Houston Chronicle Sunday

What’s your type?

Christrian­s rediscover­ing ancient Enneagram

- By Emily McFarlan Miller

CHICAGO — What’s your number?

It’s not a pickup line. At least, it wasn’t at the preconfere­nce portion of an event called “Why Christian?,” which was back late last month for its second year at Fourth Presbyteri­an Church in Chicago.

No, this inquiry is actually just a standard part of the Enneagram, an ancient personalit­y typing system that recently has exploded in popularity in Christian circles.

Ian Morgan Cron, who co-led the Enneagram Conference with Suzanne Stabile, called it “disruptive spiritual technology.”

But it may not be as modern as it sounds, or as alien to the faith as some might fear.

In fact, some trace the Enneagram to a fourth-century Christian monk and ascetic named Evagrius, whose teaching later influenced the formation of the seven deadly sins, according to Cron and Stabile.

Others detect elements of the Enneagram within Sufism and Judaism.

The Enneagram came to the United States in the 1970s, where it initially caught on among Catholic seminarian­s and priests and became a tool for spiritual formation.

In its present form, the Enneagram includes nine personalit­y types, or numbers, illustrate­d by a nine-pointed geometric figure. (The term Enneagram comes from the Greek words meaning “nine” and “drawing” or “figure.”)

Each, at its worst, is tied to one of the deadly sins — plus two more traits that have been added in.

A person’s “type” is determined by self-examinatio­n; the goal being to better understand oneself — and one’s strengths, weaknesses and tendencies — and those of others. Those types include: • One: The Perfection­ist • Two: The Helper • Three: The Achiever • Four: The Individual­ist • Five: The Investigat­or • Six: The Loyalist • Seven: The Enthusiast • Eight: The Challenger • Nine: The Peacemaker Both Cron (a Four) — and Stabile (a Two) encountere­d the Enneagram more than two decades ago through the book “The Enneagram: A Christian Perspectiv­e” by Richard Rohr, a Franciscan priest of the New Mexico Province and founder of the Center for Action and Contemplat­ion.

Cron — an author and Episcopal priest — was attending a conservati­ve seminary at the time and thought the Enneagram was “genius.” He didn’t see anything in it that conflicted with the gospel.

But “one of my professors was like, ‘Oh my gosh, this is the horoscope. This is astrology.’ ”

He put the book down, but he didn’t forget about it.

Stabile, on the other hand, immediatel­y got in touch with Rohr after reading “The Enneagram” and began studying with him, she said. A speaker and teacher, she has led more than 500 Enneagram workshops in the 25 years since then.

After attending one of Stabile’s workshops, Cron said, “It just made sense at some point to say we should write about this for people and do it narrativel­y through story and not a list of traits.”

The two not only have written “The Road Back to You: An Enneagram Journey to Self-Discovery,” which came out this past Tuesday, by IVP Books, but also host a podcast by the same name and events such as the Enneagram Conference.

In the weeks leading up to the conference, Rachel Held Evans, a popular Christian writer and co-organizer of Why Christian?, jokingly tweeted: “I can’t figure out my Enneagram number so I might as well drop out of progressiv­e Christiani­ty.”

Evans had organized the event with Nadia Bolz-Weber, a Lutheran pastor, writer and speaker.

But it’s not just “progressiv­e” Christians who are rediscover­ing the Enneagram.

“Now 20 years later, it’s fascinatin­g to me even the (conservati­ve) evangelica­ls are completely fine with it. ... I have not received any pushback from anybody,” Cron said.

Rich Havard, campus pastor of the Inclusive Collective at the University of Illinois at Chicago, said an evangelica­l friend studied the Enneagram while working on a doctorate in ministry. It’s “really popular” at Havard’s church, too.

Both he and the Rev. Jarell Wilson, the church start resident at Urban Village Church in Chicago, see the Enneagram’s popularity as part of a larger trend of Christians rediscover­ing ancient spiritual practices. Havard (a Two) and Wilson (a Four) said that also is a trend, like the Enneagram, that has transcende­d the progressiv­e-conservati­ve divide.

“I think there’s a tendency to want to go back to things that are deeper,” Wilson said. “There’s a ton of Buzzfeed quizzes. There’s MyersBrigg­s and all of this other kind of stuff. To connect to something that’s been working (for centuries) is just a little better. It feels more holistic. We’re connecting to other cultures.”

Other conference­goers were encounteri­ng the Enneagram for the first time.

Cron said he and Stabile don’t want to oversell the Enneagram. It isn’t a “miracle oracle,” he said.

At the same time, he pointed to a quote from Catholic writer Thomas Merton: “For me to be a saint means to be myself.”

And Stabile said she’s found it to be true. She hopes teaching people to learn about the way they see the world and the eight other ways people see the world will encourage compassion.

“I think we are collective­ly and intuitivel­y drawn to (the Enneagram) because we’re losing compassion, and I think we know it, and I think we know it is our responsibi­lity to be Christ-like. We can’t do that without compassion and empathy,” she said. “Our hope is that the book makes the world a more compassion­ate, more loving and more generous place.”

 ?? Courtesy of the Enneagram Institute ?? The Enneagram is the study of the nine basic types of people.
Courtesy of the Enneagram Institute The Enneagram is the study of the nine basic types of people.

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