Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Offsite Post: ‘Yankee Cain and Southern Seth’

 

Southerners have often been mocked for their agrarian simplicity by Yankee-minded folks.  We know the insults well by now:  hicks, hillbillies, rednecks, and so on.  But Dixie should not be ashamed of this.  We ought rather to delight and exult in it.

Richard Weaver gives us good ground for doing so in his contrast of the Northern/Yankee and Southern types:


“Nowhere has the Northern mind more clearly embraced the Faustian concept than in the idea of progress. There is the constant out-reaching, the denial of limits, the willingness to dissolve all into endless instrumental activity, to which even some American philosophers have supplied theoretical support. Hence the incessant urge to be doing, to be transforming, to effect some external change between yesterday and today. The mood of the Americans, another French critic of a century ago remarked, is that of an army on the march. The language of conquest fills the air. They will ‘master nature’; they will ‘attack problems’; they will ‘control energy’; they will ‘overcome space and time.’ The endlessness of progress in these terms is the most generally accepted dogma. And thus enchanted by the concept of an infinite expansion, they reject the classical philosophy as too constricting.


“The Southerner, to sum up the contrast, has tended to live in the finite, balanced, and proportional world which Classical man conceived. In Cicero and Horace he has found congenial counsellors about human life. The idea of stasis is not abhorrent to him, because it affords a ground for the identity of things. Life is not simply a linear progression, but a drama, with rise and fall. Happiness may exist as much in contemplation as in activity. Experience alone is not good; it has to be accompanied by the human commentary. From this, I believe, has come the South’s great fertility in myth and anecdote. It is not so much a sleeping South as a dreaming one, and out of dreams come creations that affect the imagination” (“The South and the American Union”).

It is a fine historical, philosophical analysis, but the Christian South must go beyond these for justification of her way of life.  Wendell Berry is helpful in this respect.  Essays like the “The Gift of Good Land” provide a Biblical grounding for a life of restraint, of proper limits to human striving.  But Mr. Berry is mostly concerned with men and women being good stewards of the creation.  This is by no means unimportant, yet it nevertheless prevents him from fully developing a theological understanding of the Yankee and Southern types.

There is a man who can help us in this, however:  an exceptional teacher of the Holy Scriptures, Fr. Athanasios Mitilianaios, an Orthodox priest who fell asleep in the Lord in 2006.  In his exposition of verses from both Genesis and Revelation, he shows with remarkable clarity the two essential types of mankind to which the North and the South correspond.

In his sermon on Revelation 9:1-12 (an overview of which may be viewed here; all quotes from Fr. Athanosios are via that presentation), in which he describes the meaning of the terrifying locusts, he says,

“Do you know that a man who has no faith in God is terrified of the universe?  . . .  Man is afraid of earthquakes, hurricanes, and thunderstorms, elements which have really lost their balance and rhythm in these last decades, and which create an impression of a dangerous and unfriendly universe for today’s troubled man.  All of things torment, in the manner of locusts—as the text says—the man who has lost the purpose of his existence, the man who has lost his faith or belief in God.  Thus, the locusts of fury are already terribly tormenting today’s man.”

Fallen man, man separated from God, therefore, seeks out consolation for himself, something to take his mind off the foreboding world around him.  And he finds it in the unceasing development of advanced, technological civilization:

“It is not by mere coincidence that Cain and his descendants originally developed civilization. Cain and his four children created civilization. According to Hebraic tradition, his daughter invented the spinning wheel, using wool to make threads and clothing. From this it becomes obvious that the generations of Cain, and this is a very subtle detail, were primarily preoccupied with the development of civilization… God had cursed Cain, so he needed to develop something to lighten the burden of that curse. Thus, man became preoccupied with the elements of civilization because the purpose of civilization is to introduce consolation in man’s life.”

Here is the basic outline of one type of man – the type of Cain, which corresponds to Yankee man.  But what of the second type?

“In contrast, the descendants of Seth, who was born to serve as a replacement for Abel who had been killed by Cain, focused on the worship of God and the simplicity of life. To Seth also a son was born, and he called his name Enosh. At that time men began to call upon the name of the Lord (Genesis 4:26). He trusted in the Lord. So Enoch, or Enosh (Enos in the Septuagint), trusted and hoped in the name of the Lord and God.”

The second type is Seth, satisfied with simple living and worshipping God.  This corresponds to Dixie’s folk.

Fr. Athanasios expands on these two types.  Of Cain’s type, he notes further:

 . . .

The rest is at https://www.abbevilleinstitute.org/yankee-cain-and-southern-seth/.

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Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!

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