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Real Clear Politics
 
 
 
 
 
Religion’s Role in the  History of Ideas
Wesleyan President Michael Roth on the  importance of understanding 
religious experience

 
 
 
 
By  
Michael Roth 

Feb. 20,  2015 3:48 p.m. ET 
It happens every year. In teaching my humanities class, I ask what a  
philosopher had in mind in writing about the immortality of the soul or  
salvation, and suddenly my normally loquacious undergraduates start staring 
down  
intently at their notes. If I ask them a factual theological question about 
the  Protestant Reformation, they are ready with an answer: predestination, 
faith not  works, etc. 
But if I go on to ask them how one knows in one’s heart that one is saved,  
they turn back to their notes. They look anywhere but at me, for fear that 
I  might ask them about feeling the love of God or about having a heart 
filled with  faith. In this intellectual history class, we talk about sexuality 
and identity,  violence and revolution, art and obscenity, and the students 
are generally eager  to weigh in. But when the topic of religious feeling 
and experience comes up,  they would obviously just prefer that I move on to 
another subject. 
Why is it so hard for my very smart students to make this leap—not the leap 
 of faith but the leap of historical imagination? I’m not trying to make a  
religious believer out of anybody, but I do want my students to have a 
nuanced  sense of how ideas of knowledge, politics and ethics have been 
intertwined with  religious faith and practice.
 
Given my reading list, I often ask these questions about Christian  
traditions, inviting students to step into the shoes of thinkers who were 
trying  
to walk with Jesus. I realize that more than a few of my undergraduates are  
Christians who might readily speak to this experience in another setting. 
But in  the classroom, they are uncomfortable speaking out. So I carry on 
awkwardly as  best I can: a secular Jew trying to get his students to empathize 
with Christian  sensibilities. 
In recent years, I myself have become more accustomed to the awkwardness of 
 my secular engagement with religious practice. After the death of my 
father, I  sought out a place where I could say Kaddish, the Jewish memorial 
prayer.  According to tradition, you don’t say this prayer alone; there should 
be at  least 10. I stumbled upon a small, eclectic group that met early in 
the morning  for a lay service (no rabbi). I could say the prayer with them, 
and eventually I  would stay on for study sessions. Why was this atheist 
praying and studying?  It’s about participation, I told myself. And that was 
enough. 
The people with whom I said my prayer became part of my life. Prayer was 
like  study—or was it the other way around? Studying with them wouldn’t mean 
I was  abandoning my own secular worldview, I thought. I was learning about 
a tradition  in which I’d been raised but had only dimly apprehended. I 
mostly ignored the  question of belief; learning was enough.
 
The classroom is another kind of participation. As a historian, I want my  
students to learn concrete things about major events and daily life in the 
past,  but I also want them to go beyond the facts and try to imagine how it 
felt to be  at a certain time and place; I want them to participate 
imaginatively in the  past while recognizing that this creative act can never 
be 
accomplished fully.  When we read great books together, I want them to 
understand why an author made  certain choices, how the arguments were first 
received and how they might be  relevant to us today. 
When we exercise historical imagination about secular topics, we have an  
easier time accepting the possibility that we might be wrong, that new 
evidence  might change our minds. Religious questions seem to cut more deeply,  
arousing…well, some fear and trembling. 
So why not just stick to the facts and timelines? Why not just show what is 
 right and wrong in the work of the authors we read? After all, aren’t we 
now in  a position to know the truth about many of the things that they could 
only guess  at? Today we even know what parts of the brain light up when 
someone prays—or  asks questions about prayer! 
Those are the kind of objections I get from bright, confident 
undergraduates,  and I try to show them that the questions asked by the 
philosophers, 
writers and  artists we study have not been settled. Our job in the classroom 
isn’t to arrive  at some definitive historical or philosophical truth about 
the past but to learn  from exercising our intellect and imagination. The 
books we read together raise  issues that challenge our assumptions, calling 
into doubt what many of us  usually take for granted. The questions in these 
texts are ones to be wrestled  with, not answered once and for all. 
At Torah study, we begin with a blessing that echoes the commandment to  
wrestle with the biblical texts. We pledge ourselves not to memorize or obey 
but  to engage with what we read. That’s what I want to offer my students, 
the  opportunity to wrestle with basic questions of love and judgment, justice 
and  violence, grace and forgiveness. What they believe is none of my 
business, but I  do want them to have a sense of what it’s like to be absorbed 
in 
robust  traditions, including religious ones. 
That would be enough.  
— Mr. Roth is the president of Wesleyan University and the author, most  
recently, of “Beyond the University: Why Liberal Education Matters.” 

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