[The New Jerusalem by G. K. Chesterton]@TWC D-Link book
The New Jerusalem

CHAPTER IV
12/16

Every faith is a faith which offers everything except faithfulness.

It was never so necessary to insist that most of the really vital and valuable ideas in the world, including Christianity, would never have survived at all if they had not survived their own death, even in the sense of dying daily.
The ideal was out of date almost from the first day; that is why it is eternal; for whatever is dated is doomed.
As for our own society, if it proceeds at its present rate of progress and improvement, no trace or memory of it will be left at all.
Some think that this would be an improvement in itself.

We have come to live morally, as the Japs live literally, in houses of paper.
But they are pavilions made of the morning papers, which have to be burned on the appearance of the evening editions.

Well, a thousand years hence the Japs may be ruling in Jerusalem; the modern Japs who no longer live in paper houses, but in sweated factories and slums.
They and the Chinese (that much more dignified and democratic people) seem to be about the only people of importance who have not yet ruled Jerusalem.

But though we may think the Christian chapels as thin as Japanese tea-houses, they will still be Christian; though we may think the sacred lamps as cheap as Chinese lanterns, they will still be burning before a crucified creator of the world.
But besides this need of making strange cults the test not of themselves but ourselves, the sights of Jerusalem also illustrate the other suggestion about the philosophy of sight-seeing.


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