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ART AND RELIGION
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Art and Religion
By Max Stirner
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ART AND RELIGION
2
Art and Religion
Max Stirner
translated by Lawrence Stepelevich
Now, as soon as man suspects that he has another side of himself [ Jenseits ] within himself, and
that he is not enough in his mere natural state, then he is driven on to divide himself into that
which he actually is, and that which he should become. Just as the youth is the future of the boy,
and the mature man the future of the innocent child, so that othersider [ Jenseitiger ] is the future
man who must be expected on the other side of this present reality. Upon the awakening of that
suspicion, man strives after and longs for the second other man of the future, and will not rest
until he sees himself before the shape of this man from the other side. This shape fluctuates back
and forth within him for a long time; he only feels it as a light in the innermost darkness of
himself that would elevate itself, but as yet has no certain contour or fixed form. For a long time,
along with other groping and dumb others in that darkness, the artistic genius seeks to express
this presentiment. What no other succeeds in doing, he does, he presents the longing, the sought
after form, and in finding its shape so creates the - Ideal. For what is then the perfect man, man's
proper character, from which all that is seen is but mere appearance if it be not the Ideal Man, the
Human Ideal? The artist alone has finally discovered the right word, the right picture, the right
expression of that being which all seek. He presents that presentiment - it is the Ideal. 'Yes! that
is it! that is the perfect shape, the appearance that we have longed for, the Good News - the
Gospel. The one we sent forth so long ago with the question whose answer would satisfy the
thirst of our spirit has returned!' So hail the people that creation of genius, and then fall down - in
adoration.
Yes, adoring! The hot press of men would rather be doubled than alone, being dissatisfied with
themselves when in their natural isolation. They seek out a spiritual man for their second self.
This crowd is satisfied with the work of the genius, and their disunion is complete. For the first
time man breathes easy, for his inward confusions are resolved, and the disturbing suspicion is
now cast forth as a perceptible form. This Other [ Gegenüber ] is he himself and yet it is not he: it
is his otherside to which all thoughts and feelings flow but without actually reaching it, for it is
his otherside, encapsulated and inseparably conjoined with his present actuality. It is the inward
God, but it is set without; and that is something he cannot grasp cannot comprehend. His arms
reach outward, but the Other is never reached; for would he reach it how could the 'Other'
remain? Where would this disunion with all of its pains and pleasures be? Where would be - and
we can speak it outright, for this disunion is called by another name - religion ?
Art creates disunion, in that it sets the Ideal over and against man. But this view, which has so
long endured, is called religion, and it will only endure until a single demanding eye again draws
that Ideal within and devours it. Accordingly, because it is a viewpoint, it requires another, an
Object. Hence, man relates himself religiously to the Ideal cast forth by artistic creation, to his
second, outwardly expressed Ego as to an Object. Here lie all the sufferings and struggles of the
centuries, for it is fearful to be outside of oneself, having yourself as an Object, without being
able to unite with it, and as an Object set over and against oneself able to annihilate itself and so
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ART AND RELIGION
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oneself. [2] The religious world lives in the joys and sorrows which it experiences from the
Object, and it lives in the separation of itself. Its spiritual being is not of reason, but rather of
understanding. Religion is a thing of understanding [ Verstandes-Sache ]! [3] The Object is so firm
that no pious soul can fully win it over to itself, but must rather be cast down by it, so fragile is
its spirit when set against the Object of the understanding. 'Cold understanding!' - know ye not
that 'cold' understanding? - Know ye not that nothing is so ardently hot, so heroically determined
as understanding? 'Censeo, Carthaginem esse delendam' spoke the understanding of Cato, and he
remained sane thereby. [4] The earth moves about the sun spoke the understanding to Galileo
even while the weak old man knelt adjuring the truth - and as he rose up again he said 'and yet it
moves about the sun'. No force is great enough to make us overthrow thought, that two times two
is four, and so the eternal word of understanding remains this' Here I stand, I can do naught
else!' [5] The basis for such understanding is unshakable, for its object (two times two is four,
etc.) does not allow itself to be shaken. Does religion have such understanding? Certainly, for it
also has an unshakable Object to which it is fortified: the artist has created it for you and only the
artist can regain it for you.
