Orthodoxy by Gilbert K. Chesterton
IX--Authority and the Adventurer
THE last chapter has been concerned with the contention that orthodoxy is not
only (as is often urged) the only safe guardian of morality or order, but is
also the only logical guardian of liberty, innovation and advance. If we wish
to pull down the prosperous oppressor we cannot do it with the new doctrine of
human perfectibility; we can do it with the old doctrine of Original Sin. If we
want to uproot inherent cruelties or lift up lost populations we cannot do it
with the scientific theory that matter precedes mind; we can do it with the
supernatural theory that mind precedes matter. If we wish specially to awaken
people to social vigilance and tireless pursuit of practise, we cannot help it
much by insisting on the Immanent God and the Inner Light: for these are at
best reasons for contentment; we can help it much by insisting on the
transcendent God and the flying and escaping gleam; for that means divine
discontent. If we wish particularly to assert the idea of a generous balance
against that of a dreadful autocracy we shall instinctively be Trinitarian
rather than Unitarian. If we desire European civilization to be a raid and a
rescue, we shall insist rather that souls are in real peril than that their
peril is ultimately unreal. And if we wish to exalt the outcast and the
crucified, we shall rather wish to think that a veritable God was crucified,
rather than a mere sage or hero. Above all, if we wish to protect the poor we
shall be in favour of fixed rules and clear dogmas. The rules of a club
are occasionally in favour of the poor member. The drift of a club is always in
favour of the rich one.
And now we come to the crucial question which truly concludes the whole matter.
A reasonable agnostic, if he has happened to agree with me so far, may justly
turn round and say, "You have found a practical philosophy in the doctrine of
the Fall; very well. You have found a side of democracy now dangerously
neglected wisely asserted in Original Sin; all right. You have found a truth in
the doctrine of hell; I congratulate you. You are convinced that worshippers of
a personal God look outwards and are progressive; I congratulate them. But even
supposing that those doctrines do include those truths, why cannot you take the
truths and leave the doctrines? Granted that all modern society is trusting the
rich too much because it does not allow for human weakness; granted that
orthodox ages have had a great advantage because (believing in the Fall) they
did allow for human weakness, why cannot you simply allow for human weakness
without believing in the Fall? If you have discovered that the idea of
damnation represents a healthy idea of danger, why can you not simply take the
idea of danger and leave the idea of damnation? If you see clearly the kernel
of common-sense in the nut of Christian orthodoxy, why cannot you simply take
the kernel and leave the nut? Why cannot you (to use that cant phrase of the
newspapers which I, as a highly scholarly agnostic, am a little ashamed of
using) why cannot you simply take what is good in Christianity, what you can
define as valuable, what you can comprehend, and leave all the rest, all the
absolute dogmas that are in their nature incomprehensible?" This is the real
question; this is the last question; and it is a pleasure to try to answer
it.
The first answer is simply to say that I am a rationalist. I like to have some
intellectual justification for my intuitions. If I am treating man as a fallen
being it is an intellectual convenience to me to believe that he fell; and I
find, for some odd psychological reason, that I can deal better with a man's
exercise of freewill if I believe that he has got it. But I am in this matter
yet more definitely a rationalist. I do not propose to turn this book into one
of ordinary Christian apologetics; I should be glad to meet at any other time
the enemies of Christianity in that more obvious arena. Here I am only giving
an account of my own growth in spiritual certainty. But I may pause to remark
that the more I saw of the merely abstract arguments against the Christian
cosmology the less I thought of them. I mean that having found the moral
atmosphere of the Incarnation to be common sense, I then looked at the
established intellectual arguments against the Incarnation and found them to be
common nonsense. In case the argument should be thought to suffer from the
absence of the ordinary apologetic I will here very briefly summarise my own
arguments and conclusions on the purely objective or scientific truth of the
matter.
If I am asked, as a purely intellectual question, why I believe in
Christianity, I can only answer, "For the same reason that an intelligent
agnostic disbelieves in Christianity." I believe in it quite rationally upon
the evidence But the evidence in my case, as in that of the intelligent
agnostic, is not really in this or that alleged demonstration; it is in an
enormous accumulation of small but unanimous facts. The secularist is not to be
blamed because his objections to Christianity are miscellaneous and even
scrappy; it is precisely such scrappy evidence that does convince the mind. I
mean that a man may well be less convinced of a philosophy from four books,
than from one book, one battle, one landscape, and one old friend. The very
fact that the things are of different kinds increases the importance of the
fact that they all point to one conclusion. Now, the non-Christianity of the
average educated man to-day is almost always, to do him justice, made up of
these loose but living experiences. I can only say that my evidences for
Christianity are of the same vivid but varied kind as his evidences against it.
