In 1908, two of G.K. Chesterton’s most famous books were published, almost back-to-back. The first was the novel The Man Who Was Thursday, about a group of anarchists who are actively trying to undermine everything normal thing in civilization, driven by a philosophy that hates property, hates marriage, and hates life itself. What makes the book such a great read is that every character is someone else in disguise, and the suspense and tension and mystery build as each one of them is unexpectedly unmasked.
A few months later came another book about revelation, that is, revealing the truth. It was Orthodoxy. In this classic of apologetics, Chesterton tries to explain how he had found the truth and how he knew it was the truth. But his challenge in making his case is that, in former times, the standard approach to defending the faith was to begin with the fact of sin, which Chesterton describes as the only Christian doctrine that can be proved. However, in the modern world, where we deny everything, we even deny sin. So we can’t talk about sin.
Chesterton takes a different tack: if we can’t talk about sin, let’s talk about sanity. Let’s show that every modern philosophy is in insane or leads to insanity, and that the only sane one is Christianity.
That would seem to be a good approach still.
But maybe not in 2020, which is the year that the world went insane. And even worse than the obvious insanity is the strange and stubborn and even deliberate hesitancy to admit that the world is insane. That would mean having to face it, maybe even doing something about it. Instead we are simply putting up with it. We can’t call evil things evil anymore, and now we can’t call insane things insane.
And so it is fitting that we are all being told to wear masks. We are trying to cover up the truth about ourselves. The modern world is a walking lie. But it’s not a bold-faced lie. It’s a shame-faced lie.
Masks. Chesterton is amazingly prophetic about masks:
“In a world where everything is ridiculous, nothing can be ridiculed. You cannot unmask a mask.” (Illustrated London News, July 10, 1927)
“A mob does not wear a mask.” (The Illustrated Review, Oct. 1923)
“In what religious age was a man allowed to thunder from the pulpit with a mask on his face?”(Illustrated London News, July 25, 1908)
And I recently stumbled across an uncollected essay by Chesterton (re-stumbled, actually, since I had read it before) called “The Materialist in the Mask,” (New Witness, June 30, 1922)
“Hmm…” I thought to myself, “Sounds like GKC is going to say something prophetic once again. And about masks!”
I was right. But it was nothing what I expected.
In this essay he begins by writing about anti-clericalism, which may be motivated by an objection to priests having too much power, but is more widely simply an objection to the priesthood. “A priesthood is a powerful thing and a man is entitled to think it too powerful.” But Chesterton has more sympathy with old-fashioned anti-clericals who were willing to be known as atheists, than with a certain sort of new anti-clericals who would be referred to as secularists, though they would never call themselves that.
People don’t want to be called secularists. They may prefer to be grouped with “non-sectarians,” but really they don’t want to be called that either. They want to be known as something positive and potent and positioned above and apart from the practitioners of religion. They want to be known only by the recognizable and respectful title of, say, governor or mayor or magistrate. Or judge. Or journalist. Or doctor. Or scientist. Or health official. They profess only to pursue some secular aim in a productive and constructive manner, and if their decisions affect religion in a negative way, it is merely by accident. Nothing intentional. Nothing personal.
Chesterton says, “There are some people of whom this is true, and they are worthy of all respect.” But for the most part and for most people, the so-called “secular” pose is only a pose. It is a pretense. It is a mask.
Most secularists really have a “destructive enthusiasm” for the Church, and Chesterton says he doesn’t blame them. What?! He doesn’t blame them?! Why not?
“If Christianity is a lie, it is certainly a great thundering lie. No man is to be blamed for denouncing what he thinks a thundering lie.”
Okay, good point. If people hate Christianity, we can’t blame them for attacking it. But can we blame them for … anything?
Yes. “No man is to be blamed for denouncing what he thinks a thundering lie, but a man is to be blamed for telling small and sniveling lies in defense of his own denunciation.”
Ah. This indeed is what the battleground looks like. We are fighting against “the small and sniveling lies” that are being told to justify the attacks on the Church. Here is a call to stand up for the truth, and tell the truth about the lies against us. We don’t have to apologize for what we believe, and for believing it wholeheartedly. And we have to point out that those who oppose us – or who would restrict our worship, close our churches, interfere with our religious education – are wearing a mask, a mask of impartiality.
“A man who professes a creed,” says Chesterton, “confesses a partiality for the creed; when he loves it he is necessarily partial. But when he hates it he generally professes to be impartial. He pretends that the thing he hates is obstructing his way to other things; such as education or hygiene or science or social reform.” But he cares more about the obstacle than the object. He cares more about his hatred for the Church than for objective truth. “No man is less likely to forget the religious question than the irreligious man.”
