The Enneagram is a nine-sided figure that looks like a
theorem straight from Euclid’s
Elements.
Instead of teaching basic mathematical facts, however, the Enneagram purports
to teach a path to enlightenment, a path that Church leaders find worrisome.
In 2000, the US Conference of Catholic Bishops prepared a
draft statement, “A Brief Report on the Origins of the Enneagram,” cautioning
against its use. It was never published, but it can be found on the website of
the National Catholic Reporter. In
2003, the Vatican’s document “Jesus Christ, Bearer of the Water of Life”
discussed the dangers of New Age spirituality, and mentioned the Enneagram in its
glossary. In 2004, the USCCB Committee on Doctrine released “Report on the Use
of the Enneagram: Can It Serve as a True Instrument of Christian Spiritual
Growth?” for the conference’s internal use. Father Thomas Weinandy of the USCCB’s
Secretariat of Doctrine provided that report for this article.
Last February, Archbishop Thomas Wenski of Miami explained
Catholic teaching on the Enneagram and related subjects in an online column titled,
“New Age is Old Gnosticism.” He wrote that the Enneagram is a
“pseudo-psychological exercise supposedly based on Eastern mysticism, [which] introduces
ambiguity into the doctrine and life of the Christian faith and therefore
cannot be happily used to promote growth in an authentic Christian spirituality.”
The archbishop’s column is the clearest available teaching for the laity on
this topic, and a neat summary of the bishops’ reports.
The Enneagram redefines sin, among other fundamental
concepts, by simply associating faults with personality types, which is
particularly tempting in a cultural climate of irresponsibility and narcissism.
It encourages an unhealthy self-absorption about one’s own “type,” so that the
type is at fault rather than the person. This gives rise to a deterministic
mindset at odds with Christian freedom.
Religious who
promote it
Yet interest in the Enneagram persists in some Christian
circles. Retreat centers such as Vallombrosa in Menlo Park, California and the
Tabor Retreat Center in Oceanside, New York (run by the Ursulines) conduct
Enneagram programs. Living Water Spiritual Center in Winslow, Maine, run by the
Sisters of St. Joseph, gave a retreat in November about sobriety that was centered
on the Enneagram. From January to April this year, the Archdiocese of Los
Angeles had an Enneagram Series, with such workshops as “The Enneagram and Triads
of Being.” Father Richard Rohr of the Center for Action and Contemplation in
Albuquerque, New Mexico teaches the Enneagram.
Joanna Quintrell says that Jerome Wagner at Loyola
University in Chicago taught the Enneagram to her about four years ago. She is
an ordained minister with the Evangelical Covenant Church; the Chicago-based
denomination sent her to Loyola to learn the Enneagram. Now she teaches it at
the Journey Center in Santa Rosa, California, which bills itself as offering
“Christ-centered spirituality, healing, and wholeness.”
“I teach the Enneagram from a spiritual point of view,”
Quintrell said. “The Enneagram has pre-Christian as well as Christian roots.”
She claims that “you can trace the Enneagram to the Desert Mothers and Fathers,”
citing the work of Father Richard Rohr to back up this statement. Quintrell
described the nine personality types included in the Enneagram as reflecting
the divine character. She asserts that she Christianizes the Enneagram, saying
it reflects people in God’s image as well as acknowledging their brokenness.
“Depending on their Christian background, some are open to
it, some are scared,” commented Quintrell. “Some see it as a pentagram, as
something they shouldn’t be investigating.” She noted that 60 percent of
Enneagram participants identify themselves as Christian. “It’s not something to
be scared of,” Quintrell said. “It’s a tool for transformation. The Holy Spirit
uses that tool to bring God’s healing.”
However, the Enneagram isn’t a self-explanatory tool, like
the newspaper’s daily horoscope. Quintrell has workshop participants do a
200-question inventory developed by Loyola University’s Wagner. “It’s a place
to begin discovering your type,” she explained. “It’s complex. What is my
highest score? What is the essence of who I am?”
Sr. Suzanne Zuercher of the Benedictine Sisters of Chicago
illustrates another way the Enneagram is utilized in Christian settings. She
has taught the Enneagram for 36 years and uses it at the Institute for
Spiritual Leadership at Loyola University; she is also president of St.
Scholastica Academy, where she uses it with staff members. Zuercher described
the Enneagram as “helpful for the spiritual journey.”
“I define it as an instrument for spiritual growth, a tool
for self-knowledge, humility, and self-acceptance,” Zuercher said. “I hardly go
a day without it. It talks about my gifts, my issues.”
Zuercher acknowledges the controversy surrounding the
Enneagram, and is aware of the US bishops’ 2000 document on the subject.