For when I look at these various anti-Christian truths, I simply discover that
none of them are true. I discover that the true tide and force of all the facts
flows the other way. Let us take cases. Many a sensible modern man must have
abandoned Christianity under the pressure of three such converging convictions
as these: first, that men, with their shape, structure, and sexuality, are,
after all, very much like beasts, a mere variety of the animal kingdom; second,
that primeval religion arose in ignorance and fear; third, that priests have
blighted societies with bitterness and gloom. Those three anti-Christian
arguments are very different; but they are all quite logical and legitimate;
and they all converge. The only objection to them (I discover) is that they are
all untrue. If you leave off looking at books about beasts and men, if you
begin to look at beasts and men then (if you have any humour or imagination,
any sense of the frantic or the farcical) you will observe that the startling
thing is not how like man is to the brutes, but how unlike he is. It is the
monstrous scale of his divergence that requires an explanation. That man and
brute are like is, in a sense, a truism; but that being so like they should
then be so insanely unlike, that is the shock and the enigma. That an ape has
hands is far less interesting to the philosopher than the fact that having
hands he does next to nothing with them; does not play knuckle-bones or the
violin; does not carve marble or carve mutton. People talk of barbaric
architecture and debased art. But elephants do not build colossal temples of
ivory even in a roccoco style; camels do not paint even bad pictures, though
equipped with the material of many camel's-hair brushes. Certain modern
dreamers say that ants and bees have a society superior to ours. They have,
indeed, a civilization; but that very truth only reminds us that it is an
inferior civilization. Who ever found an ant-hill decorated with the statues of
celebrated ants? Who has seen a bee-hive carved with the images of gorgeous
queens of old? No; the chasm between man and other creatures may have a natural
explanation, but it is a chasm. We talk of wild animals; but man is the only
wild animal. It is man that has broken out. All other animals are tame animals;
following the rugged respectability of the tribe or type. All other animals are
domestic animals; man alone is ever undomestic, either as a profligate or a
monk. So that this first superficial reason for materialism is, if anything, a
reason for its opposite; it is exactly where biology leaves off that all
religion begins.
It would be the same if I examined the second of the three chance rationalist
arguments; the argument that all that we call divine began in some darkness and
terror. When I did attempt to examine the foundations of this modern idea I
simply found that there were none. Science knows nothing whatever about
pre-historic man; for the excellent reason that he is pre-historic. A few
professors choose to conjecture that such things as human sacrifice were once
innocent and general and that they gradually dwindled; but there is no direct
evidence of it, and the small amount of indirect evidence is very much the
other way. In the earliest legends we have, such as the tales of Isaac and of
Iphigenia, human sacrifice is not introduced as something old, but rather as
something new; as a strange and frightful exception darkly demanded by the
gods. History says nothing; and legends all say that the earth was kinder in
its earliest time. There is no tradition of progress; but the whole human race
has a tradition of the Fall. Amusingly enough, indeed, the very dissemination
of this idea is used against its authenticity. Learned men literally say that
this pre-historic calamity cannot be true because every race of mankind
remembers it. I cannot keep pace with these paradoxes.
And if we took the third chance instance, it would be the same; the view that
priests darken and embitter the world. I look at the world and simply discover
that they don't. Those countries in Europe which are still influenced by
priests, are exactly the countries where there is still singing and dancing and
coloured dresses and art in the open-air. Catholic doctrine and discipline may
be walls; but they are the walls of a playground. Christianity is the only
frame which has preserved the pleasure of Paganism. We might fancy some
children playing on the flat grassy top of some tall island in the sea. So long
as there was a wall round the cliff's edge they could fling themselves into
every frantic game and make the place the noisiest of nurseries. But the walls
were knocked down, leaving the naked peril of the precipice. They did not fall
over; but when their friends returned to them they were all huddled in terror
in the centre of the island; and their song had ceased.
Thus these three facts of experience, such facts as go to make an agnostic,
are, in this view, turned totally round. I am left saying, "Give me an
explanation, first, of the towering eccentricity of man among the brutes;
second, of the vast human tradition of some ancient happiness; third, of the
partial perpetuation of such pagan joy in the countries of the Catholic
Church." One explanation, at any rate, covers all three: the theory that twice
was the natural order interrupted by some explosion or revelation such as
people now call "psychic." Once Heaven came upon the earth with a power or seal
called the image of God, whereby man took command of Nature; and once again
(when in empire after empire men had been found wanting) Heaven came to save
mankind in the awful shape of a man. This would explain why the mass of men
always look backwards; and why the only corner where they in any sense look
forwards is the little continent where Christ has His Church. I know it will be
said that Japan has become progressive. But how can this be an answer when even
in saying "Japan has become progressive," we really only mean, "Japan has
become European"? But I wish here not so much to insist on my own explanation
as to insist on my original remark. I agree with the ordinary unbelieving man
in the street in being guided by three or four odd facts all pointing to
something; only when I came to look at the facts I always found they pointed to
something else.
