{"id":1226,"date":"2025-08-05T12:00:18","date_gmt":"2025-08-05T12:00:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/classicalchristian.org\/classis\/?p=1226"},"modified":"2025-08-28T17:15:59","modified_gmt":"2025-08-28T17:15:59","slug":"credulitas","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/classicalchristian.org\/classis\/credulitas\/","title":{"rendered":"Credulitas and the Way Back to the Real"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>[et_pb_section fb_built=&#8221;1&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; background_image=&#8221;https:\/\/classicalchristian.org\/classis\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/06\/river-landscape-with-horseman-and-peasants-by-aelbert-cuypt-e1749585167446.jpg&#8221; parallax=&#8221;on&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_row _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_column type=&#8221;4_4&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_text admin_label=&#8221;Text&#8221; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h1><span style=\"color: #ffffff;\">Credulitas and The Way back to the Real<\/span><\/h1>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p><span style=\"color: #ffffff;\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-38972 alignright size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/classicalchristian.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/ACCS-cross_x512_white_trans_x200.png\" sizes=\"(max-width: 45px) 100vw, 45px\" srcset=\"https:\/\/classicalchristian.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/ACCS-cross_x512_white_trans_x200.png 200w, https:\/\/classicalchristian.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/ACCS-cross_x512_white_trans_x200-150x150.png 150w, https:\/\/classicalchristian.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/ACCS-cross_x512_white_trans_x200-100x100.png 100w\" alt=\"\" width=\"45\" height=\"45\" \/><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #ffffff;\">August 13, 2025<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #ffffff;\"><strong><em>Written by:<\/em><\/strong> Devin O&#8217;Donnell<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #ffffff; font-family: Lato; font-weight: normal;\">Originally published in Classis<\/span><br \/><span style=\"color: #ffffff; font-family: Lato; font-weight: normal;\">Fall 2024, Volume XXXII Issue 2<\/span><\/p>\n<p>[\/et_pb_text][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section][et_pb_section fb_built=&#8221;1&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; background_enable_image=&#8221;off&#8221; custom_margin=&#8221;auto||auto|auto|false|false&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;||2px|||&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_row _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; background_size=&#8221;initial&#8221; background_position=&#8221;top_left&#8221; background_repeat=&#8221;repeat&#8221; custom_margin=&#8221;|auto||auto|false|false&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;||10px|||&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_column type=&#8221;4_4&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.16&#8243; custom_padding=&#8221;|||&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221; custom_padding__hover=&#8221;|||&#8221;][et_pb_audio audio=&#8221;https:\/\/classicalchristian.org\/classis\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/08\/Credulitas-Reading-8_11_25-8.36-PM.mp3&#8243; title=&#8221;Credulitas and The Way back to the Real&#8221; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; hover_enabled=&#8221;0&#8243; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221; sticky_enabled=&#8221;0&#8243;][\/et_pb_audio][et_pb_text _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; background_size=&#8221;initial&#8221; background_position=&#8221;top_left&#8221; background_repeat=&#8221;repeat&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;]<\/p>\n<p>Originally Published In Classis<br \/>Volume XXXII, Issue 1<\/p>\n<p>On any given day of the school year, one might walk into the average classroom of an Humanities course situated in the Rhetoric school and find students gathered around a text. Surely, there would be a teacher present, either at the front of the room, on a stool, addressing students from behind a podium, or seated with them around a table, asking questions about the text <em>sotto voce<\/em>. If the text were written before the seventeenth or eighteenth century\u2014be it from the Golden Age of Greece or from Late Antiquity in Carthage or at the high noon of Renaissance Italy or at the evening of Dark Age Britain\u2014then the author of that text almost certainly shares an epistemology which the students reading do not. This is revealed quickly, especially when the text is the historical record of an ancient Greek or medieval monk.<\/p>\n<p>Consider an account in Bede\u2019s <em>Ecclesiastical History of the English Nation<\/em>. In Book 2, Bede the Venerable recounts the conversion of King Eabald. The story is told almost in passing\u2014a small vignette in the larger drama of the gospel going forth among the pagan Anglo-Saxons. But Britania has proven a hard field to plow. In Chapter VI, Laurentius, a rather exasperated bishop and fellow missionary, is frustrated with the uncouth barbarians. He is about to give up and quit England for good. Before leaving and following Mellitus and Justus back to Rome, Laurentius sleeps in the Church of the Blessed Apostles Peter and Paul. That night he is visited by St. Peter in a dream.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cIn the dead of night,\u201d Bede tells us, \u201cthe blessed prince of the apostles appeared to him, and scourging him a long time with apostolical severity, asked of him, \u2018Why he would forsake the flock which he had committed to him? Or to what shepherds he would commit Christ\u2019s sheep that were in the midst of wolves?