A month after he wrote those words, G.K. Chesterton was received into the Catholic Church.
(Note: This article was originally posted at CWR on November 29, 2020.)
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Dale Ahlquist is president of the Society of Gilbert Keith Chesterton, creator and host of the EWTN series "G.K. Chesterton: The Apostle of Common Sense," and publisher of Gilbert Magazine. He is the author and editor of several books on Chesterton, including The Complete Thinker: The Marvelous Mind of G.K. Chesterton.
Caleb Perkins, 29, was one of several young men and women from around the world who shared their testimonies in videos played for 800,000 people during the Stations of the Cross with Pope Francis at World Youth Day in Lisbon, Portugal, in August… […]
“What’s the Eucharist?” Kent Shi, a 25-year-old Harvard graduate student, asked that question when he attended eucharistic adoration for the first time. The answer put him on a path to conversion. / Julia Monaco | CNA
Cambridge, Massachusetts, Apr 16, 2022 / 09:03 am (CNA).
One convert’s journey to Catholicism began with an invitation to an ice-cream social.
Another says he instantly believed in the Real Presence the moment someone explained what the round object was that everyone was staring at during eucharistic adoration.
For a third, the poems of T.S. Eliot — and a seemingly random encounter with a priest on a public street — led to deeper questions about truth and faith.
Their paths differed but led them to the same destination: St. Paul’s Catholic Church in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where they are among 31 people set to be fully initiated into the Catholic Church during the Easter vigil Mass on Saturday, April 16.
That number of initiates is a record high for St. Paul’s, a nearly century-old Romanesque-style brick church whose bell tower looms over Harvard Square.
A scheduling backlog caused by the COVID-19 pandemic is partly responsible for the size of this year’s group of catechumens (non-baptized) and candidates (baptized non-Catholics.) But Father Patrick J. Fiorillo, the parochial vicar at St. Paul’s, believes there’s more to it than that.
“There’s definitely a significant segment of people who started thinking more deeply about their lives and faith during COVID-19,” Fiorillo said. “So, coming out of Covid has given them the occasion to take the next step and move forward.”
Fiorillo is the undergraduate chaplain for the Harvard Catholic Center, a chaplaincy based at St. Paul’s for undergraduate and graduate students at Harvard University and other academic institutions in the area. This year, 17 of the 31 initiates are Harvard students.
“Everybody assumes that, because this is the Harvard Catholic Center, that everybody here is very smart and therefore has a very highly intellectual orientation towards their faith,” Fiorillo told CNA.
“That is definitely true of some people. But I would say the majority are not here because of intellectually thinking their way into the faith. Some are. But the majority are just kind of ordinary life circumstances, just seeking, questioning the ways of the world, and just trying to get in touch with this desire on their heart for something more,” he said.
Fiorillo says welcoming converts into the Church at the Easter vigil is one of the highlights of his ministry.
“It’s an honor. It gives me hope just seeing all this new life and new faith here. So much in one place,” he said.
“When I tell other people about it, it gives them hope to hear that many young people are still converting to Catholicism, and they’re doing it in a place as secular as Cambridge.”
Prior to the Easter vigil, CNA spoke with five of St. Paul’s newest converts. Here are their stories:
‘This is what I’ve been looking for’
Katie Cabrera, a 19-year-old Harvard freshman, told CNA that she was excited to experience the “transformative power of Christ through his body and blood” at Mass for the first time at the Easter vigil.
A native of Dorchester, Massachusetts, she said she was baptized as a child and comes from a family of Dominican immigrants. Her father, who grew up in an extremely impoverished area, lacked a formal education, but always kept the traditions of the Catholic faith close to him in order to persevere in difficult times.
Her father’s love for her and his Catholic faith deeply inspired Cabrera, and served as an anchor for her faith throughout her life.
Growing up, however, Cabrera attended a non-denominational church with her mother. Because she felt the church’s teachings lacked an emphasis on God’s love and mercy, Cabrera eventually left.
“Even though I Ieft, I always knew that I believed in God,” Cabrera said. “So, I was at a place where I felt kind of lost, because I always had that faith, but I didn’t know what to do with it.”
After she arrived at Harvard, she accepted a friend’s invitation to attend an ice-cream social at the Harvard Catholic Center — “and that was like, sort of, how it all started,” she told CNA.
Once she was added to the email list for the center’s events, she felt a “calling” that she “really wanted to officially become Catholic” after many difficult years without a faith community.
Catholic doctrine about the sacraments was no hurdle for Cabrera, as she credits Fiorillo with explaining the faith well.
“There was a void that existed in my heart,” she said. “As soon as Father Patrick started teaching about marriage and family, theology of the body, and the sacraments, I was like, ‘This is what I’ve been looking for my whole life.’”