I have given an imaginary triad of such ordinary anti-Christian arguments; if
that be too narrow a basis I will give on the spur of the moment another. These
are the kind of thoughts which in combination create the impression that
Christianity is something weak and diseased. First, for instance, that Jesus
was a gentle creature, sheepish and unworldly, a mere ineffectual appeal to the
world; second, that Christianity arose and flourished in the dark ages of
ignorance, and that to these the Church would drag us back; third, that the
people still strongly religious or (if you will) superstitious -- such people
as the Irish -- are weak, unpractical, and behind the times. I only mention
these ideas to affirm the same thing: that when I looked into them
independently I found, not that the conclusions were unphilosophical, but
simply that the facts were not facts. Instead of looking at books and pictures
about the New Testament I looked at the New Testament. There I found an
account, not in the least of a person with his hair parted in the middle or his
hands clasped in appeal, but of an extraordinary being with lips of thunder and
acts of lurid decision, flinging down tables, casting out devils, passing with
the wild secrecy of the wind from mountain isolation to a sort of dreadful
demagogy; a being who often acted like an angry god -- and always like a god.
Christ had even a literary style of his own, not to be found, I think,
elsewhere; it consists of an almost furious use of the a fortiori. His
"how much more" is piled one upon another like castle upon castle in the
clouds. The diction used about Christ has been, and perhaps wisely,
sweet and submissive. But the diction used by Christ is quite curiously
gigantesque; it is full of camels leaping through needles and mountains hurled
into the sea. Morally it is equally terrific; he called himself a sword of
slaughter, and told men to buy swords if they sold their coats for them. That
he used other even wilder words on the side of non-resistance greatly increases
the mystery; but it also, if anything, rather increases the violence. We cannot
even explain it by calling such a being insane; for insanity is usually along
one consistent channel. The maniac is generally a monomaniac. Here we must
remember the difficult definition of Christianity already given; Christianity
is a superhuman paradox whereby two opposite passions may blaze beside each
other. The one explanation of the Gospel language that does explain it, is that
it is the survey of one who from some supernatural height beholds some more
startling synthesis.
I take in order the next instance offered: the idea that Christianity belongs
to the Dark Ages. Here I did not satisfy myself with reading modern
generalisations; I read a little history. And in history I found that
Christianity, so far from belonging to the Dark Ages, was the one path across
the Dark Ages that was not dark. It was a shining bridge connecting two shining
civilizations. If any one says that the faith arose in ignorance and savagery
the answer is simple: it didn't. It arose in the Mediterranean civilization in
the full summer of the Roman Empire. The world was swarming with sceptics, and
pantheism was as plain as the sun, when Constantine nailed the cross to the
mast. It is perfectly true that afterwards the ship sank; but it is far more
extraordinary that the ship came up again: repainted and glittering, with the
cross still at the top. This is the amazing thing the religion did: it turned a
sunken ship into a submarine. The ark lived under the load of waters; after
being buried under the debris of dynasties and clans, we arose and remembered
Rome. If our faith had been a mere fad of the fading empire, fad would have
followed fad in the twilight, and if the civilization ever re-emerged (and many
such have never re-emerged) it would have been under some new barbaric flag.
But the Christian Church was the last life of the old society and was also the
first life of the new. She took the people who were forgetting how to make an
arch and she taught them to invent the Gothic arch. In a word, the most absurd
thing that could be said of the Church is the thing we have all heard said of
it. How can we say that the Church wishes to bring us back into the Dark Ages?
The Church was the only thing that ever brought us out of them.
I added in this second trinity of objections an idle instance taken from those
who feel such people as the Irish to be weakened or made stagnant by
superstition. I only added it because this is a peculiar case of a statement of
fact that turns out to be a statement of falsehood. It is constantly said of
the Irish that they are impractical. But if we refrain for a moment from
looking at what is said about them and look at what is done about them,
we shall see that the Irish are not only practical, but quite painfully
successful. The poverty of their country, the minority of their members are
simply the conditions under which they were asked to work; but no other group
in the British Empire has done so much with such conditions. The Nationalists
were the only minority that ever succeeded in twisting the whole British
Parliament sharply out of its path. The Irish peasants are the only poor men in
these islands who have forced their masters to disgorge. These people, whom we
call priest-ridden, are the only Britons who will not be squire-ridden. And
when I came to look at the actual Irish character, the case was the same.
Irishmen are best at the specially hard professions -- the trades of
iron, the lawyer, and the soldier. In all these cases, therefore, I came back
to the same conclusion: the sceptic was quite right to go by the facts, only he
had not looked at the facts. The sceptic is too credulous; he believes in
newspapers or even in encyclopedias. Again the three questions left me with
three very antagonistic questions. The average sceptic wanted to know how I
explained the namby-pamby note in the Gospel, the connection of the creed with
mediaeval darkness and the political impracticability of the Celtic Christians.
