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¨Sept.
25, 1869,
Peine, Prussia
V
March 6, 1937,
Marburg, Ger.
German
theologian,
philosopher,
and historian
of religion,
who exerted
worldwide
influence
through his
investigation
of man's
experience of
the holy.
Das Heilige
(1917; The
Idea of the
Holy, 1923)
is his most
important work.
Early life and academic career.
Otto was the son of William Otto, a manufacturer. Little is known of Otto's early life, except that he was educated at the gymnasium in Hildesheim before becoming a student of theology and philosophy at the University of Erlangen and, later, at the University of Göttingen, where he was made a Privatdozent ("lecturer") in 1897, teaching theology, history of religions, and history of philosophy. In 1904 he was appointed professor of systematic theology at Göttingen, a post he held until 1914, when he became professor of theology at the University of Breslau. In 1917 he became professor of systematic theology at the University of Marburg and for one year (1926-27) served as rector of the university. He retired from his university post in 1929, though he continued to live in Marburg the rest of his life.
Otto took time
from his
scholarly
pursuits, more
out of a sense
of duty than of
preference, to
participate in
community and
public affairs.
He was a member
of the Prussian
Parliament from
1913 to 1918
and a member of
the Constituent
Chamber in
1918, where he
asserted a
liberal and
progressive
influence. And
he was later to
concern himself
with the
political
questions of
the Weimar
Republic. Otto
also
participated
widely in
Christian
ecumenical
activities,
both as they
related to
divisions
within the
Christian
community and
as they
concerned
relations
between
Christianity
and other
religions of
the world.
The Idea of the
Holy.
Various influences had played upon Otto's reflections through the years, aiding him in reformulating the religious category that was to carry him beyond Schleiermacher. His early teacher at Göttingen, Albrecht Ritschl, had located religion in the realm of value judgments, whereas, more significantly, his theological colleague at Göttingen, Ernst Troeltsch, sought for a religious a priori as the ground of religious interpretation and judgment. Otto was impressed by William James's shrewd insights in The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902), yet he found James's empirical method inadequate for interpreting such phenomena. Otto was particularly attracted to the thought of J.F. Fries, already mentioned, whose notion of Ahndung (obsolete form of Ahnung; literally, "presentiment," or "intuition"), a yearning that yields the feeling of truth, opened up to him a way of dealing with religious phenomena sensitively and appropriately. These "feelings of truth" Otto sought to schematize in his The Idea of the Holy.
In that work,
however, Otto
was conscious
of moving
beyond his
previous
efforts,
exploring more
specifically
the nonrational
aspect of the
religious
dimension, for
which he coined
the term
numinous, from
the Latin
numen
("god,"
"spirit," or
"divine"), on
the analogy of
"ominous" from
"omen." The
numinous, the
awe-inspiring
element of
religious
experience,
Otto contended,
evades precise
formulation in
words. Like the
beauty of a
musical
composition, it
is non-rational
and eludes
complete
conceptual
analysis; hence
it must be
discussed in
symbolic terms.
Thus,
The Idea of the
Holy,
while
benefiting from
earlier
studies,
represented for
Otto a new
venture and a
radical shift
in the nature
and ground of
his inquiry.
The concern
here was to
attend to that
elemental
experience of
apprehending
the numinous
itself. In such
moments of
apprehension,
said Otto, we
are dealing
with something
for which there
is only one
appropriate
expression,
mysterium
tremendum.
. . . The
feeling of it
may at times
come sweeping
like a gentle
tide pervading
the mind with a
tranquil mood
of deepest
worship. It may
pass over into
a more set and
lasting
attitude of the
soul,
continuing, as
it were,
thrillingly
vibrant and
resonant, until
at last it dies
away and the
soul resumes
its "profane,"
non-religious
mood of
everyday
experience. . .
. It has its
crude, barbaric
antecedents and
early
manifestations,
and again it
may be
developed into
something
beautiful and
pure and
glorious. It
may become the
hushed,
trembling, and
speechless
humility of the
creature in the
presence
of--whom or
what? In the
presence of
that which is a
Mystery
inexpressible
and above all
creatures.
Although the mysterium, which Otto represents as the form of the numinous experience, is beyond conception, what is meant by the term, he insists, is something intensely positive. Mysterium can be experienced in feelings that convey the qualitative content of the numinous experience. This content presents itself under two aspects: (1) that of "daunting awfulness and majesty," and (2) "as something uniquely attractive and fascinating." From the former comes the sense of the uncanny, of divine wrath and judgment; from the latter, the reassuring and heightening experiences of grace and divine love. This dual impact of awesome mystery and fascination was Otto's characteristic way of expressing man's encounter with the holy.
Later works.
Otto employed the method he had developed in The Idea of the Holy in three major publications that followed: West-Östliche Mystik (1926; Mysticism East and West, 1932); Die Gnadenreligion Indiens und das Christentum (1930; India's Religion of Grace and Christianity, 1930); and Reich Gottes und Menschensohn (1934; The Kingdom of God and Son of Man, 1938). Of the three books, the latter is especially important for glimpses of new insight that seem to point beyond the earlier, more widely acclaimed volume; it renders the hint of ultimacy that appears in present history.