‘What’s the Eucharist?’
“What is that thing on the thing?”
Kent Shi laughs when he recalls how perplexed he was the first time he attended eucharistic adoration at St. Mary’s of the Assumption in Cambridge.
Someone helpfully explained that what Shi was looking at was the Eucharist displayed inside a monstrance.
“What’s the Eucharist?” he wanted to know.
For many non-Catholics considering entering the Catholic Church, the Real Presence can be a major obstacle.
Not Shi. He says that once the Eucharist was explained to him that day, he instantly believed.
Shi, 25, told CNA that he considered himself an agnostic for most of his life, meaning he neither believed nor disbelieved in God.
Between his first and second years as a graduate student in Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, however, he accepted Christ and started attending services at a Presbyterian church.
One day in the summer of 2021, a crucifix outside St. Paul’s that Shi says he “must have passed multiple times a week for months and never noticed” caught his eye, and deeply moved him.
Shortly after, he accepted a friend’s invitation to attend eucharistic adoration at St. Mary’s even though he “didn’t know what adoration meant.” Unaware of what he was about to walk into, Shi asked a friend what the dress code was for adoration. His friend replied, “Respectful.”
And so, respectfully dressed in a button-down shirt and slacks, Shi sat in the front row with his friend, only a few feet from the monstrance. That’s when the questions began.
It wasn’t long after that encounter that Shi began attending Mass at St. Paul’s and the parish’s RCIA (Rite of Christian Initiation for Adults) program. Shi asked CNA readers to pray for him and his fellow RCIA classmates.
“There’s a lot of prodigal sons and daughters here, so we would very much appreciate that,” he said, “especially me.”
Poetry and art opened the door
For Loren Brown, choosing to attend a secular university like Harvard proved to be “providential.”
The 25-year-old junior from La Center, Washington, said he comes from a “lapsed” Catholic family and wasn’t baptized.
He didn’t think much about the faith until the spring semester of his freshman year, when, he says, Catholic friends of his “began to question my lack of commitment to faith.”
Later, when students were sent home to take classes virtually due to the pandemic, he had time to reflect and began to read some of the books they’d recommended to him. The poetry of T.S. Eliot (his favorite set of poems being “Four Quartets”) and the “Confessions” by St. Augustine, in particular, “pulled me towards the faith,” he said.
Brown describes his conversion as a “gradual process” which backed him into a “logical corner.” But a chance meeting with a priest also played a pivotal role.
One day in the summer of 2021 while walking back to his dormitory he encountered a man wearing a priestly collar outside St. Paul’s Church on busy Mount Auburn Street.
It was Father George Salzmann, O.S.F.S., graduate chaplain of the Harvard Catholic Center.
“He asked me how I was doing, what I was studying, and we immediately found a common interest in St. Augustine,” Brown told CNA.
“You know, there’s this great window of St. Augustine inside St. Paul’s and you should come see it,” Brown remembers the gregarious priest telling him. Salzmann wound up giving Brown a brief tour of the church, which was completed in 1923.
The next week, Brown found himself sitting in a pew for his first Sunday Mass at St. Paul’s. He hasn’t missed a Sunday since, a routine that ultimately led him to join the RCIA program that fall.
Brown says he now realizes that coming to Harvard was about more than majoring in education.
“What I wanted out of Harvard has completely changed,” he said. “Instead of an education that prepares me for a job or a career, I want one that forms me as a moral being and a human.”
‘I can’t do this alone. Please help me.’
Verena Kaynig-Fittkau, 42, is a German immigrant who came to the U.S. 10 years ago with her husband to do her post-doctoral research in biomedical image processing at Harvard’s engineering school.
The couple settled in Cambridge, where they had their first child. Two subsequent pregnancies ended in miscarriage, however. That second loss was overwhelming for Kaynig-Fittkau, who says she was raised as a “secular Lutheran” without any strong faith.
“It broke me and a lot of my pride and made me realize that I can’t do things by myself,” she told CNA.
She found herself on knees one Thanksgiving, pleading with God. “I can’t do this alone,” she said. “Please help me.”
She says God answered her prayer by introducing her to another mother, who she met at a playground. She was a Christian who later invited Kaynig-Fittkau to attend services at a Presbyterian church in Somerville, Massachusetts.
In that church, there was a lot of emphasis on “faith alone,” she said. But Kaynig-Fittkau, who now works for Adobe and is the mother of two girls, kept questioning if her faith was deep enough.
Then one day she stumbled upon a YouTube video titled “The hour that will change your life,” in which Father Mike Schmitz, a Catholic priest from the Diocese of Duluth, Minnesota, known for his “Bible in a Year” podcast, speaks about the Eucharist.
