South is the lower industrial development of that
section. The industrial organization of the South is at present, and
especially it has been until quite recently, of a more primitive character
than that of the American community taken as a whole. It approaches nearer
to handicraft, in the paucity and rudeness of its mechanical appliances,
and there is more of the element of mastery and subservience. It may also
be noted that, owing to the peculiar economic circumstances of this
section, the greater devoutness of the Southern population, both white and
black, is correlated with a scheme of life which in many ways recalls the
barbarian stages of industrial development. Among this population offenses
of an archaic character also are and have been relatively more prevalent
and are less deprecated than they are elsewhere; as, for example, duels,
brawls, feuds, drunkenness, horse-racing, cock-fighting, gambling, male
sexual incontinence (evidenced by the considerable number of mulattoes).
There is also a livelier sense of honor—an expression of
sportsmanship and a derivative of predatory life.</p>
<p>As regards the wealthier class of the North, the American leisure class in
the best sense of the term, it is, to begin with, scarcely possible to
speak of an hereditary devotional attitude. This class is of too recent
growth to be possessed of a well-formed transmitted habit in this respect,
or even of a special home-grown tradition. Still, it may be noted in
passing that there is a perceptible tendency among this class to give in
at least a nominal, and apparently something of a real, adherence to some
one of the accredited creeds. Also, weddings, funerals, and the like
honorific events among this class are pretty uniformly solemnized with
some especial degree of religious circumstance. It is impossible to say
how far this adherence to a creed is a bona fide reversion to a devout
habit of mind, and how far it is to be classed as a case of protective
mimicry assumed for the purpose of an outward assimilation to canons of
reputability borrowed from foreign ideals. Something of a substantial
devotional propensity seems to be present, to judge especially by the
somewhat peculiar degree of ritualistic observance which is in process of
development in the upper-class cults. There is a tendency perceptible
among the upper-class worshippers to affiliate themselves with those cults
which lay relatively great stress on ceremonial and on the spectacular
accessories of worship; and in the churches in which an upper-class
membership predominates, there is at the same time a tendency to
accentuate the ritualistic, at the cost of the intellectual features in
the service and in the apparatus of the devout observances. This holds
true even where the church in question belongs to a denomination with a
relatively slight general development of ritual and paraphernalia. This
peculiar development of the ritualistic element is no doubt due in part to
a predilection for conspicuously wasteful spectacles, but it probably also
in part indicates something of the devotional attitude of the worshippers.
So far as the latter is true, it indicates a relatively archaic form of
the devotional habit. The predominance of spectacular effects in devout
observances is noticeable in all devout communities at a relatively
primitive stage of culture and with a slight intellectual development. It
is especially characteristic of the barbarian culture. Here there is
pretty uniformly present in the devout observances a direct appeal to the
emotions through all the avenues of sense. And a tendency to return to
this naive, sensational method of appeal is unmistakable in the
upper-class churches of today. It is perceptible in a less degree in the
cults which claim the allegiance of the lower leisure class and of the
middle classes. There is a reversion to the use of colored lights and
brilliant spectacles, a freer use of symbols, orchestral music and
incense, and one may even detect in "processionals" and "recessionals" and
in richly varied genuflexional evolutions, an incipient reversion to so
antique an accessory of worship as the sacred dance. This reversion to
spectacular observances is not confined to the upper-class cults, although
it finds its best exemplification and its highest accentuation in the
higher pecuniary and social altitudes. The cults of the lower-class devout
portion of the community, such as the Southern Negroes and the backward
foreign elements of the population, of course also show a strong
inclination to ritual, symbolism, and spectacular effects; as might be
expected from the antecedents and the cultural level of those classes.
With these classes the prevalence of ritual and anthropomorphism are not
so much a matter of reversion as of continued development out of the past.
But the use of ritual and related features of devotion are also spreading
in other directions. In the early days of the American community the
prevailing denominations started out with a ritual and paraphernalia of an
austere simplicity; but it is a matter familiar to every one that in the
course of time these denominations have, in a varying degree, adopted much
of the spectacular elements which they once renounced. In a general way,
this development has gone hand in hand with the growth of the wealth and
the ease of life of the worshippers and has reached its fullest expression
among those classes which grade highest in wealth and repute.</p>
<p>The causes to which this pecuniary stratification of devoutness is due
have already been indicated in a general way in speaking of class
differences in habits of thought. Class differences as regards devoutness
are but a special expression of a generic fact. The lax allegiance of the
lower middle class, or what may broadly be called the failure of filial
piety among this class, is chiefly perceptible among the town populations
engaged in the mechanical industries. In a general way, one does not, at
the present time, look for a blameless filial piety among those classes
whose employment approaches that of the engineer and the mechanician.
These mechanical employments are in a degree a modern fact. The
handicraftsmen of earlier times, who served an industrial end of a
character similar to that now served by the mechanician, were not
similarly refractory under the discipline of devoutness. The habitual
activity of the men engaged in these branches of industry has greatly
changed, as regards its intellectual discipline, since the modern
industrial processes have come into vogue; and the discipline to which the
mechanician is exposed in his daily employment affects the methods and
standards of his thinking also on topics which lie outside his everyday
work. Familiarity with the highly organized and highly impersonal
industrial processes of the present acts to derange the animistic habits
of thought. The workman's office is becoming more and more exclusively
that of discretion and supervision in a process of mechanical,
dispassionate sequences. So long as the individual is the chief and
typical prime mover in the process; so long as the obtrusive feature of
the industrial process is the dexterity and force of the individual
handicraftsman; so long the habit of interpreting phenomena in terms of
personal motive and propensity suffers no such considerable and consistent
derangement through facts as to lead to its elimination. But under the
later developed industrial processes, when the prime movers and the
contrivances through which they work are of an impersonal, non-individual
character, the grounds of generalization habitually present in the
workman's mind and the point of view from which he habitually apprehends
phenomena is an enforced cognizance of matter-of-fact sequence. The
result, so far as concerts the workman's life of faith, is a proclivity to
undevout scepticism.</p>
<p>It appears, then, that the devout habit of mind attains its best
development under a relatively archaic culture; the term "devout" being of
course here used in its anthropological sense simply, and not as implying
anything with respect to the spiritual attitude so characterized, beyond
the fact of a proneness to devout observances. It appears also that this
devout attitude marks a type of human nature which is more in consonance
with the predatory mode of life than with the later-developed, more
consistently and organically industrial life process of the community. It
is in large measure an expression of the archaic habitual sense of
personal status—the relation of mastery and subservience—and
it therefore fits into the industrial scheme of the predatory and the
quasi-peaceable culture, but does not fit into the industrial scheme of
the present. It also appears that this habit persists with greatest
tenacity among those classes in the modern communities whose everyday life
is most remote from the mechanical processes of industry and which are the
most conservative also in other respects; while for those classes that are
habitually in immediate contact with modern industrial processes, and
whose habits of thought are therefore exposed to the constraining force of
technological necessities, that animistic interpretation of phenomena and
that respect of persons on which devout observance proceeds are in process
of obsolescence. And also—as bearing especially on the present
discussion—it appears that the devout habit to some extent
progressively gains in scope and elaboration among those classes in the
modern communities to whom wealth and leisure accrue in the most
pronounced degree. In this as in other relations, the institution of a
leisure class acts to conserve, and even to rehabilitate, that archaic
type of human nature and those elements of the archaic culture which the
industrial evolution of society in its later stages acts to eliminate.</p>
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