
Christian History Home > Issue 75 > G.K. Chesterton: Christian History Interview - Exactly the Opposite

G.K. Chesterton: Christian History Interview - Exactly the Opposite
Chesterton is seldom what we expect but often what we need.
conversation with Philip Yancey | posted 7/01/2002 12:00AM
Philip Yancey credits G.K. Chesterton with helping to save his faith from a bitter encounter with fundamentalism. The power of Chesterton's work also pointed Yancey toward a writing career that has produced such enriching books as Soul Survivor, The Jesus I Never Knew, What's So Amazing About Grace? and Where Is God When It Hurts? We talked to Yancey about what contemporary Christians—especially evangelicals—can learn from the jolly journalist.
You've written that Chesterton helped you recover the joy of faith. How did he do that?
Chesterton believed that a godly way of life is the best way of all ways. It's the way the world is supposed to work, the way the world is meant to be.
Evangelicals often say that Christianity is a "counter-culture." I think Chesterton would probably say, "No, Christianity is the culture. Heretics are the counter-culture."
What we need to do is rediscover the culture. And the culture includes joy and pleasure.
So often, the church is viewed as this finger-wagging, ...
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