The Everlasting Man is a Christian
apologetics book written by G. K. Chesterton.
In The Everlasting Man G. K. Chesterton proclaimed anew
to the doubters of the age that the key to history had arrived nearly two
thousand years before.
It was published in 1925. And it is, to some extent, a
deliberate rebuttal of H. G. Wells' The Outline of History.
In his book Chesterton disputes Wells' portrayals of
human life and civilization as a seamless development from animal life and of
Jesus Christ as merely another charismatic figure.
Chesterton detailed his own spiritual journey
in Orthodoxy, but in this book he tries to illustrate the spiritual
journey of humanity, or at least of Western civilization.
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.
Chesterton's thesis is that if man is really and
dispassionately viewed simply as another animal, one is forced to the
conclusion that he is a bizarrely unusual animal.
Part I of the book 'On the Creature Called Man'
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.
In his telling, the
groaning and travail of the ancient world was answered, precisely and
definitely, in the still night of Bethlehem and the Birth of our Lord.
Chesterton insists
the event be seen with fresh eyes: God as Child - a claim no other religion
dares to make.
He also argues that if Jesus is really viewed as simply
another human leader and Christianity and the Church are simply another human
religion, one is forced to the conclusion that he was a bizarrely unusual
leader, whose followers founded a bizarrely and miraculously unusual religion
and Church.
"I do not believe that the past is most truly
pictured as a thing in which humanity merely fades away into nature, or
civilization merely fades away into barbarism, or religion fades away into
mythology, or our own religion fades away into the religions of the world. In
short I do not believe that the best way to produce an outline of history is to
rub out the lines."
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.
Part II 'On the Man Called Christ'
The Everlasting Man is the tale of a unique creature,
man, made in the image of God. And of the God-Made-Man who fully reveals this
fact to him.
Something marvelous happens in history. According to
Chesterton the path that leads to man's true home begins with the Nativity and
ends with the Resurretion, and in between is contained all life and all
holiness.
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.
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 central
dogma of the Christian faith is that God died, that, in Chesterton’s
phrase, God was for one instant 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 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.
C. S. Lewis and The Everlasting Man
C. S.
Lewis credited The Everlasting Man with "baptising"
his intellect, so as to make him more than half-converted well before he could
bring himself to embrace Christianity. After reading the
book he observed that a young man who is serious about his atheism cannot
be too careful about what he reads.
In a 1950 letter to Sheldon Vanauken, Lewis
calls the book "the best popular apologetic I know," and in 1947 he
wrote to Rhonda Bodle :"the [very] best popular defence of the full
Christian position I know is G. K. Chesterton's The Everlasting Man."
The book was also
cited by The Christian Century in a list of 10 books that "most
shaped [Lewis'] vocational attitude and philosophy of life".
Lewis fell in love with the literary works of G.K. Chesterton. For me the languege was difficult from time to time. And Chesterton has a way of taking the long road to get to the point that can be frustrating from time to time. But I have no doubt that many others will be affected by him when they experience his way with words.
Lewis fell in love with the literary works of G.K. Chesterton. For me the languege was difficult from time to time. And Chesterton has a way of taking the long road to get to the point that can be frustrating from time to time. But I have no doubt that many others will be affected by him when they experience his way with words.
I'm your neighbor at Unite. This sounds like an amazing read. You are the second person in the last two days to write about his books. I'll have to look them up.
VastaaPoistaIt is an amazing book and definitely a classic. Also a great way to see C. S. Lewis' writing in diffent light. And the origins of many of his thoughts.
PoistaBut it was also a hard read because he knows so much and just assumes that you do too.
Joanna,
VastaaPoistaThank you so much for sharing this review and all the great quotes. Truly encouraging. Blessings to you :-)
Thank you, Dolly! Hope you will try and read the book, it's a true classic.
PoistaI am one of those really lame people who jots down Chesterton quotes because they are so profound but has never actually read a Chesterton book! This one, like his others, sounds wonderful! Also, I love the graphics you make for your posts! Thanks so much for sharing this at Booknificent Thursday!
VastaaPoistaTina
I'm so glad that you enjoyed the post, Tina. The book is a tough read from time to time. There is just so much information Chesterton assumes you know beforehand that it made my head spin from time to time. On the other hand, I loved to see how the book related to C. S. Lewis's Mere Christianity.
Poista