Intrigued, she began watching similar videos by other Catholic speakers, including Father Casey Cole, O.F.M., Bishop Robert Barron, Matt Fradd, and Scott Hahn, each of whom drew her closer and closer to the Catholic faith.
Familiar with St. Paul’s from her days as a Harvard researcher and lecturer, she decided to attend Mass there one day, and made an appointment before she left to meet with Fiorillo.
When they met, Fiorillo answered all of her questions from what she calls “a list of Protestant problems with Catholicism.” She entered the RCIA program three weeks later.
Recalling her first experience attending eucharistic adoration, she said it felt “utterly weird” to be worshiping what she describes as “this golden sun.”
A conversation with a local Jesuit priest helped her better understand the Eucharist, however. Now she finds that spending time before the Blessed Sacrament is “amazing.”
“I am really, really, really excited for the Easter vigil,” Kaynig-Fittkau said. “I can’t wait, I have a big smile on my face just thinking about it.”
The rosary brought him peace
Another catechumen at St. Paul’s this year is Kyle Richard, 37, who lives in the Beacon Hill neighborhood of Boston and works in a technology startup company downtown.
Although he grew up in a culturally Catholic hub in Louisiana, his parents left the Catholic faith and joined a Full Gospel church. Richard said he found the church “intimidating,” which led him eventually to leave Christianity altogether.
When Richard was in his mid-twenties, his father battled pancreatic cancer. Before he died, he expressed a wish to rejoin the Catholic Church. He never did confess his sins to a priest or receive the Anointing of the Sick, Richard recalls sadly. But years later, his non-believing son would remember his father’s yearning to return to the Church.
“I kind of filed that away for a while, but I never really let it go,” he said.
Initially, Richard moved even farther away from the Church. He said he became an atheist who thought that Christianity was simply “something that people used to just soothe themselves.”
Years later, while going through a divorce, he had a change of heart.
Feeling he ought to give Christianity “a fair shot,” he began saying the rosary in hopes of settling his anxiety. The prayer brought him peace, and became a gateway to the Catholic faith.
Before long, he was reading the Bible on the Vatican’s website, downloading prayer apps, and meditating on scripture.
A Google search brought him to St. Paul’s. Joining the RCIA program, he feels, was a continuation of his father’s expressed desire on his deathbed more than a decade ago.
“I think he would be proud, especially because he was born on April 16th and that is the date of the Easter vigil,” he said.
G.K. Chesterton remarks somewhere in Orthodoxy that the longer one is acquainted with animals, the greater the difference between them and human beings appears. I have had a familiarity, frequently a close one, with a […]
““In what religious age was a man allowed to thunder from the pulpit with a mask on his face?”(Illustrated London News, July 25, 1908)”
Alexander Peden, the Scottish Covenanter, wore a weird-looking mask, and was quite the celebrity. The Covenanters were Presbyterians in the 1600’s, and their character can be seen by the fact that they objected to swearing an oath that stated that they rejected a declaration that it was lawful for them to kill those who served the king in church, state, army, or country, or those who acted against the people who wrote the statement; and that they wouldn’t help anybody to do such killing.
We wear masks during this pandemic because they are an integral part in limiting transmission of a deadly disease. That’s all. If you want to read more into it, that’s your problem.
PS: Am I the only orthodox Catholic who finds Chesterton’s paradoxical writing tedious?
No, masks are completely & utterly useless in preventing transmission of any disease. The failure of lockdowns/forced mask-wearing are proof of this. If these implements of population control worked the first time, why are we now trying it again? Follow the science – good research ability is hard to learn – you would do well to learn it.
Highly debatable whether mask wearing is “an integral part in limiting transmission of a deadly disease”. Packaging for the most common masks contain a disclaimer affirming the simple truth that their efficacy in fighting disease is unproven. Given the lack of verifiable scientific proof for effectiveness in preventing the spread of the disease, its likely more about imposing social control than anything else. Anyone who disagrees is encouraged to examine the packaging for their own supply of masks.
To answer succinctly your last question: Yes, emphatically you stand alone. As for the masks, if you want to believe the gobbledygook surrounding them, that is your privilege, but please do not inflict this superstition on the rest of us. Many people clearer thinking perhaps than you yourself subscribe to the initial view Mr. Fauci embraced concerning masks, viz. that they do nothing to protect anyone against any virus, much less the latest Red Chinese-manufactured variety. As I said, if it makes people feel better to do so, then let them don the facial germ bag. Those “following the science,” though, will forgo that pleasure.