Otto's concern with experiencing the numinous also gave rise to experimenting with new forms of liturgy designed to give urgency and vividness to such experiences in Protestant services of worship under critically controlled conditions. Here he employed a "Sacrament of Silence" as a culminating phase, a time of waiting comparable to the Quaker moment of silence, which he acknowledged to have been the stimulus to his own innovation.
Otto took all religions seriously as occasions to experience the holy and thus pressed beyond involvement in his own historical faith as a Christian to engage in frequent encounter with people of other religious traditions. He had much respect for the distinctive characteristics of the various religions and thus resisted universalizing religion in the sense of reducing all to the lowest common denominator. Yet he strongly argued for a lively exchange between representatives of the various religions. It was this concern that led him to create in Marburg the Religious Collection of religious symbols, rituals, and apparatus on a worldwide basis for purposes of inspection and study and to advocate establishing an Inter-Religious League as "a cultural exchange in which the noblest . . . of our art and science and of our whole spiritual heritage would be mutually interpreted and shared."
Scholarly pursuits.
What initially prompted Otto's inquiry into man's experience of the holy was a specifically Christian, even Protestant, concern that had awakened in him while studying the life and thought of Martin Luther. This concern--to elucidate the distinctive character of the religious interpretation of the world--is reflected in his first book, Die Anschauung vom heiligen Geiste bei Luther (1898; "The Perception of the Holy Spirit by Luther"). He was to expand his inquiry in his book, Naturalistische und religiöse Weltansicht (1904; Naturalism and Religion, 1907), in which he contrasted the naturalistic and the religious ways of interpreting the world, first indicating their antitheses and then raising the question of whether the contradictions can be or should be reconciled.
Otto resisted an easy reconciliation between the world view offered by the sciences and the religious interpretation but opposed equally the religionist's hostility toward science and the scientist's disregard of religion. The two perspectives, he insisted, are to be embraced and heeded for what they purport to disclose concerning the world in which men live. It was clear, however, that Otto's principal concern was to justify and to clarify what it is that the religious interpretation of the world, even within its rational aspect, conveys to man as a distinctive dimension of understanding beyond the discoveries of the sciences and the generalized knowledge following from them. Five years later came his work, Kantische-Fries'sche Religionsphilosophie (1909; The Philosophy of Religion Based on Kant and Fries, 1931), a discussion of the religious thought of the German philosophers Immanuel Kant and Jacob Friedrich Fries, in which he sought to specify the kind of rationality that is appropriate to religious inquiry.
During 1911-12 Otto undertook an extended journey, visiting many countries of the world, beginning with North Africa, Egypt, and Palestine, continuing to India, China, and Japan, and returning by way of the United States. These experiences were to set his problem in a worldwide context, turning him to an extended and searching exploration of the diverse ways in which the religious response had manifested itself among various religions of the world. He proved to be remarkably well equipped for such an exploration, both in his mastery of languages and his knowledge of the history of world religions. In addition to being at home with the languages of Near Eastern religions, he had mastered Sanskrit sufficiently to translate many ancient Hindu texts into German as well as to write several volumes comparing Indian and Christian religious thought.
Influence of Schleiermacher
Otto's initial
mentor guiding
his inquiry
into the
specific
character of
the religious
response was
the eminent
German
philosopher and
theologian
Friedrich
Schleiermacher.
It was
Schleiermacher's
early work,
specifically
his book
Über die
Religion. Reden
an die Gebilden
unter ihren
Verächtern
(1799; On
Religion:
Speeches to Its
Cultured
Despisers,
1893), to which
Otto gave
particular
attention. What
appealed to him
in this work
was
Schleiermacher's
fresh way of
perceiving
religion as a
unique feeling
or awareness,
distinct from
ethical and
rational modes
of perception,
though not
exclusive of
them.
Schleiermacher
was later to
speak of this
unique feeling
as man's
"feeling of
absolute
dependence."
Otto was deeply
impressed by
this
formulation and
credited
Schleiermacher
with having
rediscovered
the sense of
the holy in the
post-Enlightenment
age. Yet he
later
criticized the
formulation on
the grounds
that what
Schleiermacher
had pointed up
here was no
more than a
close analogy
with ordinary,
or "natural,"
feelings of
dependence. For
"absolute
dependence"
Otto
substituted
"creature-feeling."
Creature-feeling,
he said, is
itself a first
subjective
concomitant and
effect of
another feeling
element, which
casts it like a
shadow, but
which in itself
indubitably has
immediate and
primary
reference to an
object outside
of the self.
Otto called
this object
"the numinous"
or "Wholly
Other"--i.e.,
that which
utterly
transcends the
mundane sphere,
roughly
equivalent to
"supernatural"
and
"transcendent"
in traditional
usage.
Otto, Rudolf
Bibliography
Robert F.
Davidson,
Rudolf Otto's
Interpretation
of Religion
(1947); S.P.
Dubey,
Rudolf Otto and
Hinduism
(1969); Philip
C. Almond,
Rudolf Otto: An
Introduction to
His
Philosophical
Theology
(1984).
(B.E.M./Ed.)
