Orthodoxy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 227 pages of information about Orthodoxy.
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Orthodoxy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 227 pages of information about Orthodoxy.
tongue of trumpets; you cannot go clad in crimson and gold for this.  On the other hand, this mild rationalist modesty does not cleanse the soul with fire and make it clear like crystal; it does not (like a strict and searching humility) make a man as a little child, who can sit at the feet of the grass.  It does not make him look up and see marvels; for Alice must grow small if she is to be Alice in Wonderland.  Thus it loses both the poetry of being proud and the poetry of being humble.  Christianity sought by this same strange expedient to save both of them.

It separated the two ideas and then exaggerated them both.  In one way Man was to be haughtier than he had ever been before; in another way he was to be humbler than he had ever been before.  In so far as I am Man I am the chief of creatures.  In so far as I am a man I am the chief of sinners.  All humility that had meant pessimism, that had meant man taking a vague or mean view of his whole destiny—­all that was to go.  We were to hear no more the wail of Ecclesiastes that humanity had no pre-eminence over the brute, or the awful cry of Homer that man was only the saddest of all the beasts of the field.  Man was a statue of God walking about the garden.  Man had pre-eminence over all the brutes; man was only sad because he was not a beast, but a broken god.  The Greek had spoken of men creeping on the earth, as if clinging to it.  Now Man was to tread on the earth as if to subdue it.  Christianity thus held a thought of the dignity of man that could only be expressed in crowns rayed like the sun and fans of peacock plumage.  Yet at the same time it could hold a thought about the abject smallness of man that could only be expressed in fasting and fantastic submission, in the grey ashes of St. Dominic and the white snows of St. Bernard.  When one came to think of one’s self, there was vista and void enough for any amount of bleak abnegation and bitter truth.  There the realistic gentleman could let himself go—­as long as he let himself go at himself.  There was an open playground for the happy pessimist.  Let him say anything against himself short of blaspheming the original aim of his being; let him call himself a fool and even a damned fool (though that is Calvinistic); but he must not say that fools are not worth saving.  He must not say that a man, qua man, can be valueless.  Here again, in short, Christianity got over the difficulty of combining furious opposites, by keeping them both, and keeping them both furious.  The Church was positive on both points.  One can hardly think too little of one’s self.  One can hardly think too much of one’s soul.

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Orthodoxy from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.