-Wrestling with Angels: Adventures in Faith and Doubt, Carolyn Arends, p. 39
Quotes by and posts relating to one of the most influential authors of the 20th century, G.K. Chesterton
Friday, April 25, 2014
"Rich [Mullins] once literally forced me to read Orthodoxy by G.K. Chesterton."
Rich [Mullins] once literally forced me to read Orthodoxy by G.K. Chesterton. I vividly remember him sitting across from me while I read the first chapter, craning his neck to see what page I was on, fidgeting in excitement and anticipation, hardly able to contain himself. I was rather self-consciously aware that he was studying my face, waiting for my reaction when I got to the good parts. Within the first few lines of chapter I, Chesterton explains that Orthodoxy was written as an answer to a critic who had challenged him to support his ideas and explain his philosphy. "It was perhaps an incautious suggestion," Chesterton says of the critic's challenge, "to make to a person only too ready to write books upon the feeblest provocation." Rich waited impatiently for me to read that line and then roared it out loud- "only too ready to write books upon the feeblest provocation!"- and slapped his knee as he relished a favorite punch line.
How lovely...I could easily see Rich doing that.
ReplyDeleteAndrew Peterson (widely considered Mullins's musical successor) is also a big Chesterton fan. And Jason Gray (of Remind Me Who I Am fame). And Andrew Osenga, formerly of Caedmon's Call. Oh, and N.D. Wilson, who wrote NYTimes Bestseller 100 Cupboards. It's All Connected. :)
I really enjoy your Influence of Chesterton page - besides the musicians/authors I've mentioned, Tolkien also directly named Chesterton in a letter:
"What a dreadful, fear-darkened, sorrow-laden world we live in — especially for those who have also the burden of age, whose friends and all they especially care for are afflicted in the same way. Chesterton once said that it is our duty to keep the Flag of This World flying: but it takes now a sturdier and more sublime patriotism than it did then. Gandalf added that it is not for us to choose the times into which we are born, but to do what we could to repair them; but the spirit of wickedness in high places is now so powerful and so many-headed in its incarnations that there seems nothing more to do than personally to refuse to worship any of the hydras’ heads."
Thanks for the information. That's awesome. :-)
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