I fully understand your position. I hesitate to say that you are in the minority regarding COVID protection masks. Every scientist who is a scientist tell us that federal CDC rules that protect both wearer and a person without a mask. Even Pope Francis said he would follow the instructions from scientists. The Pope angushies as he reads of the COVID massacre in the US of more than 260,000 souls For sure the Pope acknowledges the failure of the US Government that relinquished responsibility and passed the needed help to of administration leadership, to the governors. That decision caused mayhem in the states, particularly with competition for PPEs for medical professional’s protection.
The CDC says “until we have a vaccine our best hope of not getting infected includes wearing of a mask”.
We are a federal republic, so it was appropriate to defer to individual states and local authorities to best address covid related issues. That was not relinquishing responsibility, it was actually honoring the Constitution. And a recent study clearly indicated that mask wearing is useless in terms of protection. You view that as a minority position only because it challenges the talking points you constantly parrot in your posts.
No. It’s a “minority position” because there is an ocean of research that says the contrary. Wear a mask for the same reason you cover your mouth when you cough or sneeze. Your attitude might explain why the USA is one of the leading countries in terms of both COVID cases and deaths in the developed world. As for Chesterton, I refuse to take health advice from an 19th century chain smoking obese essayist.
I’m not sure which countries you consider to be in “the developed world,” but you might take a look at the per-capita statistics about deaths from Wuhan coronavirus; here’s the analysis from Johns Hopkins: https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/data/mortality The US deaths per capita are far below the rate in Belgium, and below the rates in Spain, Italy, the United Kingdom,
Of course, the statistics can be skewed by inaccurate reporting. I’m not sure, for example, that I would take China’s word for the number of deaths in China. And of course countries have different ways of reporting deaths – some record the death of anybody who had the coronavirus at the time of death even if the death was not directly from that; some don’t.
As far as masks go, the experts insisting that they should be worn are the same experts who originally said there was no reason to wear them because they wouldn’t help, so you can hardly blame people for being skeptical.
Odd that you would take solace in the fact that the USA is in the top 20 of covid deaths. I thought the USA was the best and exceptional and blah, blah blah. Surely, the USA can do better than that!
Yes, there was contradicting info at first. That’s how science works. Info changes as more is learned.
If you’re skeptical about masks, ask yourself why your doctor or dentists wears one. It’s not because they don’t protect.
True that!
No, there is no “ocean” of research supporting the efficacy of mask wearing. In fact, the so-called experts have flip-flopped so many times it’s difficult to know what to believe anymore. But it is obvious that this is much more about power and politics than any delusion about “keeping people safe” You are simply trafficking in fear and superstition and parroting the media’s narrative.
Excellent thoughts and words. Social control? Maybe. Common sense? Probably. Mask wearing has become a modern complement to others. The height of rudeness is to sneeze on someone unmasked.
I wish someone would address the mask issue which is causing division. I am torn. I wear one to try to prevent others from getting sick. The hospitals are filling up. Staffing shortages are occurring. If someone can answer what their plan is to resolve these serious issues, then I will stop wearing the masks. Needless deaths occur when hospitals cannot provide the needed care if they are overrun. If the mask slows the virus 20%, then that’s 20%. And what are our obligations to being obedient to civil authorities? Did not God permit them to be in charge? “You would have no authority over me, unless it were given to you by my Father.” Are we called to listen to the “internet” experts or the civil authorities? Does one study prove something? Is that how science works? Do we have an obligation to try to keep others safe? These are questions I struggle with, but no one will give answers. They just want to listen to those who tickle their ears, and say what they want to believe. It’s crazy. Those who wear masks are told not to judge. But those who don’t are okay to judge. This entire pandemic has revealed a lot about the conditions of the human race on all sides. And all the while the hospitals are filling more and more with COVID yet a few “experts” on the internet claim the pandemic is over!?? And people believe it! Sorry for the ramble.
I think you make a great point, especially when wearing a mask costs us nothing. It’s no different than wearing a scarf in the winter. Big deal?!
Let’s do everything we possibly can…mask, wash hands and keep distance.
Americans have an odd, almost teenager-like view of freedom. It’s the feet stomping “no one can tell me what to do” attitude. We should remember what Pope St. John Paul II said: “Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought.”
When a deadly virus kills more than a quarter of a million people in the USA (and that’s with health measures) we ought to do all we can to stop it. A mask, keeping distance and washing hands is a very small inconvenience. If you don’t like it, then offer it up.
I took the 1957 G. K. Chesteron anthology with me to hospital and it was invaluable; what insight, what humour, what prescience.. this little book has become a treasure,
Andrew……….. Yes, the USA is in the top 20 of countries with covid, that being said, one never hears of contributing factors such as obesity, diabetes,heart disease,electronic addictions,drug usage,the ability to travel at will, should I go on ? The only reason covid deaths are so low in light of our life styles, is because of our technically superior medical community. To compare our country and other countries relating to covid effects without the complete picture is as ludicrous as listening to NPR and trying to metabolize half truths and carefully selected “ facts”.