Religion itself is without genius. There is no religious genius, and no one would be permitted to
distinguish between the talented and the untalented in religion. For religion, everyone has the
same capacity, good enough for the understanding of the triangle and the Pythagorean theory as
well. Of course, one does not confuse religion and theology, for not everyone has the same
capacity here, just as with higher mathematics and astronomy, for these things require a
particular level of - calculation.
Only the founder of a religion is inspired, but he is also the creator of Ideals, through whose
creation any further genius will be impossible. Where the spirit is bound to an Object, its
movement will henceforth be fully determined in respect to that Object. Were a definite doubt
over the existence of God, over this transcendent object to emerge for the religious person, that
person would stop being religious, somewhat as a believer in ghosts would no longer said to be a
believer once he definitely doubted their existence. The religious person concerns himself only
about the 'Proofs for God's Existence' because he, as bound fast within the circle of belief,
inwardly reserves the free movement of the understanding and calculation. Here, I say, the spirit
is dependent upon an object, seeks to explain it, to explore it, to feel it, to love it, and so forth . . .
because it is not free, and since freedom is the condition of genius, therefore the religious spirit is
not inspired. Inspired piety is as great an inanity as inspired linen-weaving. Religion is always
accessible to the impotent, and every uncreative dolt can and will always have religion, for
uncreativeness does not impede his life of dependency.
' But is not love the proper essence of religion, and is not that totally a matter of feeling and not
of understanding?' [6] But if it is a matter of the heart, must it be less a matter of the
understanding? If it takes up my whole heart, then it is a concern of my heart - but that does not
preclude it engaging my whole understanding as well, and that in itself is nothing particularly
good, since hate and envy can also be concerns of the heart. Love is, in fact, only a thing of the
understanding [ Verstandes-Sache ], but otherwise, it can retain unblemished its title as a thing of
the heart. Love, in any case, is not a concern of reason [ Sache der Vernunft ], for in the Kingdom
of Reason there is even less love than that which will be celebrated, according to Christ, in the
Kingdom of Heaven. Of course it is permitted to speak of a love that 'passes understanding', but
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ART AND RELIGION
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it is either so far beyond understanding as to be worthless - as that often called love by those
enamoured by an attractive face - or it can appear in the future, a love that is presently beyond
the expression of understanding, but yet to have expression. Childish love, without
consciousness, is only understandable in itself, and taken alone is nothing without the given
concerns of consciousness, going only so far as the maturation and growth of the child's
understanding. As long as the child gives no sign of understanding, it shows - as anyone can
learn from experience - no love. Its love begins in fear - or, if one wishes to say, in respect - of
that Object which first separates itself from the general chaos that contains all, including men,
and which then focuses itself upon it more than another. The child loves because it is drawn by a
presence, or thing, and so a person, into its boundary of power or its magical circle. It clearly
understands how the being of its mother is distinguished from another being even if it yet knows
not how to speak of this understanding. No child loves before any understanding ; and its most
devoted love is nothing but that innermost understanding. Whoever has sensibly observed the
love of a child will find this principle confirmed. But not only does the love of a child rise and
sink with the understanding of its 'Object [ Gegenstandes ]' (as so often the loved one is
significantly, but crudely, named) but rather every love. If a misunderstanding enters, so love
more or less exists while it lasts, and one even uses the word 'misunderstanding' to exactly
signify the discord which disturbs love. Love is gone and irretrievably lost whenever one has
been totally mistaken about another: the misunderstanding is then complete, and the love
extinguished.
The beloved thing is an indispensable Object, an 'Other [ Gegenstand ]'. It is this way with the
understanding, that one and only proper spiritual act of religion, because understanding is only
thought over and about an object, only meditation and devotion, and not free, undirected
[ objectlose ] 'reasonable' thinking, which religion would rather consider and so condemn as
'philosophical chimeras'. Since to the understanding an object is necessary, it will always cease
its activity whenever it finds more to know. Its concern with a case expires with its activity upon
the case, and for it to willingly dedicate itself and its powers to anything, that thing must be a
mystery for it. This holds equally for the beloved as the lover. A marriage is only assured of a
steady love when the couple discover themselves anew each day, and when each recognizes in
the other an inexhaustible spring of life, that is, a mystery, unfathomed and incomprehensible. If
they find nothing new in one another, so love dissolves inexorably into boredom and
indifference. The activity of understanding, when unable to be exercised upon a mystery because
its darkness has been dispelled, turns away from the completely understood and now insipid
other. Who wishes to be loved must take care, like the clever woman, not to offer all charms at
once. With something new every morning the love might endure centuries! The understanding is
concerned with real mysteries which it develops into affairs of the heart: the real person is
involved with matters of understanding, and so these are transformed into concerns of the heart.
