Muscular Christianity is a term for a movement
during the
Victorian era which
stressed the need for energetic Christian activism in combination
with an ideal of vigorous
masculinity.
It was most associated with the English writers
Charles Kingsley and
Thomas Hughes, though the name was bestowed by
others.
Kingsley and Hughes promoted physical
strength and health (at least for men) as well as
an active pursuit of
Christian ideals
in personal life and politics.
The term has also been applied to later movements that combine
physical and Christian spiritual development.
Origins
Though muscular Christianity is most closely associated with
Kingsley and Hughes, aspects of it appeared in literature as early
as 1762, when
Rousseau's
Emile described
physical education as important for the
formation of moral character.
The term probably first appeared in a review of Kingsley's novel
Two Years Ago in the February 21, 1857 issue of the
Saturday Review. Kingsley wrote a reply to this review in
which he called the term "painful, if not offensive", but he later
used it favourably on occasion. Hughes used it in
Tom Brown at Oxford; saying that it
was "a good thing to have strong and well-exercised bodies," he
specified, "The least of the muscular Christians has hold of the
old chivalrous and Christian belief, that a man's body is given him
to be trained and brought into subjection, and then used for the
protection of the weak, the advancement of all righteous causes,
and the subduing of the earth which God has given to the children
of men."
In addition to the beliefs stated above, muscular Christianity
preached the spiritual value of sports, especially team sports. As
Kingsley said, "games conduce not merely to physical but to moral
health" (
Education and Health, quoted by Ladd and
Mathisen).
Influence
By 1901, muscular Christianity was influential enough in England
that one author could praise "the Englishman going through the
world with rifle in one hand and Bible in the other" and add, "If
asked what our muscular Christianity has done, we point to the
British Empire."
Muscular Christianity spread to other countries in the 19th
century.
In the United States
it appeared first in private schools and then in
the YMCA and in the preaching of evangelists
such as Dwight L. Moody.
(The addition of athletics to the YMCA led
to, among other things, the invention of basketball and volleyball.) Parodied by Sinclair Lewis in Elmer Gantry (though he had praised the
Oberlin
College
YMCA for its "positive earnest muscular
Christianity") and out of step with theologians such as Reinhold Niebuhr, its influence declined in
American mainline Protestantism. Nonetheless it was felt
in such
evangelical organizations as
the
Fellowship of
Christian Athletes,
Athletes in
Action, and the
Promise
Keepers.
References
External links