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Orthodoxy Paperback – September 9, 2013
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length164 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateSeptember 9, 2013
- Dimensions6 x 0.37 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101613823649
- ISBN-13978-1613823644
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Editorial Reviews
Review
--from the foreword by Philip Yancey, author of What's So Amazing About Grace? and The Jesus I Never Knew
"My favorite on the list [of top 100 spiritual classics of the twentieth century] is Chesterton's Orthodoxy. It offers wonderful arguments for embracing religious traditions, but it also has humor you don't typically find in religious writing."
--Philip Zaleski, author and journalist
Named by Publisher's Weekly as one of 10 "indispensable spiritual classics" of the past 1500 years.
--Publisher?s Weekly
"Chesterton's most enduring book.... Charming."
--World
From the Hardcover edition. --Review
"Whenever I feel my faith going dry again, I wander to a shelf and pick up a book by G.K. Chesterton."
--from the foreword by Philip Yancey, author of What's So Amazing About Grace? and The Jesus I Never Knew
"My favorite on the list [of top 100 spiritual classics of the twentieth century] is Chesterton's Orthodoxy. It offers wonderful arguments for embracing religious traditions, but it also has humor you don't typically find in religious writing."
--Philip Zaleski, author and journalist
Named by Publisher's Weekly as one of 10 "indispensable spiritual classics" of the past 1500 years.
--Publisher?s Weekly
"Chesterton's most enduring book.... Charming."
--World
From the Hardcover edition.
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Simon & Brown (September 9, 2013)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 164 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1613823649
- ISBN-13 : 978-1613823644
- Item Weight : 8.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.37 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,672,476 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #9,263 in Essays (Books)
- #146,983 in Christian Living (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936) was a prolific English journalist and author best known for his mystery series featuring the priest-detective Father Brown and for the metaphysical thriller The Man Who Was Thursday. Baptized into the Church of England, Chesterton underwent a crisis of faith as a young man and became fascinated with the occult. He eventually converted to Roman Catholicism and published some of Christianity's most influential apologetics, including Heretics and Orthodoxy.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book excellent, clever, and engaging. They describe the prose as insightful, sharp, and awe-inspiring. Readers also appreciate the wit and value for money. Opinions are mixed on the style, with some finding it elegant and well-designed, while others say the pages are poorly designed and too glib.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book excellent, clever, and worth reading. They also say the prose is engaging, humorous, and thought-provoking. Readers also appreciate the author's good way with language and quotable points.
"...This is a great book, and I am already doing a second pass through it because there is so much in it that I missed...." Read more
"...to read, but what makes it invaluable to me is that there is no introductions, studies, footnotes or any interference by sages or intellectuals, as..." Read more
"...Simply put, this book is clever in its dealings with semi-paradoxical topics; and it is funny...." Read more
"...He is a masterful storyteller and his prose is engaging, humorous, and thought-provoking...." Read more
Customers find the book insightful, intellectual, and awe-inspiring. They say it's an amazing mind and uses many analogies to illustrate his points. Readers also mention the arguments presented are fun and profound.
"...of God" by St. Augustine in one aspect, it provides convincing arguments against gods that we have set up in front of the real God and the real..." Read more
"I have read almost 4 books by G. K. Chesterton thus far; and Orthodoxy is a masterpiece. The best of what I have read from him yet...." Read more
"...This is my review of what I felt. Is awe-inspiring...." Read more
"...are still presented with very good arguments, and Chesterton makes a ton of fantastic points about..." Read more
Customers find the wit in the book wonderful, inspiring, and strutting-ish. They appreciate the author's gentility, humility, and lightheartedness. Readers also appreciate the literary style and conversational style.
"...The best of what I have read from him yet. Witty, hilarious, intellectually astute--Chesterton is in fine form throughout...." Read more
"...Chesterton has a self-deprecating and simultaneously strutting-ish sort of wit...." Read more
"...He is a masterful storyteller and his prose is engaging, humorous, and thought-provoking...." Read more
"...He has a good way with language and fine wit, launching humorous broadsides at many intellectual foes of Christianity...." Read more
Customers appreciate the value for money of the book. They say it's worth the full price, the printing is cheap, and it looks okay on the outside.
