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Orthodoxy Paperback – July 27, 2015
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--- G.K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy
Orthodoxy (1908) is a book by G. K. Chesterton that has become a classic of Christian apologetics. Chesterton considered this book a companion to his other work, Heretics. In the book's preface Chesterton states the purpose is to "attempt an explanation, not of whether the Christian faith can be believed, but of how he personally has come to believe it." In it, Chesterton presents an original view of Christian religion. He sees it as the answer to natural human needs, the "answer to a riddle" in his own words, and not simply as an arbitrary truth received from somewhere outside the boundaries of human experience.
The book was written when Chesterton was an Anglican. He converted to Catholicism 14 years later. The title, Orthodoxy, is meant to avoid such sectarian questions.
- Print length114 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateJuly 27, 2015
- Dimensions6 x 0.29 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101515241394
- ISBN-13978-1515241393
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About the Author
Chesterton is well known for his fictional priest-detective Father Brown, and for his reasoned apologetics. Even some of those who disagree with him have recognized the wide appeal of such works as Orthodoxy and The Everlasting Man. Chesterton, as a political thinker, cast aspersions on both Progressivism and Conservatism, saying, "The whole modern world has divided itself into Conservatives and Progressives. The business of Progressives is to go on making mistakes. The business of the Conservatives is to prevent the mistakes from being corrected." Chesterton routinely referred to himself as an "orthodox" Christian, and came to identify this position more and more with Catholicism, eventually converting to Roman Catholicism from High Church Anglicanism. George Bernard Shaw, Chesterton's "friendly enemy" according to Time, said of him, "He was a man of colossal genius." Biographers have identified him as a successor to such Victorian authors as Matthew Arnold, Thomas Carlyle, Cardinal John Henry Newman, and John Ruskin.
Product details
- Publisher : CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (July 27, 2015)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 114 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1515241394
- ISBN-13 : 978-1515241393
- Item Weight : 6.4 ounces
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.29 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #554,096 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #28,332 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- #136,731 in Religion & Spirituality (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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Customers find this book engaging and thought-provoking, with witty and poetic writing that makes it a joy to read. Moreover, they appreciate its apologetic value, with one customer describing it as a masterpiece of Christian apologetics. Additionally, the book receives positive feedback for its elegant style, relevance to modern times, and value for money, with many noting it's available for free and serves as a great introduction to Chesterton's works.
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Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a joy to read and excellent for Christians, with one customer noting its engaging prose.
"...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
"...ago Gilbert Keith Chesterton was an extremely popular and prolific English journalist with thousands of essays, articles, books, and other writings...." 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
"...He is a masterful storyteller and his prose is engaging, humorous, and thought-provoking...." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking, with one customer highlighting its profound truths about human nature and another noting its amazing mind.
"...His paradoxical manner of framing big ideas, his undeniable ability to wield "common" sense as a weapon, his way of speaking to universal..." Read more
"...in Defence of Everything Else, Maniac, Suicide of Thought, Ethics of Elfland, Flag of the World, Paradoxes of Christianity, Eternal Revolution,..." Read more
"...The Divine Intelligence intuits immediately that figure, in the same way the men intuit a triangle (...)" these words are in a little footnote of an..." Read more
"...He is able to explore a wide range of topics and themes, including the nature of truth, the role of faith and reason, the dangers of skepticism and..." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, finding it witty and humorous, with one customer noting its profound sensibility and another highlighting its tremendous mastery of irony.
"...The best of what I have read from him yet. Witty, hilarious, intellectually astute--Chesterton is in fine form throughout...." 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
"...book is clever in its dealings with semi-paradoxical topics; and it is funny...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's apologetic content, describing it as a masterpiece of Christian apologetics with timeless wisdom, and one customer notes its incredible job chronicling the author's journey through modern philosophy.
"...the intelligence of most persons, I believe he can discover the difficult philosophies in history and perceive their pattern and essence as easily..." Read more
"...He is a masterful storyteller and his prose is engaging, humorous, and thought-provoking...." Read more
"...Finally, his arguments are imbued with a gentility, humility and lightheartedness that are sorely lacking in our public debate...." Read more
"...and epic earth scorching win for Christianity with great humor and sympathy...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's style, describing it as elegant, well designed, and cheerful, with amazing illustrations.