But I wanted to ask, and to ask with an earnestness amounting to urgency, "What
is this incomparable energy which appears first in one walking the earth like a
living judgment and this energy which can die with a dying civilization and yet
force it to a resurrection from the dead; this energy which last of all can
inflame a bankrupt peasantry with so fixed a faith in justice that they get
what they ask, while others go empty away; so that the most helpless island of
the Empire can actually help itself?"
There is an answer: it is an answer to say that the energy is truly from
outside the world; that it is psychic, or at least one of the results of a real
psychical disturbance. The highest gratitude and respect are due to the great
human civilizations such as the old Egyptian or the existing Chinese.
Nevertheless it is no injustice for them to say that only modern Europe has
exhibited incessantly a power of self-renewal recurring often at the shortest
intervals and descending to the smallest facts of building or costume. All
other societies die finally and with dignity. We die daily. We are always being
born again with almost indecent obstetrics. It is hardly an exaggeration to say
that there is in historic Christendom a sort of unnatural life: it could be
explained as a supernatural life. It could be explained as an awful galvanic
life working in what would have been a corpse. For our civilization
ought to have died, by all parallels, by all sociological probability,
in the Ragnorak of the end of Rome. That is the weird inspiration of our
estate: you and I have no business to be here at all. We are all
revenants; all living Christians are dead pagans walking about. Just as
Europe was about to be gathered in silence to Assyria and Babylon, something
entered into its body. And Europe has had a strange life -- it is not too much
to say that it has had the jumps -- ever since.
I have dealt at length with such typical triads of doubt in order to convey the
main contention -- that my own case for Christianity is rational; but it is not
simple. It is an accumulation of varied facts, like the attitude of the
ordinary agnostic. But the ordinary agnostic has got his facts all wrong. He is
a non-believer for a multitude of reasons; but they are untrue reasons. He
doubts because the Middle Ages were barbaric, but they weren't; because
Darwinism is demonstrated, but it isn't; because miracles do not happen, but
they do; because monks were lazy, but they were very industrious; because nuns
are unhappy, but they are particularly cheerful; because Christian art was sad
and pale, but it was picked out in peculiarly bright colours and gay with gold;
because modern science is moving away from the supernatural, but it isn't, it
is moving towards the supernatural with the rapidity of a railway train.
But among these million facts all flowing one way there is, of course, one
question sufficiently solid and separate to be treated briefly, but by itself;
I mean the objective occurrence of the supernatural. In another chapter I have
indicated the fallacy of the ordinary supposition that the world must be
impersonal because it is orderly. A person is just as likely to desire an
orderly thing as a disorderly thing. But my own positive conviction that
personal creation is more conceivable than material fate, is, I admit, in a
sense, undiscussable. I will not call it a faith or an intuition, for those
words are mixed up with mere emotion, it is strictly an intellectual
conviction; but it is a primary intellectual conviction like the
certainty of self of the good of living. Any one who likes, therefore, may call
my belief in God merely mystical; the phrase is not worth fighting about. But
my belief that miracles have happened in human history is not a mystical belief
at all; I believe in them upon human evidences as I do in the discovery of
America. Upon this point there is a simple logical fact that only requires to
be stated and cleared up. Somehow or other an extraordinary idea has arisen
that the disbelievers in miracles consider them coldly and fairly, while
believers in miracles accept them only in connection with some dogma. The fact
is quite the other way. The believers in miracles accept them (rightly or
wrongly) because they have evidence for them. The disbelievers in miracles deny
them (rightly or wrongly) because they have a doctrine against them. The open,
obvious, democratic thing is to believe an old apple-woman when she bears
testimony to a miracle, just as you believe an old apple-woman when she bears
testimony to a murder. The plain, popular course is to trust the peasant's word
about the ghost exactly as far as you trust the peasant's word about the
landlord. Being a peasant he will probably have a great deal of healthy
agnosticism about both. Still you could fill the British Museum with evidence
uttered by the peasant, and given in favour of the ghost. If it comes to human
testimony there is a choking cataract of human testimony in favour of the
supernatural. If you reject it, you can only mean one of two things. You reject
the peasant's story about the ghost either because the man is a peasant or
because the story is a ghost story. That is, you either deny the main principle
of democracy, or you affirm the main principle of materialism -- the abstract
impossibility of miracle. You have a perfect right to do so; but in that case
you are the dogmatist. It is we Christians who accept all actual evidence -- it
is you rationalists who refuse actual evidence being constrained to do so by
your creed. But I am not constrained by any creed in the matter, and looking
impartially into certain miracles of mediaeval and modern times, I have come to
the conclusion that they occurred. All argument against these plain facts is
always argument in a circle. If I say, "Mediaeval documents attest certain
miracles as much as they attest certain battles," they answer, "But mediaevals
were superstitious"; if I want to know in what they were superstitious, the
only ultimate answer is that they believed in the miracles. If I say "a peasant
saw a ghost," I am told, "But peasants are so credulous." If I ask, "Why
credulous?" the only answer is -- that they see ghosts. Iceland is impossible
because only stupid sailors have seen it; and the sailors are only stupid
because they say they have seen Iceland. It is only fair to add that there is
another argument that the unbeliever may rationally use against miracles,
though he himself generally forgets to use it.
