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The Serenity Prayer |
God, grant me
the serenity to accept
the things I cannot change,
courage to change the things I can
and wisdom to know the difference.
Living one
day at a time,
enjoying one moment at a time,
accepting hardship as a pathway to peace.
Taking, as Jesus did,
this sinful world as it is,
not as I would have it.
Trusting that
You will make all things right
if I surrender to Your will,
so that I may be reasonably happy in this life
and supremely happy in the next.
AMEN
Although the origin of the Serenity Prayer may never be known for sure, some people attribute it to Reinhold Niebuhr. Alcoholics Anonymous has adopted it as its favorite way to open or close a meeting and to use it constantly as a prayer to handle life and it's normal problems.
Ancient origins of the Serenity Prayer
In terms of the ancient background of the
Serenity Prayer, the distinction between "the things we do not have the power to
change" and "the things we do have the power to change" is a fundamental and
central part of ancient Greco-Roman Stoic philosophy. In ancient Greek (in the
Stoic literature), it is called the distinction between ta ouk eph' hemin and ta
eph' hemin, that is, read literally, "things not up to us" vs. "things up to
us."
And the goal of the good life in Stoic philosophy is always described as the
attainment of "serenity," which in ancient Greek was apatheia, which meant
freedom from overwhelming emotional storms (what were called the pathe in Greek,
that is, the fierce passions like the furious and insane rage which drove Medea
to kill her own children and Clytemnestra to murder her husband, King Agamemnon,
by chopping him up with an ax as he lay soaking in his bathtub).
To see what they meant by the pathe, the overwhelming "passions" which led us to
our destruction, see the Roman tragedies written by Seneca. His plays usually
focus on the destructive power of ira (out of control anger) and furor (which is
out of control anger carried to truly insane lengths). But the Stoics knew that
there were a lot of other passions which could destroy you when they got out of
control, such as desire, grief, fear, and even joy (modern drug addicts can
assure you that this is so). And the ancients knew about sexual lust of course!
They had felt its power too.
At any rate, any ancient Greek philosopher who looked at the Serenity Prayer
would note these two items - - the distinction between the things we cannot
change and the things we can, and the idea of serenity as the goal of the good
life - - and nod his head and say, "Yes, this must be by a Stoic." These were
technical terms which these ancient philosophers argued over, and everybody knew
that this was the Stoic position on those issues.
St. Augustine, who knew his ancient philosophy thoroughly, later on attacked the
idea of serenity as the goal of the good life in his City of God, which he wrote
at the beginning of the fifth century A.D., specifically identifying this as a
Stoic idea.
The Discourses of Epictetus is the best Stoic work to look at to see how the
ancient Stoics understood these terms. Epictetus had once been a slave in the
mad emperor Nero's palace, and knew whereof he spoke when he talked about being
in situations where we had no control over people, places, or things. (This
observation was a standard part of ancient Stoic belief also. The only thing we
ultimately have real control over, they taught, is what is going on inside us,
inside our own heads.)
How did these ideas get down to the twentieth century? By the end of the
Greco-Roman period, most philosophers were teaching mixtures of Stoic and
Platonic (and sometimes Aristotelian) philosophy. They were called Late Stoics
or Middle Platonists or Neo-Pythagorians or other technical terms like that, but
all of them had mixed a lot of Stoic ideas into their thought. Even the writings
of an Academic Sceptic like Cicero were filled with references to Stoic ideas.
And by the second century, Christian theologians were using a mixture of Stoic
and Middle Platonic philosophy to explain their own Christian ideas. In the
eastern end of the Mediterranean most early Christian theologians taught that
serenity in the Stoic sense was the goal of the Christian life, and Eastern
Orthodox Christianity still teaches that to this day.
And the revival of the Greek and Roman classics in the Renaissance, beginning in
the 1300's A.D., meant that you can find Stoic ideas coming out in all sorts of
Renaissance and Early Modern literature from western Europe for a number of
centuries afterward.
Reinhold Niebuhr was probably the greatest American-born theologian of the
twentieth century, and had a deep and profound knowledge of ancient philosophy
as well as the history of Christian theology.
There is a little bit of the Stoic approach in the early medieval philosopher
Boethius (who is sometimes cited as the source), but he really doesn't use the
Stoic technical terminology, and he was also not very apt to have been on
Reinhold Niebuhr's reading list. Boethius just did not show up on the standard
reading lists at either Protestant or Roman Catholic seminaries in the early
twentieth century. They might mention his name in a general history course, but
would not go into any detail about his ideas, or require the students to
actually read anything Boethius wrote.
But Reinhold Niebuhr could have picked up these ideas from so many different
Late Ancient and Medieval sources, that I think tracking down the particular one
that suggested the prayer to him is impossible. There were just too many places
he could have found the basic ideas.
Originally though, if we take the ideas in the Serenity Prayer back to their
beginnings, it was a very distinctive and easily identifiable Stoic
philosophical position. It wasn't just vague talk about men and women sometimes
being at the mercy of forces they cannot control, which was something which
thoughtful human beings in all cultures at all periods of history have talked
about (Egyptians, Persians, Buddhists, Hindus, the classical Greek tragedians,
and so on).
Glenn Chesnut, Professor Emeritus of Ancient History, Indiana University
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