"...'s mysticism is a conglomeration of principles such as the assumption of design in beauty, a bias in favor of optimism against pessism, and a desire..." Read more
"...The formatting is professional and exemplary. The typography is clean and modern...." 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
"...There is quite a bit of familiar stuff about how the materialist cannot appreciate the flower because he feels he understands it completely whereas..." Read more
Customers find the book timeless and valid for the 21st century, with one customer noting that its problems are amazingly modern.
"...This is a timeless piece, Chesterton is a man outside time, part of this world but not of it...." Read more
"...Orthodoxy is higher, greater, freer, and fairer than this present age. It contains eternal values not the whims of a wayward society...." Read more
"...His explanation is masterful and timeless. It is as relevant today, in our day, as it was when he penned the words over a century ago." Read more
"This is a timeless classic, as relevant today as when it was first written...." Read more
Customers find the book worth its price, with some noting it's available for free.
"...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
"...of Orthodoxy for my personal library, and this won out for cost and design...." 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 book valuable as an introduction to Chesterton's works, with one customer describing it as a treasure worth digging into.
"...Chesterton is a great resource and Orthodoxy will make you think...." Read more
"...and enticing introduction to Christianity, which I found helpful as a beginner, and comforting still 40 years later...." Read more
"Reading the works of G.K. Chesterton is always rewarding. His eloquence and mastery of our language has few equals...." Read more
"This slender little book is a Chesterton classic, a good starting point for those who don't know Chesterton well...." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on August 24, 2017I 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. Witty, hilarious, intellectually astute--Chesterton is in fine form throughout. And though Orthodoxy is heady you will find that Chesterton's humor and skill with the pen makes it an almost addictive read. His paradoxical manner of framing big ideas, his undeniable ability to wield "common" sense as a weapon, his way of speaking to universal human experiences--together makes him one of the most enjoyable writers of his time. And he's not pulling any punches with the philosophers of his day either.
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.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 21, 2024KindleUnlimited review. Although not as well-know today, a century ago Gilbert Keith Chesterton was an extremely popular and prolific English journalist with thousands of essays, articles, books, and other writings. He was a staunch Christian writer who converted from the Anglican Church to Catholicism in 1922. People may recognize his named as the author of “Father Brown” a murder mystery TV series featuring a priest-detective.
“Orthodoxy” is a collection of essays where Chesterton verbosely constructs his logical arguments against his contemporary social critics. This book has nine essays or chapters: Introduction in Defence of Everything Else, Maniac, Suicide of Thought, Ethics of Elfland, Flag of the World, Paradoxes of Christianity, Eternal Revolution, Romance of Orthodoxy , and Authority and the Adventurer. In “Orthodoxy”, Chesterton actually explain his own social philosophy that his omitted in his previous book “Heretics”. As the author noted in the book’s preface, these two books are companion pieces. I recommend listening to the AmazonClassic audiobook version.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 7, 2011I recently read back-to-back MacIntyre's After Virtue and Chesterton's Orthodoxy. Although I've been meaning to read these both for over a decade, I decided to do it now and together as I had conceived a project to read them together with Julius Evola's Revolt Against the Modern World as three views of anti-modernism: MacIntyre as a reformed modernist, Evola as a radical reactionary, and Chesterton as a defender of the status quo of the old order. This project didn't quite work out as MacIntyre and Chesterton turned out not to be quite what I thought. Although it's true that MacIntyre made the trip from Marxism to classicism and Catholicism, After Virtue is less an attempt to disabuse us of Marxism than an attempt to re-ground a form of corporatism in a pre-modern mode that would not be subject to the devastating critiques presented by advocates of modern liberal capitalism. And although it's also true that Chesterton defends orthodox Roman Catholicism, he makes no attempt to defend the status quo per se and, in fact, embraces Catholicisim as a stable ground from which he can ask for the dissolution of the traditional social structure. As against these two, Evola is quite another type as he has no interest in ethics' relationship to the distribution of goods; his is an otherworldly and inegalitarian philosophy.
In a most general way, MacIntyre argues that reason has been shown incapable of providing a basis for ethics since reasoning requires some starting point outside itself. For MacIntyre, this starting point is our mutual social life and experience of society.