He may say that there has been in many miraculous stories a notion of spiritual
preparation and acceptance: in short, that the miracle could only come to him
who believed in it. It may be so, and if it is so how are we to test it? If we
are inquiring whether certain results follow faith, it is useless to repeat
wearily that (if they happen) they do follow faith. If faith is one of the
conditions, those without faith have a most healthy right to laugh. But they
have no right to judge. Being a believer may be, if you like, as bad as being
drunk; still if we were extracting psychological facts from drunkards, it would
be absurd to be always taunting them with having been drunk. Suppose we were
investigating whether angry men really saw a red mist before their eyes.
Suppose sixty excellent householders swore that when angry they had seen this
crimson cloud: surely it would be absurd to answer "Oh, but you admit you were
angry at the time." They might reasonably rejoin (in a stentorian chorus), "How
the blazes could we discover, without being angry, whether angry people see
red?" So the saints and ascetics might rationally reply, "Suppose that the
question is whether believers can see visions -- even then, if you are
interested in visions it is no point to object to believers." You are still
arguing in a circle -- in that old mad circle with which this book began.
The question of whether miracles ever occur is a question of common sense and
of ordinary historical imagination: not of any final physical experiment. One
may here surely dismiss that quite brainless piece of pedantry which talks
about the need for "scientific conditions" in connection with alleged spiritual
phenomena. If we are asking whether a dead soul can communicate with a living
it is ludicrous to insist that it shall be under conditions in which no two
living souls in their senses would seriously communicate with each other. The
fact that ghosts prefer darkness no more disproves the existence of ghosts than
the fact that lovers prefer darkness disproves the existence of love. If you
choose to say, "I will believe that Miss Brown called her fiancé
a periwinkle or, any other endearing term, if she will repeat the word before
seventeen psychologists," then I shall reply, "Very well, if those are your
conditions, you will never get the truth, for she certainly will not say it."
It is just as unscientific as it is unphilosophical to be surprised that in an
unsympathetic atmosphere certain extraordinary sympathies do not arise. It is
as if I said that I could not tell if there was a fog because the air was not
clear enough; or as if I insisted on perfect sunlight in order to see a solar
eclipse.
As a common-sense conclusion, such as those to which we come about sex or about
midnight (well knowing that many details must in their own nature be concealed)
I conclude that miracles do happen. I am forced to it by a conspiracy of facts:
the fact that the men who encounter elves or angels are not the mystics and the
morbid dreamers, but fishermen, farmers, and all men at once coarse and
cautious; the fact that we all know men who testify to spiritualistic incidents
but are not spiritualists, the fact that science itself admits such things more
and more every day. Science will even admit the Ascension if you call it
Levitation, and will very likely admit the Resurrection when it has thought of
another word for it. I suggest the Regalvanisation. But the strongest of all is
the dilemma above mentioned, that these supernatural things are never denied
except on the basis either of anti-democracy or of materialist dogmatism -- I
may say materialist mysticism. The sceptic always takes one of the two
positions; either an ordinary man need not be believed, or an extraordinary
event must not be believed. For I hope we may dismiss the argument against
wonders attempted in the mere recapitulation of frauds, of swindling mediums or
trick miracles. That is not an argument at all, good or bad. A false ghost
disproves the reality of ghosts exactly as much as a forged banknote disproves
the existence of the Bank of England -- if anything, it proves its existence.
Given this conviction that the spiritual phenomena do occur (my evidence for
which is complex but rational), we then collide with one of the worst mental
evils of the age. The greatest disaster of the nineteenth century was this:
that men began to use the word "spiritual" as the same as the word "good." They
thought that to grow in refinement and uncorporeality was to grow in virtue.