Masks work, but not for the COVID virion, which easily passes through and around the masks that people wear. The best protection is in building up your immune system, especially with Vitamins D, C and zinc.
You’re quite right. If instead of pushing the mask lie the “authorities” talked about the efficacy of Vitamins D and C combined with other immune boosting supplements, I’d have perhaps more faith in their words. But when I examine, for just one egregious example, the track record of the ‘scientific community’s’ much ballyhooed champion, Mr. Fauci, I develop strong reservations about every word coming from their mouths. Fauci has been dead wrong about almost everything he has ever said, and provably so, yet the media lickspittles continue to treat him with respect. He’s little more than a fraudulent publicity hound who enjoys overmuch the perks of power. I wouldn’t trust that flimflam artist to treat my dog’s diarrhea.
Nice article I need to take up the challenge and read more of Chesterton. However my experience in reading Chesterton’s books takes me back to college days and taking a abstract algebra course for my math minor. I had to study like crazy to get a B; in the end it was worth it since really improved my logical thinking process. For me reading Chesterton is not easy, just need to power on and reflect on his writing, in the end it is also worth it, one can see the lies promulugated by the secularist society we have become.
Getting to the mask issue and Covid. This is a good example of media of mudding up the issue. First of all a significant majority of Covid deaths is in age of 65 plus and especially those in nursing homes. The death rate also includes other factors that media does not address so the real death rate from Covid is not known. Second while I wear a mask in stores, I think it has evolved into a Government control issue. The data on mask usefulness is not well studied. While I agree it’s not good to cough on people directly not sure how effective it is beyond that. It is interesting, well actually frightening, how the media surpresses any data or analysis to contradict their blessed opinion.
I think the N-95 masks are the most effective type, when they are fitted to the person in a sterile environment, as in a surgical procedure. Paper or cutesy cloth coverings…not so much. Especially when constantly touched and fiddled with. Those are more germ-laden.
The real argument here is that the USA is not a collectivist culture. When collectivism is imposed upon people by governments, it is called tyranny. One only needs to take a peek at the USSR to see that this does not end well.
The Catholic Church has condemned collectivism, when it is not willingly chosen by a culture. As Catholics with free will, I believe the best course of action is to follow one’s conscience. I feel like I’m living a lie wearing a mask that most likely doesn’t work. I’d rather social distance to protect myself and others. While I do believe in working toward the common good, I refuse to accept the government forcing me to do so, and I don’t view that as being selfish. In fact, I think it is selfish for others to expect me to protect them, at the expense of following my conscience.
I suggest you all watch “The Social Dilemma” on Netflix’s. It will enlightened you as to what is going on in the world especially all the division. As to the covid, never before has any illness been reported as it has. Terror is in people’s eyes. How many times does the Bible say “Be not afraid”? Shut down, isolation, fear… alcoholics, depression, Suicide increase. Most people who catch it wear masks. I’ve read the reports and I don’t wear one. I keep my distance. I see a people with fear in there eyes and a world where people are afraid to talk. God intended us to be in community and it’s especially sad when someone dies alone. So if you want to wear your mask, wear it, but don’t judge someone else. If you watch “The Social Dilemma” you’ll understand how we’re being manipulated.
Bingo!! Mr Ahlquist.
““In what religious age was a man allowed to thunder from the pulpit with a mask on his face?”(Illustrated London News, July 25, 1908)”
Alexander Peden, the Scottish Covenanter, wore a weird-looking mask, and was quite the celebrity. The Covenanters were Presbyterians in the 1600’s, and their character can be seen by the fact that they objected to swearing an oath that stated that they rejected a declaration that it was lawful for them to kill those who served the king in church, state, army, or country, or those who acted against the people who wrote the statement; and that they wouldn’t help anybody to do such killing.
Basically, the Taliban of 17th-century Scotland.
So there! What an awesome article!
We wear masks during this pandemic because they are an integral part in limiting transmission of a deadly disease. That’s all. If you want to read more into it, that’s your problem.
PS: Am I the only orthodox Catholic who finds Chesterton’s paradoxical writing tedious?
No, masks are completely & utterly useless in preventing transmission of any disease. The failure of lockdowns/forced mask-wearing are proof of this. If these implements of population control worked the first time, why are we now trying it again? Follow the science – good research ability is hard to learn – you would do well to learn it.
Highly debatable whether mask wearing is “an integral part in limiting transmission of a deadly disease”. Packaging for the most common masks contain a disclaimer affirming the simple truth that their efficacy in fighting disease is unproven. Given the lack of verifiable scientific proof for effectiveness in preventing the spread of the disease, its likely more about imposing social control than anything else. Anyone who disagrees is encouraged to examine the packaging for their own supply of masks.