"...This edition/printing of the book is cheap and looks okay on the outside, but the font and page layout make it difficult to read...." Read more
"...If you are looking for an edition of Orthodoxy, that is a reasonably priced and high quality paperback, I can recommend without hesitation that you..." Read more
"The typography is small but is ok for the price" Read more
"The price is right! (Free because of some generous volunteers.) This is a famous book in Christian circles...." Read more
Customers find the apologetic content in the book masterful, humble, and lighthearted. They appreciate the poetry and experiential honesty.
"...Finally, his arguments are imbued with a gentility, humility and lightheartedness that are sorely lacking in our public debate...." Read more
"...Combine this with the poetry of his prose and his experiential honesty, and you have a book without peer in addressing the crying need of our day...." Read more
"..."Mere Christianity," cannot touch this book as to its apologetic brilliance and enormous scope of argument." Read more
"What a refreshing apologetic! I didn't expect to find so much humor and humility from such a towering intellect. Enjoy!" Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking and accessible to mature readers. They appreciate the humor and charm of the author.
"...He is able to take complex ideas and make them accessible and engaging for the reader...." Read more
"...I suggest Orthodoxy to all, for it is an accessible, excellent read that will truly affirm a true vision of beauty in the world." Read more
"...I have seen no wit like Chesterton. He is accessible to all mature readers. I absolutely adore his humor and charm as a writer...." Read more
"...a mind like Chesterton's, he was simply amazing, and incredibly accessible...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the style of the book. Some mention it's elegant, well-designed, and attractive. Others say the prose is obscured by poorly designed pages with inadequate spacing. They also say the style is sometimes difficult to climb into and awkward.
"...This edition/printing of the book is cheap and looks okay on the outside, but the font and page layout make it difficult to read...." Read more
"...Other statements, such as those toward suicide, were strangely callous and contradiction once again, since he claims it is the same as destroying..." Read more
"...typeset, well designed and attractive, and with a very nice style to the production. It is in all respects completely satisfactory...." Read more
"...It is beautiful. It is tasty. It is so satisfying! This book is an intellectual delight, but written for the ordinary person on the street...." Read more
Customers find the print size of the book small and cramped. They also mention the margins are tiny.
"...Even though the circle is infinite, the circle is a very small one! 3 pence in diameter he states...." Read more
"...The main point of this review is to note that the pages have relatively small type with long, close-spaced lines which makes it *very* hard to read...." Read more
"...A little bigger than I imagined (I didn't read the specs) which allows for large margins which are nice for notes if you're that kind of reader...." Read more
"...The words are squeezed in from top to bottom,with a tiny margin...." Read more
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The materialist philosopher (Darwinists, relativists) arguments contradict themselves laying the way for the way, the truth and the light. Since the present age has all but forsaken philosophy, it also was unwittingly laid to waste common sense. Chesterton is the "Apostle of Common Sense" and Orthodoxy is his swan song. Do not become discouraged by the discussion of the maniac, lunatic and asylum which are the first items of the book. He compares some of the great thinkers, with their universally appealing laws, to the lunatics.
How can this be that these individuals of higher learning, such as Nietzsche, can explain everything by such small arguments? Chesterton argues that indeed they do explain the universe, but the universe they explain is a very small universe. Even though the circle is infinite, the circle is a very small one! 3 pence in diameter he states. Insomuch the attack is not against dogmas of Catholicism and Christianity, but attacks against human thinking. The killing of thought itself, which is the only thought that should be censored. If there is any unwavering dogma, it is the dogma against miracles. No matter what is put forth in terms of the miracle, there is an predisposition against it. Nietzsche, and others like him, which Chesterton one by one fillets are "...wrong not by error of their arguments, by the manifest mistake of their whole lives." The Christian may have doubts, and he can take two conflicting items and the conflict as well and move on. The dogma of the materialist or Darwinist (or any of the isms) can have no exceptions. Chesterton makes not excuse for God's complexity, but just states that it is.
In a way, Orthodoxy is much like "City of God" by St. Augustine in one aspect, it provides convincing arguments against gods that we have set up in front of the real God and the real Truth. Augustine (400 AD) explains why Christianity is not responsible for the fall of Rome (but like the phoenix, or a sinking ship with a cross, sinks, but comes back to life again, it becomes a submarine, and miraculously reemerges). If Christianity were a fad, that fad would have died with Rome. But as Chesterton points out, it is one of the only things that did survive the fall of Rome. Chesterton takes the atheists, of which he was one at one time, to task one at a time, as Augustine took the Roman gods to task one at a time. In the case of Nietzsche, he was insane at the end of his life. Chesterton comments that if he had not gone insane, his followers would have.