When scientific evolution was announced, some feared that it would encourage
mere animality. It did worse: it encouraged mere spirituality. It taught men to
think that so long as they were passing from the ape they were going to the
angel. But you can pass from the ape and go to the devil. A man of genius, very
typical of that time of bewilderment, expressed it perfectly. Benjamin Disraeli
was right when he said he was on the side of the angels. He was indeed; he was
on the side of the fallen angels. He was not on the side of any mere appetite
or animal brutality; but he was on the side of all the imperialism of the
princes of the abyss; he was on the side of arrogance and mystery, and contempt
of all obvious good. Between this sunken pride and the towering humilities of
heaven there are, one must suppose, spirits of shapes and sizes. Man, in
encountering them, must make much the same mistakes that he makes in
encountering any other varied types in any other distant continent. It must be
hard at first to know who is supreme and who is subordinate. If a shade arose
from the under world, and stared at Piccadilly, that shade would not quite
understand the idea of an ordinary closed carriage. He would suppose that the
coachman on the box was a triumphant conqueror, dragging behind him a kicking
and imprisoned captive. So, if we see spiritual facts for the first time, we
may mistake who is uppermost. It is not enough to find the gods; they are
obvious; we must find God, the real chief of the gods. We must have a long
historic experience in supernatural phenomena -- in order to discover which are
really natural. In this light I find the history of Christianity, and even of
its Hebrew origins, quite practical and clear. It does not trouble me to be
told that the Hebrew god was one among many. I know he was, without any
research to tell me so. Jehovah and Baal looked equally important, just as the
sun and the moon looked the same size. It is only slowly that we learn that the
sun is immeasurably our master, and the small moon only our satellite.
Believing that there is a world of spirits, I shall walk in it as I do in the
world of men, looking for the thing that I like and think good. Just as I
should seek in a desert for clean water, or toil at the North Pole to make a
comfortable fire, so I shall search the land of void and vision until I find
something fresh like water, and comforting like fire; until I find some place
in eternity, where I am literally at home. And there is only one such place to
be found.
I have now said enough to show (to any one to whom such an explanation is
essential) that I have in the ordinary arena of apologetics, a ground of
belief. In pure records of experiment (if these be taken democratically without
contempt or favour) there is evidence first, that miracles happen, and second
that the nobler miracles belong to our tradition. But I will not pretend that
this curt discussion is my real reason for accepting Christianity instead of
taking the moral good of Christianity as I should take it out of Confucianism.
I have another far more solid and central ground for submitting to it as a
faith, instead of merely picking up hints from it as a scheme. And that is
this: that the Christian Church in its practical relation to my soul is a
living teacher, not a dead one. It not only certainly taught me yesterday, but
will almost certainly teach me to-morrow. Once I saw suddenly the meaning of
the shape of the cross; some day I may see suddenly the meaning of the shape of
the mitre. One free morning I saw why windows were pointed; some fine morning I
may see why priests were shaven. Plato has told you a truth; but Plato is dead.
Shakespeare has startled you with an image; but Shakespeare will not startle
you with any more. But imagine what it would be to live with such men still
living, to know that Plato might break out with an original lecture to-morrow,
or that at any moment Shakespeare might shatter everything with a single song.
The man who lives in contact with what he believes to be a living Church is a
man always expecting to meet Plato and Shakespeare to-morrow at breakfast. He
is always expecting to see some truth that he has never seen before. There is
one only other parallel to this position; and that is the parallel of the life
in which we all began. When your father told you, walking about the garden,
that bees stung or that roses smelt sweet, you did not talk of taking the best
out of his philosophy. When the bees stung you, you did not call it an
entertaining coincidence. When the rose smelt sweet you did not say "My father
is a rude, barbaric symbol, enshrining (perhaps unconsciously) the deep
delicate truths that flowers smell." No: you believed your father, because you
had found him to be a living fountain of facts, a thing that really knew more
than you; a thing that would tell you truth to-morrow, as well as to-day. And
if this was true of your father, it was even truer of your mother; at least it
was true of mine, to whom this book is dedicated. Now, when society is in a
rather futile fuss about the subjection of women, will no one say how much
every man owes to the tyranny and privilege of women, to the fact that they
alone rule education until education becomes futile: for a boy is only sent to
be taught at school when it is too late to teach him anything. The real thing
has been done already, and thank God it is nearly always done by women. Every
man is womanised, merely by being born. They talk of the masculine woman; but
every man is a feminised man. And if ever men walk to Westminster to protest
against this female privilege, I shall not join their procession.
For I remember with certainty this fixed psychological fact; that the very time
when I was most under a woman's authority, I was most full of flame and
adventure. Exactly because when my mother said that ants bit they did bite, and
because snow did come in winter (as she said); therefore the whole world was to
me a fairyland of wonderful fulfilments, and it was like living in some Hebraic
age, when prophecy after prophecy came true. I went out as a child into the
garden, and it was a terrible place to me, precisely because I had a clue to
it: if I had held no clue it would not have been terrible, but tame. A mere
unmeaning wilderness is not even impressive. But the garden of childhood was
fascinating, exactly because everything had a fixed meaning which could be
found out in its turn. Inch by inch I might discover what was the object of the
ugly shape called a rake; or form some shadowy conjecture as to why my parents
kept a cat.