Perhaps
Diapers on your face do absolutely nothing to protect your health. They only foster fear.
To answer succinctly your last question: Yes, emphatically you stand alone. As for the masks, if you want to believe the gobbledygook surrounding them, that is your privilege, but please do not inflict this superstition on the rest of us. Many people clearer thinking perhaps than you yourself subscribe to the initial view Mr. Fauci embraced concerning masks, viz. that they do nothing to protect anyone against any virus, much less the latest Red Chinese-manufactured variety. As I said, if it makes people feel better to do so, then let them don the facial germ bag. Those “following the science,” though, will forgo that pleasure.
I fully understand your position. I hesitate to say that you are in the minority regarding COVID protection masks. Every scientist who is a scientist tell us that federal CDC rules that protect both wearer and a person without a mask. Even Pope Francis said he would follow the instructions from scientists. The Pope angushies as he reads of the COVID massacre in the US of more than 260,000 souls For sure the Pope acknowledges the failure of the US Government that relinquished responsibility and passed the needed help to of administration leadership, to the governors. That decision caused mayhem in the states, particularly with competition for PPEs for medical professional’s protection.
The CDC says “until we have a vaccine our best hope of not getting infected includes wearing of a mask”.
We are a federal republic, so it was appropriate to defer to individual states and local authorities to best address covid related issues. That was not relinquishing responsibility, it was actually honoring the Constitution. And a recent study clearly indicated that mask wearing is useless in terms of protection. You view that as a minority position only because it challenges the talking points you constantly parrot in your posts.
No. It’s a “minority position” because there is an ocean of research that says the contrary. Wear a mask for the same reason you cover your mouth when you cough or sneeze. Your attitude might explain why the USA is one of the leading countries in terms of both COVID cases and deaths in the developed world. As for Chesterton, I refuse to take health advice from an 19th century chain smoking obese essayist.
I’m not sure which countries you consider to be in “the developed world,” but you might take a look at the per-capita statistics about deaths from Wuhan coronavirus; here’s the analysis from Johns Hopkins: https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/data/mortality The US deaths per capita are far below the rate in Belgium, and below the rates in Spain, Italy, the United Kingdom,
Of course, the statistics can be skewed by inaccurate reporting. I’m not sure, for example, that I would take China’s word for the number of deaths in China. And of course countries have different ways of reporting deaths – some record the death of anybody who had the coronavirus at the time of death even if the death was not directly from that; some don’t.
As far as masks go, the experts insisting that they should be worn are the same experts who originally said there was no reason to wear them because they wouldn’t help, so you can hardly blame people for being skeptical.
Odd that you would take solace in the fact that the USA is in the top 20 of covid deaths. I thought the USA was the best and exceptional and blah, blah blah. Surely, the USA can do better than that!
Yes, there was contradicting info at first. That’s how science works. Info changes as more is learned.
If you’re skeptical about masks, ask yourself why your doctor or dentists wears one. It’s not because they don’t protect.
True that!
No, there is no “ocean” of research supporting the efficacy of mask wearing. In fact, the so-called experts have flip-flopped so many times it’s difficult to know what to believe anymore. But it is obvious that this is much more about power and politics than any delusion about “keeping people safe” You are simply trafficking in fear and superstition and parroting the media’s narrative.
Ignorance of corona-type viruses is more the like than ‘oceans’ of research claiming efficacy of masks.
Chesterton tedious? An attack – ad hominem – on his obesity instead of making an argument on his ideas.
Excellent thoughts and words. Social control? Maybe. Common sense? Probably. Mask wearing has become a modern complement to others. The height of rudeness is to sneeze on someone unmasked.
I wish someone would address the mask issue which is causing division. I am torn. I wear one to try to prevent others from getting sick. The hospitals are filling up. Staffing shortages are occurring. If someone can answer what their plan is to resolve these serious issues, then I will stop wearing the masks. Needless deaths occur when hospitals cannot provide the needed care if they are overrun. If the mask slows the virus 20%, then that’s 20%. And what are our obligations to being obedient to civil authorities? Did not God permit them to be in charge? “You would have no authority over me, unless it were given to you by my Father.” Are we called to listen to the “internet” experts or the civil authorities? Does one study prove something? Is that how science works? Do we have an obligation to try to keep others safe? These are questions I struggle with, but no one will give answers. They just want to listen to those who tickle their ears, and say what they want to believe. It’s crazy. Those who wear masks are told not to judge. But those who don’t are okay to judge. This entire pandemic has revealed a lot about the conditions of the human race on all sides. And all the while the hospitals are filling more and more with COVID yet a few “experts” on the internet claim the pandemic is over!?? And people believe it! Sorry for the ramble.