After we get through the hard part of the beginning of the book, the maniac (the self reliant man being part of this), there is a whole different way of looking at our universe that Chesterton put forth for our contemplation. He shows how man is basically Mystical. And he lays down the stories of childhood as superior to the morbid philosophies. He helps us reclaim the sense of wonder. He keeps logic in its place, showing the many logical items and concepts conveyed. He ridicules the philosophies that begin on an unfounded base. And the rest of their philosophy that follows is not grounded. He looks at the philosophers who criticize Christ, and try to slice him up into a gentle, kind moralist, who speaks some truths. Under this view, he becomes like monster with his arm and leg sawed off. Chesterton points out that it is not a nervous breakdown that happens when Christ overturns tables in the Temple, but a truth-speaking thing, that aligns with his other actions. Chesterton says that Christ is a seamless garment, which cannot be parted out. His divinity, and miracles that go with it, are intertwined with his humanity.
Audio books is a great way to introduce ourselves and others into these old (1905 copyright) concepts. Do not get bogged down by unfamiliar philosophers or poets, but take in what you can take in. And as in any classic book, you will be back for more.
In the introduction, Chesterton self-deprecatingly describes himself as a man who sent out from England to explore new lands, but gets blown off course in his travels and unknowingly arrives back in downtown London--where he then proceeds to claim this "new land" for England! Chesterton then charts his spiritual journey from agnosticism to Christianity and how he unknowingly discovered this "new doctrine" on his own--only to find out, much to his surprise, that it was nothing more than the old Christian doctrine which has been believed for thousands of years. Chesterton is a late comer to the party, and he doesn't mind admitting that fact throughout!
Chesterton rails against intellectualism--against the scholastics and against the George Bernard Shaw types. The atheist scientist who says there is no transcendent meaning to this thing called life. Grown up skeptics and modernized "experts" who care little for the world. In short Chesterton realizes that the fairy tales that he knew as a child, that wonder he felt within the deepest part of him when he was young, the feeling that the grass was green because it was "supposed to be green"--were actually all true. The reason the tales of the lady and the dragon, or jack and the beanstalk resonated with him so much as a child because they spoke to a certain human truth--an internal testimony, that there is something more than just molecules and chance. There had to be something more. So Chesterton figures out an understanding of original sin, of creation, of a transcendent God, and of the archetypal tale because it was really true--the story of God coming into the world to bring man back to Himself. Chesterton is unabashedly romantic, and he rejoices to find that Christianity is as well.
In the chapter that perhaps hit me the hardest (The Flag of the World), Chesterton confronts exactly what our posture as Christians needs to be towards the world. It cannot be escapism or pessimism; an unhealthy desire to withdraw from the darkness of the world: "For our Titanic purposes of faith and revolution, what we need is not the cold acceptance of the world as a compromise, but some way in which we can heartily hate and heartily love it. We do not want joy and anger to neutralize each other and produce a surly contentment; we want a fiercer delight and a fiercer discontent. We have to feel the universe at once as an ogre' castle, to be stormed, and yet as our own cottage, to which we can return at evening." Wow. That is romance in writing--and ointment to my own personal numbness. Another one: "The point is not that this world is too sad to love or too glad not to love; the point is that when you do love a thing, its gladness is a reason for loving it, and its sadness a reason for loving it more." "A man's friend leaves him as he is: his wife loves him and is always trying to turn him into somebody else."
This is a great book, and I am already doing a second pass through it because there is so much in it that I missed. Chesterton is medicinal to the ills of a modern world--and Orthodoxy in particular has lost no degree of relevance in the century that has past since its composition.
Top reviews from other countries
Very impressed by the book, there are also a lot of really great quoteable lines.
“Men did not love Rome because she was great, Rome was great because men loved her.”
La apologética de Chesterton -si se le puede llamar así- es única, nadie aborda los temas como él. Este libro no demuestra el cristianismo como tal, sino que defiende el sentido común y termina por llevarte por una travesía aventuresca que te deja con ganas de empezar a aprender sobre la religión tan fascinante desde la que el autor miraba el mundo. Inolvidable libro, inolvidable estilo.







