C. S. Lewis was an atheist until he read G.K. Chesterton's book, The
Everlasting Man, but he wasn't afterwards, prompting him to observe that a
young man who is serious about his atheism cannot be too careful about what he
reads.
Of
all of Chesterton's literary monuments, this is perhaps his greatest, for he
eloquently and concisely packs the whole human story between the covers of one
book. He begins by pointing out that the main problem with the critics of the
Church is that they are too close to it to see it properly. They cannot see the
big picture, only the small picture that directly affects them. With their
sulks and their perversity and their petty criticism they are merely reacting
to the Church. What they need to do is back up. And that's what Chesterton has
the reader do in this book: back up far enough and to see the Church in all its
startling beauty and unexpected truth.
The
book was written as a kind of rebuttal to H.G. Wells' popular book, The
Outline of History. Chesterton said that Wells was like an author who
disliked the main character in his book. Wells glossed over the two biggest
points in history. The first is the uniqueness of the creature called man and
the second is the uniqueness of the man called Christ.
What
do we know about early man? The one thing we really know for sure is that he
was an artist. The cave man left behind his drawings on the wall of the cave.
The creature who made these drawings was truly different from all other
creatures because he was a creator as well as a creature. "Art is the
signature of man," says Chesterton. It is just one of many things that
demonstrates that "the more we look at man as an animal, the less he will
look like one." In addition to art are such artificial things as clothes
and furniture and such unique reactions such as shame and laughter. And that
other exclusively human thing called religion.
Religion
is as old as civilization. And civilization is as old as history. Chesterton
says that when we study history, the curtain rises on a play already in
progress. He argues that it was religion that advanced civilization. It was
religion that dealt with the meanings of things, with the development and
interpretation of symbols, which advanced communication and knowledge, or what
we call the arts and the sciences.
If
we study any civilization, we see that after progress comes decay. Chesterton
says men do not grow tired of evil, but of good. They become weary of joy. They
stop worshipping God and start worshipping idols, their own bad imitations of
God, and they become as wooden as the thing they worship. They start
worshipping nature and become unnatural. They start worshipping sex and become
perverted. Men start lusting after men and become unmanly.
The
most ignorant of humanity know by the very look of earth that they have
forgotten heaven.
But
then something marvelous happens in history. And it also happens in a cave. A
cave in Bethlehem.
Bethlehem,
says Chesterton, is emphatically a place where extremes meet. It is where
heaven meets earth. God comes to make a home in the world and finds himself
homeless.
A
mass of legend and literature has sprung from this single paradox; that the
hands that had made the sun and stars were too small to reach the huge heads of
the cattle. Upon this paradox, all the literature of our faith was founded—it
is something too good to be true, except that it is true.
Chesterton
says that if we approach the Gospel objectively we will see that it is not a
book of platitudes. It paints a picture of a man who was indeed a
wonder-worker, but who spoke in riddles and rebukes. His teachings were as
difficult to accept in his own time as they are today. None of the critics of
Christianity seem to appreciate the fact that Christ's teachings were not
dependent on the social order in which he lived but transcended their time
altogether.
The
critics of course try to create a different Christ from the one portrayed in
the Gospels by picking and choosing whatever they want. They always try to make
him merely human, whether they make him a socialist or a pacifist or a madman.
"There must surely have been something not only mysterious but many-sided
about Christ if so many smaller Christs can be carved out of him."
But
the main impression one gets from studying the teachings of Christ is that he
really did not come to teach. What separates Christianity from other religions
is that its central figure does not wish to be known merely as a teacher. He
makes the greatest claim of all. Mohammed did not claim to be God. Buddha did
not claim to be God. But Christ did claim to be God.
The
story gets stranger still. All of Christ's life is a steady pursuit towards the
ultimate sacrifice: the Crucifixion.
All
the great groups that stood about the Cross represent in one way or another the
great historical truth of the time; that the world could not save itself. Man
could do no more. Rome and Jerusalem and Athens and everything else—Chesterton
says that the strength of the world was turned to weakness and the wisdom of
the world was turned to folly. For what could be stranger than the fact that
the local execution of a minor revolutionary in an obscure outpost would become
the central event in all of history? But that is where the Cross stands: at the
center of history.
This
central dogma of the Christian faith, that God died—that, in Chesterton's
phrase, God was for one instant forsaken of God, that God sacrificed himself to
himself—is more mysterious than anything, even the mystery of creation itself.
And those who object to this dogma do so not because the dogma is bad, but
because it's too good to be true. The Gospel story does not end with God's
death; it ends with the most startling episode of all. An empty grave. And God
again walking in a garden, as on the first day of creation.
It
is this strange story that explains why Christianity has done something
different than just survive. It has itself returned to life many times after
having been apparently defeated. It has, as Chesterton says, "died many
times and risen again; for it had a God who knew the way out of the
grave."
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2006 The American Chesterton Society http://theamericanchestertonsociety.com