I think you make a great point, especially when wearing a mask costs us nothing. It’s no different than wearing a scarf in the winter. Big deal?!
Let’s do everything we possibly can…mask, wash hands and keep distance.
Americans have an odd, almost teenager-like view of freedom. It’s the feet stomping “no one can tell me what to do” attitude. We should remember what Pope St. John Paul II said: “Freedom consists not in doing what we like, but in having the right to do what we ought.”
When a deadly virus kills more than a quarter of a million people in the USA (and that’s with health measures) we ought to do all we can to stop it. A mask, keeping distance and washing hands is a very small inconvenience. If you don’t like it, then offer it up.
Great article! Chesterton is one of my favorite authors, he really had a great mind. Greets from Argentina!
Thanks so much Dale;
I took the 1957 G. K. Chesteron anthology with me to hospital and it was invaluable; what insight, what humour, what prescience.. this little book has become a treasure,
warmest regards,
Karen in Cambridge
Andrew……….. Yes, the USA is in the top 20 of countries with covid, that being said, one never hears of contributing factors such as obesity, diabetes,heart disease,electronic addictions,drug usage,the ability to travel at will, should I go on ? The only reason covid deaths are so low in light of our life styles, is because of our technically superior medical community. To compare our country and other countries relating to covid effects without the complete picture is as ludicrous as listening to NPR and trying to metabolize half truths and carefully selected “ facts”.
Masks work, but not for the COVID virion, which easily passes through and around the masks that people wear. The best protection is in building up your immune system, especially with Vitamins D, C and zinc.
I also heard that Vitamin D is helpful
You’re quite right. If instead of pushing the mask lie the “authorities” talked about the efficacy of Vitamins D and C combined with other immune boosting supplements, I’d have perhaps more faith in their words. But when I examine, for just one egregious example, the track record of the ‘scientific community’s’ much ballyhooed champion, Mr. Fauci, I develop strong reservations about every word coming from their mouths. Fauci has been dead wrong about almost everything he has ever said, and provably so, yet the media lickspittles continue to treat him with respect. He’s little more than a fraudulent publicity hound who enjoys overmuch the perks of power. I wouldn’t trust that flimflam artist to treat my dog’s diarrhea.
Nice article I need to take up the challenge and read more of Chesterton. However my experience in reading Chesterton’s books takes me back to college days and taking a abstract algebra course for my math minor. I had to study like crazy to get a B; in the end it was worth it since really improved my logical thinking process. For me reading Chesterton is not easy, just need to power on and reflect on his writing, in the end it is also worth it, one can see the lies promulugated by the secularist society we have become.
Getting to the mask issue and Covid. This is a good example of media of mudding up the issue. First of all a significant majority of Covid deaths is in age of 65 plus and especially those in nursing homes. The death rate also includes other factors that media does not address so the real death rate from Covid is not known. Second while I wear a mask in stores, I think it has evolved into a Government control issue. The data on mask usefulness is not well studied. While I agree it’s not good to cough on people directly not sure how effective it is beyond that. It is interesting, well actually frightening, how the media surpresses any data or analysis to contradict their blessed opinion.
I think the N-95 masks are the most effective type, when they are fitted to the person in a sterile environment, as in a surgical procedure. Paper or cutesy cloth coverings…not so much. Especially when constantly touched and fiddled with. Those are more germ-laden.
The real argument here is that the USA is not a collectivist culture. When collectivism is imposed upon people by governments, it is called tyranny. One only needs to take a peek at the USSR to see that this does not end well.
The Catholic Church has condemned collectivism, when it is not willingly chosen by a culture. As Catholics with free will, I believe the best course of action is to follow one’s conscience. I feel like I’m living a lie wearing a mask that most likely doesn’t work. I’d rather social distance to protect myself and others. While I do believe in working toward the common good, I refuse to accept the government forcing me to do so, and I don’t view that as being selfish. In fact, I think it is selfish for others to expect me to protect them, at the expense of following my conscience.
I suggest you all watch “The Social Dilemma” on Netflix’s. It will enlightened you as to what is going on in the world especially all the division. As to the covid, never before has any illness been reported as it has. Terror is in people’s eyes. How many times does the Bible say “Be not afraid”? Shut down, isolation, fear… alcoholics, depression, Suicide increase. Most people who catch it wear masks. I’ve read the reports and I don’t wear one. I keep my distance. I see a people with fear in there eyes and a world where people are afraid to talk. God intended us to be in community and it’s especially sad when someone dies alone. So if you want to wear your mask, wear it, but don’t judge someone else. If you watch “The Social Dilemma” you’ll understand how we’re being manipulated.