So, since I have accepted Christendom as a mother and not merely as a chance
example, I have found Europe and the world once more like the little garden
where I stared at the symbolic shapes of cat and rake; I look at everything
with the old elvish ignorance and expectancy. This or that rite or doctrine may
look as ugly and extraordinary as a rake; but I have found by experience that
such things end somehow in grass and flowers. A clergyman may be apparently as
useless as a cat, but he is also as fascinating, for there must be some strange
reason for his existence. I give one instance out of a hundred; I have not
myself any instinctive kinship with that enthusiasm for physical virginity,
which has certainly been a note of historic Christianity. But when I look not
at myself but at the world, I perceive that this enthusiasm is not only a note
of Christianity, but a note of Paganism, a note of high human nature in many
spheres. The Greeks felt virginity when they carved Artemis, the Romans when
they robed the vestals, the worst and wildest of the great Elizabethan
playwrights clung to the literal purity of a woman as to the central pillar of
the world. Above all, the modern world (even while mocking sexual innocence)
has flung itself into a generous idolatry of sexual innocence -- the great
modern worship of children. For any man who loves children will agree that
their peculiar beauty is hurt by a hint of physical sex. With all this human
experience, allied with the Christian authority, I simply conclude that I am
wrong, and the church right; or rather that I am defective, while the church is
universal. It takes all sorts to make a church; she does not ask me to be
celibate. But the fact that I have no appreciation of the celibates, I accept
like the fact that I have no ear for music. The best human experience is
against me, as it is on the subject of Bach. Celibacy is one flower in my
father's garden, of which I have not been told the sweet or terrible name. But
I may be told it any day.
This, therefore, is, in conclusion, my reason for accepting the religion and
not merely the scattered and secular truths out of the religion. I do it
because the thing has not merely told this truth or that truth, but has
revealed itself as a truth-telling thing. All other philosophies say the things
that plainly seem to be true; only this philosophy has again and again said the
thing that does not seem to be true, but is true. Alone of all creeds it is
convincing where it is not attractive; it turns out to be right, like my father
in the garden. Theosophists for instance will preach an obviously attractive
idea like re-incarnation; but if we wait for its logical results, they are
spiritual superciliousness and the cruelty of caste. For if a man is a beggar
by his own pre-natal sins, people will tend to despise the beggar. But
Christianity preaches an obviously unattractive idea, such as original sin; but
when we wait for its results, they are pathos and brotherhood, and a thunder of
laughter and pity; for only with original sin we can at once pity the beggar
and distrust the king. Men of science offer us health, an obvious benefit; it
is only afterwards that we discover that by health, they mean bodily slavery
and spiritual tedium. Orthodoxy makes us jump by the sudden brink of hell; it
is only afterwards that we realise that jumping was an athletic exercise highly
beneficial to our health. It is only afterwards that we realise that this
danger is the root of all drama and romance. The strongest argument for the
divine grace is simply its ungraciousness. The unpopular parts of Christianity
turn out when examined to be the very props of the people. The outer ring of
Christianity is a rigid guard of ethical abnegations and professional priests;
but inside that inhuman guard you will find the old human life dancing like
children, and drinking wine like men; for Christianity is the only frame for
pagan freedom. But in the modern philosophy the case is opposite; it is its
outer ring that is obviously artistic and emancipated; its despair is within.
And its despair is this, that it does not really believe that there is any
meaning in the universe; therefore it cannot hope to find any romance; its
romances will have no plots. A man cannot expect any adventures in the land of
anarchy. But a man can expect any number of adventures if he goes travelling in
the land of authority. One can find no meanings in a jungle of scepticism; but
the man will find more and more meanings who walks through a forest of doctrine
and design. Here everything has a story tied to its tail, like the tools or
pictures in my father's house; for it is my father's house. I end where I began
-- at the right end. I have entered at least the gate of all good philosophy. I
have come into my second childhood.
But this larger and more adventurous Christian universe has one final mark
difficult to express; yet as a conclusion of the whole matter I will attempt to
express it. All the real argument about religion turns on the question of
whether a man who was born upside down can tell when he comes right way up. The
primary paradox of Christianity is that the ordinary condition of man is not
his sane or sensible condition; that the normal itself is an abnormality. That
is the inmost philosophy of the Fall. In Sir Oliver Lodge's interesting new
Catechism, the first two questions were: "What are you?" and "What, then, is
the meaning of the Fall of Man?" I remember amusing myself by writing my own
answers to the questions; but I soon found that they were very broken and
agnostic answers. To the question, "What are you?" I could only answer, "God
knows." And to the question, "What is meant by the Fall?" I could answer with
complete sincerity, "That whatever I am, I am not myself." This is the prime
paradox of our religion; something that we have never in any full sense known,
is not only better than ourselves, but even more natural to us than ourselves.
