Chesterton on Saint
The Saint is a medicine because he is an antidote. Indeed that is why the saint is often a martyr; he is mistaken for a poison because he is an antidote. He will generally be found restoring the world to sanity by exaggerating whatever the world neglects, which is by no means always the same element in every age. Yet each generation seeks its saint by instinct; and he is not what the people want, but rather what the people need. This is surely the very much mistaken meaning of those words to the first saints, “Ye are the salt of the earth,” which caused the Ex-Kaiser to remark with all solemnity that his beefy Germans were the salt of the earth; meaning thereby merely that they were the earth's beefiest and therefore best. But salt seasons and preserves beef, not because it is like beef; but because it is very unlike it. Christ did not tell his apostles that they were only the excellent people, or the only excellent people, but that they were the exceptional people; the permanently incongruous and incompatible people; and the text about the salt of the earth is really as sharp and shrewd and tart as the taste of salt. It is because they were the exceptional people, that they must not lose their exceptional quality. “If salt lose its savour, wherewith shall it be salted?” is a much more pointed question than any mere lament over the price of the best beef. If the world grows too worldly, it can be rebuked by the Church; but if the Church grows too worldly, it cannot be adequately rebuked for worldliness by the world.
Therefore
it is the paradox of history that each generation is converted by the saint who
contradicts it most. St. Francis had a curious and almost uncanny attraction
for the Victorians; for the nineteenth century English who seemed superficially
to be most complacent about their commerce and their common sense. Not only a
rather complacent Englishman like Matthew Arnold, but even the English Liberals
whom he criticised for their complacency, began slowly to discover the mystery
of the Middle Ages through the strange story told in feathers and flames in the
hagiographical pictures of Giotto. There was something in the story of St.
Francis that pierced through all those English qualities which are most famous
and fatuous, to all those English qualities which are most hidden and human:
the secret softness of heart; the poetical vagueness of mind; the love of
landscape and of animals. St. Francis of Assisi was
the only medieval Catholic who really became popular in England on
his own merits. It was largely because of a subconscious feeling that the
modern world had neglected those particular merits. The English middle classes
found their only missionary in the figure, which of all types in the world they
most despised; an Italian beggar.
So, as
the nineteenth century clutched at the Franciscan romance, precisely because it
had neglected romance, so the twentieth century is already clutching at the
Thomist rational theology, because it has neglected reason. In a world that was
too stolid, Christianity returned in the form of a vagabond; in a world that
has grown a great deal too wild, Christianity has returned in the form of a
teacher of logic. In the world of Herbert Spencer men wanted a cure for
indigestion; in the world of Einstein they want a cure for vertigo. In the
first case, they dimly perceived the fact that it was after a long fast that
St. Francis sang the Song of the Sun and the praise of the fruitful earth. In
the second case, they already dimly perceived that, even if they only want to
understand Einstein, it is necessary first to understand the use of the
understanding. They begin to see that, as the eighteenth century thought itself
the age of reason, and the nineteenth century thought itself the age of common
sense, the twentieth century cannot as yet even manage to think itself anything
but the age of uncommon nonsense. In those conditions the world needs a saint;
but above all, it needs a philosopher. And these two cases do show that the
world, to do it justice, has an instinct for what it needs. The earth was
really very flat, for those Victorians who most vigorously repeated that it was
round, and Alverno of the Stigmata stood up as a single mountain in the plain.
But the earth is an earthquake, a ceaseless and apparently endless earthquake, for
the moderns for whom Newton has
been scrapped along with Ptolemy. And for them there is something more steep
and even incredible than a mountain; a piece of really solid ground; the level
of the level-headed man. Thus in our time the two saints have appealed to two
generations, an age of romantics and an age of sceptics; yet in their own age
they were doing the same work; a work that has changed the world.