A Day For G.K.
Thursday's are "G.K. Chesterton Day" here at AVITW, where we share an excerpt from a beloved Chesterton book, essay, or article. It is our hope that a new generation of Americans will re-discover the wit, wisdom, and insights of a great man, thinker, and writer.
In the opening to The Everlasting Man (1925), Chesterton takes aim at the type of journalist or social commentator whose fall-back position on social issues is to blame the religious population of a nation:
The clergyman appears in person and could easily be kicked as he came out of church; the journalist concelas even his name so that nobody can kick him...[Anti-religious writers] will suddenly turn round and revile the Church for not having prevented World War I, which they themselves did not want to prevent; and which nobody had ever professed to be able to prevent, except some of that very school of progressive and cosmopolitan skeptics who are the chief enemies of the Church. It was the anti-clerical and agnostic world that was always prophesying the advent of universal peace; it is that world that was, or should have been, abashed and confounded by the advent of universal war.
As for the general view that the Church was discredited by World War I - they might as well say that the Ark was discredited by the Flood. When the world goes wrong, it proves rather that the Church is right. The Church is justified, not because her children do not sin, but because they do.
But that marks this type of modern anti-religious writer's mood about the whole religious tradition: they are in a state of reaction against it. It is well with the boy when he lives on his father's land; and it is well with him again when he is off on his own and far enough from it to look back and see it as a whole. But these people have got into an intermediate state, have fallen into an intervening valley from which they can see neither the heights beyond them nor the heights behind. They cannot get out from under the shadow of Christianity. They cannot be Christians and they cannot leave off being Anti-Christians.
Their whole atmosphere is the atmosphere of a reaction: sulks, perversity, petty criticism. They live in the shadow of the faith and have lost the light of the faith...
The worst judge of all is the man who these days is now most ready with his judgments; the ill-educated Christian turning gradually into the ill-tempered agnostic, entangled in the end of a feud of which he never understood the beginning, blighted with a sort of hereditary boredom with he knows not what, and already weary of hearing what he has never heard.
If you are up for an intellectual challenge (with a huge pay-off), get The Everlasting Man.
Happy Reading!
-RJM
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March 4th, 2010 - 18:22
Ok, that’s it. I gotta buy a Chesterton book. I tried to resist your wiles for months RJ, but I am going to give in and read Heretics or Orthodoxy. Which one first?
Thanks for putting stuff like this up. You are a very interesting person.
March 4th, 2010 - 19:37
I liked the link you had to the Al Mohler article on Hitchens. I find it ironic that so many of the “new atheists” are so over-the-top nasty and intolerant of religious Americans (primarily Christians)…whom they claim are nasty and intolerant.
Atheists, God-less societies always end the same way: tyranny.
Chesterton is so right that the majority of critics of the Church reside in this in-between world of criticism where they condemn religious people for believing in things like morality and charity and chastity…but then insist that people follow their brand of morality (Relativism), their ideas of charity (welfare), and their kind of chastity (abstaining for the sake of “Green”).
March 4th, 2010 - 19:38
“The Church is justified, not because her children do not sin, but because they do”.
Wow, what an incredible statement. It’s kinda like how he begins Orthodoxy, with how we used to argue about the best way to clean a dirty man, but now we argue about whether that man is even dirty or not.
Rheinhold Niebuhr once said that original sin is the only Christian doctrine that can be proved empirically; I would definitely have to agree with both him and GKC. Man has always been a rather disgusting individual, and the inability to recognize this most likely lies in one’s own filth.
A huge part of The Everlasting Man is how human beings have always considered certain things wrong and certain things right no matter what the liberal anthropology teacher says nowadays. Family and faith are the two things that have remained profoundly important throughout human history, regardless of the sometimes strange cultural traits that people can have, some things always are the same.
March 6th, 2010 - 17:30
I’m telling you Moeller, Catholicism is a-callin’…