Now as art has created the Ideal for man, and with this gives man's understanding an object to
wrestle with, a wrestling match which will, in the course of time, give worth to those empty
objects of the understanding, so is art the creator of religion, and in a philosophical system - such
as Hegel's - it should not be placed after religion. Not only have the poets Homer and Hesiod
'made the gods of the Greeks', but others, as artists, have established religions, although one
hesitates to apply the superficial name 'Artist' to them. Art is the beginning, the Alpha of religion,
but it is also its end, its Omega. Even more - it is its companion. Without art and the idealistically
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ART AND RELIGION
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creative artist religion would not exist, but when the artist takes back his art unto himself, so
religion vanishes. However, in this return it is also preserved, for it is regenerated. Whenever art
strides forth in its full energy, it creates a religion and stands at its source. On the other hand,
philosophy is never the creator of a religion, for it never produces a shape that might serve as an
Object of the understanding, and its insensible ideas do not lend themselves to being the revered
objects of cultic worship. Art, other than philosophy, is compelled to draw forth from its
seclusion within the concealing darkness of the subject the proper and best form of the spirit, the
most completely idealized expression of the spirit itself, and to develop it and to release it as an
Object. At that,'man stands opposite to this Object, this creation of his spirit, to the God, and
even the artist falls before it on his knees. In this engagement and involvement with the Object,
religion pursues a course opposite of art. In art, the world of the artist is set before one's eyes as
an Object, a world which the artist has brought forth and concentrated from the full power and
richness of his own inwardness, a world which will satisfy every real need and longing. For its
part, religion strives to recover this world once again for man's inwardness, to draw it back to its
source, to make it again subjective. Religion endeavors to reconcile the Ideal, or God, with man,
the subject, and to strip God of his hard Objectivity. God is to become inward - 'Not I, but Christ
lives in me.' Man, sundered from the Ideal, strives to win God and God's Grace, and to finally
transform God into his own being [ Gott ganz zu seinem Ich zu machen ], and God, separated from
man, would only win him for the Kingdom of Heaven. Both sides seek and so complement each
other. However, they will never find one another, and will never become united, for if they ever
would then religion itself would vanish, for religion only exists in this separation. Accordingly,
the believer hopes for nothing more than that he will someday have a 'face-to-face view'.
But still, art also accompanies religion, for the inwardness of man is expanded by its struggle
with the Object, and in the genius of the artist it breaks forth again into a new expression, and the
Object becomes yet further enhanced and illuminated. Thankfully, hardly a generation has been
passed without such enlightenment by art. But, at the last, art will stand at the close of religion.
Serene and confident, art will claim its own once again, and by so doing will rob the Object of its
objectivity, its 'other-sidedness', and free it from its long religious imprisonment. Here, art no
longer will enrich its Object, but totally destroy it. In reclaiming its creature, art rediscovers itself
and renews its creative powers as well. It appears, at the decline of religion, as a trifling with the
full seriousness of the old belief, a seriousness of content which religion has now lost, and which
must be returned to the joyful poet. Hence, religion is presented as a ridiculous comedy. [7]
Now, however, terrible this comedic destruction might be, it will nevertheless restore to actuality
that which it thinks but to destroy. And so, we do not elect to condemn its horror!
Art creates a new Ideal, a new Object and a new religion. It never goes beyond the making of
religion. Raphael's portrayal of Christ casts him in such a light that he could be the basis of a
new religion - a religion of the biblical Christ set apart from all human affairs. From that first
moment when the tireless understanding begins to pursue its long course of reflection upon a
new Object, it steadily deepens in its thoughts until it finally turns upon itself in total inwardness.
With devoted love, it sinks into itself and attends to its own revelations and inspirations. But yet
this religious understanding is so ardently in love with its own Object that it must have a burning
hatred for all else - religious hatred is inseparable from religious love. Who does not believe in
the Object, he is a heretic, and who is not truly godly, he tolerates heresy. Who will deny that
Philip II of Spain is infinitely more godly than Joseph II of Germany, and that Hengstenberg [8]
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