Interestingly, Chesterton goes part way toward some of the same analyses as MacIntyre. Both After Virtue and Orthodoxy start from the assumption of the failure of pure reason. For MacIntyre, this is due to a lack of ends, while for Chesterton it is due to a lack of mysticism (Chesterton's word for unexamined assumptions about reality). Reasoning without pre-conditions is shown to be (a) incomplete and incoherent and (b) unhealthy and counterproductive. Chesterton then goes on to examine a number of ethical systems that all fail in one way or another for a lack standards. He brings in the classical-Catholic view of virtues here and argues that some modes of ethics fail for lacking the proportionality of the virtues. Nietzsche fails for being unable to distinguish between willing the good of being a prince and that of a pauper. If these arguments seem unreasonable and based in socially constructed standards, it must be remembered that Chesterton has already dismissed pure reason without a ground of assumptions.
Having dismissed modern rationalist theories, Chesterton goes on to explain the assumptions from which he reasons, that is, his own personal mysticism so to speak. Chesterton's mysticism is a conglomeration of principles such as the assumption of design in beauty, a bias in favor of optimism against pessism, and a desire for social reform. He is quite straightforward in admitting that he developed these assumptions in childhood and makes no attempt to defend them. He is, at least, an introspective thinker who has probably more honesty about himself than most thinkers. Chesterton's argument for Christian orthodoxy, then, is essentially that orthodoxy is the philosophy most at home in Chesterton's world of assumptions. This is not a good argument for why you should be orthodox, but it is a perfectly acceptable account for why Chesterton is, and this is all he claimed to be doing in his book.
Is it a good or relevant book for us? I think Chesterton assumes that his assumptions are very similar to our own, although I'm not sure that's true in our time and place. Beyond this, although I have sketched a very broad outline of Chesterton's theme or point, his book is filled with a multidude of tiny arguments upon which his theme relies, and I'm not sure they are all good. For example, in discussing Carlyle, he confuses Christianity's attitude toward the state of the soul with a doctrinal assumption that he who least wants to rule ought to be chosen as the ruler. This may be a good guide for choosing a Pope, but it is simply an empirical question whether it is a good guide for choosing a king or a member of parliament. On this point, orthodoxy does not support his levelling political instinct. This is one example, but the book is filled with questionable assumptions and questionable conclusions. Chesterton even at times argues against himself, taking two opposite views at different places in order to score rhetorical points.
Orthodoxy is not in any way an argument for orthodoxy in the way we have come to expect arguments. However, Chesterton is not an unreasonable or unpleasant person, and it's possible that one could find the totality of his worldview overwhelming even while rejecting its specifics. His writing is inconsistent and trends from being poetic and insightful to being boorish and repetitive. Whether or not you get much out it depends on what you bring to it, I think.
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. I would choose another printing if I were to start over again.
Top reviews from other countries
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Héctor Guillermo MuñozReviewed in Mexico on July 7, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Obra maestra de un artista
Como Chesterton no hay dos -y como este libro, tampoco. Es fascinante cómo el autor logra guiar al lector por planteamientos e ideas que nadie más ha narrado de una manera tan sublime y artística como él. Cada dos o tres párrafos Chesterton tiene el don de decir una frase inolvidable o una cita extremadamente persuasiva. Uno de los libros más estimulantes que he leído, sin duda.
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.
- MitchReviewed in Canada on March 13, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars I think book made me want to believe in religion
Chesterton spends the first 1/3 of the book dismantling the arguments against religion. Then spends the rest of the book building a case for religion in a logical step by step manner that can only be described as brilliant.
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.”
- Elma MathewReviewed in India on January 5, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing
What an amazing read! One of my best book purchases of the year. Every paragraph was filled with wisdom and intellect.
- mjblancoReviewed in Australia on February 7, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic book!
One of the best book in defense of Catholic Orthodoxy. The criticism that Chesterton makes of materialism and scientific dogma is very witty and ingenious. It is amusing also to realize how little the arguments and worldview of the “moderns” have changed in 100 years!
Chesterton style is very entertaining and thought provoking. Definitely a must to read whatever your worldview.
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SalvoReviewed in Italy on April 2, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars Un saggio monumentale, un caposaldo, una pietra miliare.
Un saggio monumentale, non tanto per la lunghezza, quanto per l'architettura del pensiero. Ammirevoli le strutture portanti di questo edificio costruito di fede e ragione. Le architravi della ragione puntellano le fondamenta dello spirito, mentre le volte della spiritualità accolgono le voci della ragione. Nel pensiero di Chesterton la dualità umana vive una simbiosi assolutamente plausibile e sensata. Non tutti potranno apprezzare questo saggio, men che meno coloro che solitamente galleggiano in superficie.