\u2019\u201d Peter continues to rebuke Laurentius, leaving the stripes on his back to remind him of his oath to shepherd the flock. Immediately after he wakes up, Larentius does what any medieval bishop would do next. He presents his wounds from St. Peter\u2019s chastisement to King Eabald, who, being a wise pagan, does not doubt the story but was instead \u201cmuch frightened when he heard that the bishop had suffered so much at the hands of the apostle of Christ for his salvation.\u201d Thus, the culture was transformed by the virtue of <em>credulity<\/em>: \u201cThen,\u201d writes Bede, \u201cabjuring the worship of idols, and renouncing his unlawful marriage, [King Eabald] embraced the faith of Christ, and being baptized, promoted the affairs of the church to the utmost of his power.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>A glorious story. In fact, Bede includes in his record the many miracles which took place in the conversion of Britain. This raises a few questions: What is the role of a proper historian? Does he record only those things that a materialist would accept? Or does he record even the mysterious things he cannot explain? In my experience, students seem convinced of the former. What interests students more than the conversion of a pagan kingdom is whether any of the miracles actually happened. They might ask, \u201cDid that thing about Laurentius getting flogged in his sleep <em>really<\/em> happen?\u201d Or, \u201cWas it true that St. Alban\u2019s beheading caused a miraculous spring to flow from the ground?\u201d It may even be that the teacher approaches the text with similar suspicion, and if we are honest with ourselves, such questions immediately come to mind when we read such things. Whenever I have encountered skepticism in my students, convincing them otherwise\u2014that miracles, dragons, fairies, and ghosts are real\u2014is an experience not unlike an exorcism. Students do not ask such questions out of joy but out of skepticism. They often want teachers to comfort them with safe answers that affirm their jaded disbelief in even the possibility of such accounts.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<div class=\"footnotes\"><\/div>\n<p>[\/et_pb_text][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section][et_pb_section fb_built=&#8221;1&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; background_color=&#8221;#363800&#8243; background_enable_image=&#8221;off&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;3px||2px|||&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_row _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_column type=&#8221;4_4&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_text _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h5><span style=\"font-weight: 400; color: #ffffff;\">What interests students more than the conversion of a pagan kingdom is whether any of the miracles actually happened.<\/span><\/h5>\n<p>[\/et_pb_text][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section][et_pb_section fb_built=&#8221;1&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; background_enable_image=&#8221;off&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;0px||0px|||&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_row _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_column type=&#8221;4_4&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_text _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;]<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Some students might possibly reach for a psychoanalytic explanation of things, that St. Peter was really a projection of Laurentius\u2019s own guilt or something along those lines. But this is tenuous, and most students maintain a default reluctance to accept any record that sounds too fantastical. Keep in mind that these students come from Christian families. They grow up reading in Scripture the unambiguous accounts of angels and demons and\u2014if they pay any attention to pre-World War II translations of the Bible\u2014monsters and dragons and satyrs (and so on). They read in the Book of Acts how Paul\u2019s handkerchief, like some kind of talisman, mysteriously becomes a relic to heal the infirmities of those who touch it. And yet, upon hearing similar claims in other texts, these 15-year-old students are suddenly transformed into 55-year-old materialists, looking at events reported from the past with a sideways glance, their squinted eyes jaundiced with incredulity.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">And in the end it may be sufficient for students to give a mild assent to the plausibility of Bede\u2019s account. This may be enough for the seed of learning to flourish. But we are not in the business of chronological snobbery. <\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The goal for the instructor is not to make students <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">believe<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> in whatever fantastical claim comes from old books simply on the basis that it is old. The goal for classical educators is to preserve the small candle of <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">possibility<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> that the winds of modern skepticism would otherwise blow out.<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Whether it is Bede\u2019s account of Laurentius or Herodotus\u2019s camel-killing ants, Plato\u2019s Atlantis, or Monmouth\u2019s Arthur, the point is not to <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">state<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, \u201cThis could not happen,\u201d but to <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">ask<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, \u201cWhy couldn\u2019t this happen?