“Books by Father Rohr and I were listed on the report,
saying we were teaching things against Catholic doctrine. I saw the draft,” she
said. “If you know the Enneagram, it states in numerous ways that our greatest
sinfulness comes from our desire to redeem ourselves.”
Zuercher sees the Enneagram as more than a combination of
numerology and personality tests. Quotes from her book Enneagram Spirituality are used on the discernment page of the
Benedictine Sisters of Chicago, including, “Discernment is the awareness of
centered or non-centered energy in the organism,” and, “We abandon predictions
of how life will turn out, judgments of what is good or bad.… We simply live
from our center.” Her reflections close with, “We live as relaxed as that
child, and we are nourished by the Divine Mother at the center of who we are,
body and spirit, incarnate being, human organism.”
Father William Meninger of St. Benedict’s Monastery in
Snowmass, Colorado conducts retreats on the Enneagram and the Centering Prayer.
Last year, he led Enneagram workshops in Oregon at St. Mary’s Catholic Church
in Corvallis and Queen of Peace Catholic Church in Salem. In February, he gave
a talk about Enneagram personality types at the Washington Theological Union, a
Catholic theology and ministry school in the nation’s capital.
Meninger has taught the Enneagram since 1990. “I learned it
from lecturers and went to qualified workshops. I learned about it in Israel,” he
said. Meninger noted that he’s taught it at Episcopal and Methodist churches,
as well as secular venues.
Meninger commented that he doesn’t want to defy the US
Catholic bishops, though he doesn’t agree with them.
As a Cistercian, Meninger said, “I have a vow of obedience
I keep; I will follow [the US bishops’] ultimate decision.” He added that the
Canadian bishops don’t forbid teaching the Enneagram.
“The Enneagram teaches self-knowledge,” Meninger said. “The
Oracle at Delphi said, ‘Know thyself.’ Self-knowledge is the virtue of
humility. Humility is the primary virtue. Self-knowledge is important to the
spiritual journey. [The Enneagram] is only a tool.”
Fundamentally
Gnostic
In his column on the subject, Archbishop Wenski described
the Enneagram as fundamentally Gnostic, a form of numerology and divination of
the type that the Lord forbids among the Israelites (Deuteronomy 18:10-14). Father
Thomas Weinandy said, “Everybody wants to have control of their lives; people
purport to have secret knowledge for the relationship with God, and contact
with divine energy. The emphasis in Catholicism is the personal relationship
with Jesusfaith. It’s not a secret knowledge; it’s based on his death and
resurrection.”
Unlike many personality tests, the Enneagram claims a
profound, transcendent meaning, as well as a scientific one. But this meaning varies,
depending who you ask and what criticisms are being addressed. Sr. Zuercher
said she advises those interested in the Enneagram to “go to workshops at a
reputable retreat center, not just read.”
“It’s an oral tradition,” she explained. “People talk about
their lives, who they are, their issues. In conversation, people find
themselves on the Enneagram.… It’s a tool for self-understanding, knowing who
you are. You start with the gifts and the aspects of the Creator. You start
with the gifts, and how they got distorted by the ego.”
Many proponents of the Enneagram claim that it is
scientific. In a March 2007 interview with the San Francisco Chronicle, Don Riso of the Enneagram Institute claimed
“research is being done in an independent and nonbiased way by a highly
regarded group of statisticians and psychometricians in the UK who are well on
their way to proving that the nine types do exist.” The “highly regarded group”
remains anonymous. In the end, Riso concludes, “Ultimately, people either see
the fundamental truth and utility of the Enneagram in their own lives and
experience, or they do not.”
Both Father Meninger and Sr. Zuercher brought up Jesuit
Father Mitch Pacwa and his work with the US bishops on New Age practices.
Father Meninger described Father Pacwa as the “leader of the opposition to the
Enneagram.” Pacwa’s 1992 book Catholics
and the New Age is one of the few widely disseminated orthodox treatments
of the subject. Over the course of three chapters, Father Pacwa discusses his
involvement with the Enneagram. He once taught it; the Enneagram even seemed to
bear good fruithe notes how it inspired him to make one of his best
confessions. The more he researched it, however, the more disillusioned he
became. Father Pacwa decided the Enneagram was a dangerous fraud. “Fitting
someone into one mold or another seemed like fun,” he wrote. “…however, after
incorrectly typing some friends, I eventually dropped the Enneagram from my
repertoire of spiritual direction tools.”
“People
use [the Enneagram] because they haven’t found Catholic spirituality to their
liking,” Father Weinandy said. “They have lost their way. The more laity and
religious are educated in authentic Catholic piety, the less they’d be
interested in other things.”