Wilfred Cantwell Smith Explained

Pre-Nominals:The Reverend
Wilfred Cantwell Smith
Birth Date:21 July 1916
Birth Place:Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Death Place:Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Other Names:W. C. Smith
Module:
Child:yes
Religion:Christianity (Presbyterian)
Ordained:1944
Module2:
Child:yes
Thesis Title:The Azhar Journal: Analysis and Critique
Thesis Year:1948
Doctoral Advisor:Philip K. Hitti
Discipline:Religious studies
Main Interests:Religious pluralism
Notable Works:The Meaning and End of Religion (1961)

Wilfred Cantwell Smith [1] (July 21, 1916 – February 7, 2000) was a Canadian Islamicist, comparative religion scholar, and Presbyterian minister. He was the founder of the Institute of Islamic Studies at McGill University in Quebec and later the director of Harvard University's Center for the Study of World Religions. The Harvard University Gazette said he was one of the field's most influential figures of the past century.[2] In his 1962 work The Meaning and End of Religion he notably questioned the modern sectarian concept of religion.

Early life and career

Smith was born on 21 July 1916 in Toronto, Ontario, to parents Victor Arnold Smith and Sarah Cory Cantwell. He was the younger brother of Arnold Smith and the father of Brian Cantwell Smith. He primarily received his secondary education at Upper Canada College.

Smith studied at University College, Toronto, receiving a Bachelor of Arts degree with honours in oriental languages circa 1938. After his thesis was rejected by the University of Cambridge, supposedly for its Marxist critique of the British Raj, he and his wife Muriel Mackenzie Struthers spent seven years in pre-independence India (1940–1946), during which he taught Indian and Islamic history at Forman Christian College in Lahore.

In 1948 he obtained a Doctor of Philosophy degree in oriental languages at Princeton University, after which he taught at McGill, founding in 1952 the university's Institute of Islamic Studies. During this period, he invited Ismail al-Faruqi to join the Institute, where al-Faruqi taught from 1958 to 1961.[3] From 1964 to 1973 Smith taught at Harvard Divinity School. He left Harvard for Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, where he founded the Department of Religion. He was also among the original editorial advisors of the scholarly journal Dionysius. In 1978 he returned to Harvard. In 1979 he received an honorary doctorate from Concordia University.[4] After his retirement from Harvard in 1984, he was appointed a senior research associate in the Faculty of Divinity at Trinity College, University of Toronto, in 1985.

Views on religion

Critique of "Religion" as a Concept

In The Meaning and End of Religion (1962), Smith critiqued the concept of "religion" as a systematic, identifiable entity. He argued that the term "religion" is a uniquely Western construct and not a universally valid category. Smith proposed replacing the static concept of religion with a dynamic dialectic between "cumulative tradition" (all historically observable rituals, art, music, theologies, etc.) and "personal faith".

Analysis of Major Religions

Smith demonstrated that founders and followers of major religions did not see themselves as part of a defined system called religion, with Islam being a notable exception. In his chapter "The Special Case of Islam", Smith noted that the term Islam appears in the Qur'an, making it the only religion named by its own tradition. He also highlighted that the Arabic language does not have a word for religion equivalent to the European concept, detailing how din, usually translated as such, differs significantly.

Historical Evolution of the Term

Smith pointed out that terms for major world religions like Hinduism, Buddhism, and Shintoism did not exist until the 19th century. He suggested that practitioners historically did not view their practices as "religion" until cultural self-regard prompted them to see their practices as different from others. For Smith, the modern concept of religion emerged from identity politics and apologetics.

Etymological Study

Through an etymological study, Smith argued that "religion" originally denoted personal piety but evolved to mean a system of observances or beliefs, a shift institutionalized through reification. He traced this transformation from Lucretius and Cicero through Lactantius and Augustine, with the term "faith" predominating in the Middle Ages. The Renaissance revived "religio," which retained its personal practice emphasis. During the 17th-century Catholic-Protestant debates, religion began to refer to abstract systems of beliefs, a concept further reified during the Enlightenment, exemplified by G.W.F. Hegel's definition of religion as a self-subsisting transcendent idea.

Four Distinct Senses of "Religion"

Smith concluded that "religion" now has four distinct senses: personal piety, an overt system of beliefs, practices, and values as an ideal religion, an empirical phenomenon related to a particular community's historical and sociological manifestation, and a generic summation or universal category of religion in general.

The Meaning and End of Religion remains Smith's most influential work. The anthropologist of religion and postcolonial scholar Talal Asad has called it a modern classic and a masterpiece.

Death and legacy

Smith died on 7 February 2000 in Toronto. His papers are preserved in Special Collections and Archives at the University Library at California State University, Northridge.[5]

See also

Bibliography

References

Further reading

Of interest

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: 9 February 2000 . Deaths . The Globe and Mail . Toronto . A18.
  2. News: Putnam . Hilary . Hilary Putnam . Eck . Diana . Diana L. Eck . Carman . John . Tu Wei-Ming . Tu Weiming . Graham . William . 29 November 2001 . Wilfred Cantwell Smith: In Memoriam . Harvard University Gazette . Cambridge, Massachusetts . Harvard University . https://web.archive.org/web/20091007163800/http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2001/11.29/27-memorialminute.html . 7 October 2009 . 4 February 2010.
  3. News: Islamic scholar slain in U.S. was figure in Montreal . Balfour . Clair . July 31, 1986 . The Gazette . Montreal .
  4. Web site: Davis . Charles . 1979 . Honorary Degree Citation – Wilfred Cantwell Smith . Montreal . Concordia University . https://web.archive.org/web/20151002092308/http://archives.concordia.ca/smith-w . 2 October 2015 . 11 April 2016.
  5. Web site: Guide to the Wilfred Cantwell Smith Papers . . 2020 . Online Archive of California . November 14, 2022.