And there is really no test of this except the merely experimental one with
which these pages began, the test of the padded cell and the open door. It is
only since I have known orthodoxy that I have known mental emancipation. But,
in conclusion, it has one special application to the ultimate idea of joy.
It is said that Paganism is a religion of joy and Christianity of sorrow; it
would be just as easy to prove that Paganism is pure sorrow and Christianity
pure joy. Such conflicts mean nothing and lead nowhere. Everything human must
have in it both joy and sorrow; the only matter of interest is the manner in
which the two things are balanced or divided. And the really interesting thing
is this, that the pagan was (in the main) happier and happier as he approached
the earth, but sadder and sadder as he approached the heavens. The gaiety of
the best Paganism, as in the playfulness of Catullus or Theocritus, is, indeed,
an eternal gaiety never to be forgotten by a grateful humanity. But it is all a
gaiety about the facts of life, not about its origin. To the pagan the small
things are as sweet as the small brooks breaking out of the mountain; but the
broad things are as bitter as the sea. When the pagan looks at the very core of
the cosmos he is struck cold. Behind the gods, who are merely despotic, sit the
fates, who are deadly. Nay, the fates are worse than deadly; they are dead. And
when rationalists say that the ancient world was more enlightened than the
Christian, from their point of view they are right. For when they say
"enlightened" they mean darkened with incurable despair. It is profoundly true
that the ancient world was more modern than the Christian. The common bond is
in the fact that ancients and moderns have both been miserable about existence,
about everything, while mediaevals were happy about that at least. I freely
grant that the pagans, like the moderns, were only miserable about everything
-- they were quite jolly about everything else. I concede that the Christians
of the Middle Ages were only at peace about everything -- they were at war
about everything else. But if the question turn on the primary pivot of the
cosmos, then there was more cosmic contentment in the narrow and bloody streets
of Florence than in the theatre of Athens or the open garden of Epicurus.
Giotto lived in a gloomier town than Euripides, but he lived in a gayer
universe.
The mass of men have been forced to be gay about the little things, but sad
about the big ones. Nevertheless (I offer my last dogma defiantly) it is not
native to man to be so. Man is more himself, man is more manlike, when joy is
the fundamental thing in him, and grief the superficial. Melancholy should be
an innocent interlude, a tender and fugitive frame of mind; praise should be
the permanent pulsation of the soul. Pessimism is at best an emotional
half-holiday; joy is the uproarious labour by which all things live. Yet,
according to the apparent estate of man as seen by the pagan or the agnostic,
this primary need of human nature can never be fulfilled. Joy ought to be
expansive; but for the agnostic it must be contracted, it must cling to one
comer of the world. Grief ought to be a concentration; but for the agnostic its
desolation is spread through an unthinkable eternity. This is what I call being
born upside down. The sceptic may truly be said to be topsy-turvy; for his feet
are dancing upwards in idle ecstacies, while his brain is in the abyss. To the
modern man the heavens are actually below the earth. The explanation is simple;
he is standing on his head; which is a very weak pedestal to stand on. But when
he has found his feet again he knows it. Christianity satisfies suddenly and
perfectly man's ancestral instinct for being the right way up; satisfies it
supremely in this; that by its creed joy becomes something gigantic and sadness
something special and small. The vault above us is not deaf because the
universe is an idiot; the silence is not the heartless silence of an endless
and aimless world. Rather the silence around us is a small and pitiful
stillness like the prompt stillness in a sick-room. We are perhaps permitted
tragedy as a sort of merciful comedy: because the frantic energy of divine
things would knock us down like a drunken farce. We can take our own tears more
lightly than we could take the tremendous levities of the angels. So we sit
perhaps in a starry chamber of silence, while the laughter of the heavens is
too loud for us to hear.
Joy, which was the small publicity of the pagan, is the gigantic secret of the
Christian. And as I close this chaotic volume I open again the strange small
book from which all Christianity came; and I am again haunted by a kind of
confirmation. The tremendous figure which fills the Gospels towers in this
respect, as in every other, above all the thinkers who ever thought themselves
tall. His pathos was natural, almost casual. The Stoics, ancient and modern,
were proud of concealing their tears. He never concealed His tears; He showed
them plainly on His open face at any daily sight, such as the far sight of His
native city. Yet He concealed something. Solemn supermen and imperial
diplomatists are proud of restraining their anger. He never restrained His
anger. He flung furniture down the front steps of the Temple, and asked men how
they expected to escape the damnation of Hell. Yet He restrained something. I
say it with reverence; there was in that shattering personality a thread that
must be called shyness. There was something that He hid from all men when He
went up a mountain to pray. There was something that He covered constantly by
abrupt silence or impetuous isolation. There was some one thing that was too
great for God to show us when He walked upon our earth; and I have sometimes
fancied that it was His mirth.
End of Orthodoxy
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