The Everlasting Man
by G.K. Chesterton
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"There comes an hour in the afternoon when the child is tired of 'pretending'; when he is weary of being a robber or a Red Indian. It is then that he torments the cat. There comes a time in the routine of an ordered civilisation when the man is tired of playing at mythology and pretending that a tree is a maiden or that the moon made love to a man. The effect of this staleness is the same everywhere; it is seen in all drug-taking and dram-drinking and every form of the tendency to increa...more
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bookshelves:
christianity,
mythology,
nonfiction,
religion
Read in January, 2008
The Everlasting Man is a strange kind of Christian apologetics, which relates the story of man from the beginning of time. Chesterton gives a delightful thrashing to the anthropologists who draw amazing conclusions from minimal evidence; emphasizes that whether or not evolution is true, it offers absolutely no reasonable explanation for the vast divide between man and the animals; pokes some fun at the silliness of comparative religion; and teases the historical critics who draw insupportable c...more
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churchy-stuff
Read in January, 2008
A Chesterton is a lot like a Bruckner symphony: brilliant in a way, but redundant and ragged on the edges. Much like I love Bruckner's 4th but find his other symphonies mere re-runs, I absolutely adored "Orthodoxy" but didn't learn anything new from "The Everlasting Man." Everything I really loved about this book was already said in Orthodoxy, and I didn't much care for any of the new material.
In this work, Chesterton tackles a particular materialist assault on Christi...more
In this work, Chesterton tackles a particular materialist assault on Christi...more
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in July, 2008
recommended to Gjinkerson by:
CS Lewisrecommends it for: people with a profile on MySpace.
Was Jesus the son of God? I think one of the most fascinating attempts to answer that question was mounted in the early 20th century by the two famous friends and literary rivals HG Wells and GK Chesterton, respectively the agnostic extraordinaire and the Catholic par excellence. For Wells, so emphatic was his need to debunk the notion of Christ's divinity that he took a break from his novels and switched to a series of writings on history, the most famous of which ws his "Outline of Histo...more
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bookshelves:
christian
Read in January, 2006
recommends it for:
every single person on earth
The best book I have ever read.
A wonderful chronicle of how the entirety of history reaches its pinnacle in Jesus. From the start, Chesterton takes the poetic road; he swipes at the theory of evolution by asserting the necessity of art, the desire to create, and the noticing of beauty in unattractive things.
Sweeping into the mythologies, he shows how civilizations actually decline into polytheism from monotheism, rather than the generally-accepted opposite. He then shows how the Roman em...more
A wonderful chronicle of how the entirety of history reaches its pinnacle in Jesus. From the start, Chesterton takes the poetic road; he swipes at the theory of evolution by asserting the necessity of art, the desire to create, and the noticing of beauty in unattractive things.
Sweeping into the mythologies, he shows how civilizations actually decline into polytheism from monotheism, rather than the generally-accepted opposite. He then shows how the Roman em...more
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Read in May, 2007
recommends it for:
To Any Open Minded Person (but any Catholic it is a must)
Chesterton is a genius. Period.
This book, more than most others that are on the subject of Christian apologetics, blew me away. I can't really put into words anything more than that. Maybe until I read it again. My mind was just stretched to its limits in the scope and density of his arguments.
Chesterton covers every argument for Christ & Christianity and its need and place in history.
I recommend this book to any Christian and most especially to any Catholic to read in their l...more
This book, more than most others that are on the subject of Christian apologetics, blew me away. I can't really put into words anything more than that. Maybe until I read it again. My mind was just stretched to its limits in the scope and density of his arguments.
Chesterton covers every argument for Christ & Christianity and its need and place in history.
I recommend this book to any Christian and most especially to any Catholic to read in their l...more
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philosophy-theology-life
Quite simply, one of the most original and spell-binding takes on the evolution of culture - specifically Christian culture. It was a great grace to humanity that someone of Chesterton's colossal intellect passed up the chance to go to a serious university and be infected by academia. As it stands, he writes with piercing, paradoxical brilliance. I recommend this book to anyone who wants a history of culture and ideas that has not passed through the minds of the bien-pensants (in other words, la...more
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Read in May, 2003
Chesterton's most mature and complete work of history and theory, The Everlasting Man verily bristles with insight, marvel, delight of the mind.
Everything Chesterton writes is fruitful. I say this as a writer myself. There is nothing better to read than Chesterton when you are having difficulty thinking and writing.
Everything Chesterton writes is fruitful. I say this as a writer myself. There is nothing better to read than Chesterton when you are having difficulty thinking and writing.
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bookshelves:
christian-apologetics-polemics
Men and women have become Christians solely from reading this one book. If you are not a Christian, beware this book. It will possibly convert you. If it does not, then it will probably irreparably harden your heart. A book to save you eternally or to damn you to hell forever. Amazing.
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Read in January, 2008
The only reason the book doesn't get a fifth star is because of its painfully euro-centric approach to historiography, philosophy, etc., along with a good many monolithic generalizations. If you can overlook that, however, the prose itself can be quite literally breath-taking at times.
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Read in January, 1995
recommended to Paula by:
C. S. Lewisrecommends it for: Everyone
Chesterton explores the broad sweep of history, from the very beginning to modern times, and reveals how everything points to one man. The world was created "by, for and of him." This was the book that converted C. S. Lewis to Christianity. Indeed, Chesterton will make you feel that any other position is blindness.
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recommends it for:
theology majors & very smart people
This one is really hard to rate, because I didn't understand it. Therefore, how can one enjoy a book so far above their level? I didn't hate it, but I couldn't love it either. Middle ground, I guess. :) Someday I'll attempt to read it again and perhaps the rating will improve.
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Read in January, 2003
Chesterton's articulation of Christ's impact on the world's topsy-turvy--in the power of an infant born in a cave to turn the world on it's head--is poetic and lasting. I loved this book.
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Read in December, 2007
Re-reading this book at the moment. It's necessary to re-read Chesterton, because there's just so much there, it's easy to miss much of it the first time around.
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I wanted to like this book, but it was too difficult for me to understand. Chesterton had a significant impact on C.S. Lewis' faith, which is why I chose it.
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C. S. Lewis said that this book baptized his intellect. It had that effect on me, too. This is the only book on apologetics that I would recommend.
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This is great, as good as Orthodoxy, I might argue, but it is less approachable. Written after Mr. Chesterton's conversion to the Latin Church.
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Read in January, 1998
recommends it for:
Everyone
I read this book once a year. It is perhaps one of the most complete pictures of human history that has been told.
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bookshelves:
books-owned,
christian
Read in July, 2007
A book on the history of mankind with the focal point on Christ, His uniqueness, and His Supremacy.
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This was my first book I read by Chesterton. I see how C.S.Lewis was influenced by this book.
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