\u201d\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>The Discarded Intellectual Virtue<\/b><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Old books are not easily thrown down. They bear the weight of glory. As the reader interprets this kind of text, the text interprets the reader. What does this mean? For one thing, it means that if we read books that come before the seventeenth century, we should not be surprised when a kind of functional atheism is revealed. But materialism is neither Christian nor classical.<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> This disposition constitutes a poor study of history. The most important parts of history, G. K. Chesterton argued, are the strange, the mysterious, the miraculous elements that often go overlooked by the modern historian, who looks to physical causes as the more authentic and authoritative explanation.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p>[\/et_pb_text][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section][et_pb_section fb_built=&#8221;1&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; background_color=&#8221;#363800&#8243; background_enable_image=&#8221;off&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;2px||1px|||&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_row _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_column type=&#8221;4_4&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_text _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h6><span style=\"color: #ffffff;\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The goal for the instructor is not to make students <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">believe<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> in whatever fantastical claim comes from old books simply on the basis that it is old. The goal for classical educators is to preserve the small candle of <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">possibility<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> that the winds of modern skepticism would otherwise blow out.<\/span><\/span><\/h6>\n<p>[\/et_pb_text][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section][et_pb_section fb_built=&#8221;1&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; background_enable_image=&#8221;off&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;3px||1px|||&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_row _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;||0px|||&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_column type=&#8221;4_4&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_text _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;||0px|||&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;]<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">For instance, the modern historian might find the legends of Arthur, however charming they might sound, to be silly and dubious historical evidence. Instead, \u201cThe nineteenth-century historians went on the curious principle of dismissing all people of whom tales are told and concentrating upon people of whom nothing is told.\u201d<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> But while modern progressives fuss over whether \u201clegend\u201d can be validated as historically reliable, Chesterton argues that \u201ccredulity is certainly much more sane than incredulity.\u201d<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> It is nothing more than common sense. \u201cThat fictitious stories are told about a person is, nine times out of ten, extremely good evidence that there was somebody to tell them about.\u201d A \u201cthoughtless skepticism\u201d is the only other alternative. \u201cI do not understand,\u201d says Chesterton, \u201cthe attitude which holds that there was an Ark and a man named Noah, but cannot believe in the existence of Noah\u2019s Ark.\u201d<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">It may be easy to blame modern historians who seek to diminish or debunk the almost fairytale-like events on which the course of history often turns. But students and teachers in classical Christian schools are functionally not much different. <\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Perhaps the greatest threat to handing on a classical Christian paideia is the besetting sin of our secular world: incredulity. For those who can no longer wonder at a God who can break into the cosmos in such a way as to allow for St. Alban\u2019s executioner to miraculously fall dead, the ability to learn is lost<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">. The student is not benefited by his incredulity. The student is in no way advantaged by his skepticism. Faith is the basis of knowledge. How can a student gain knowledge if he does not first believe?\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">In <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The Discarded Image<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, C. S. Lewis makes this point almost in passing. Credulity, he argues, must come first. It is an idea of massive consequence and one that is not only the byproduct of an older Christian worldview. In a passage dealing with Plato\u2019s <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Timaeus<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, Lewis comments on the way in which Plato enjoins his readers to accept the claims of past authors, which seems to mark a <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">classical<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> standard for \u201creception\u201d of a text.<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> The context for this passage is about the \u201cGod who created the gods,\u201d and all the genealogies of the gods that follow. Plato writes,\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">We must accept what was said about them by our ancestors who, according to their own account, were actually their descendants. Surely they must have been well informed about their own progenitors! And who could disbelieve the children of gods?\u2019<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Lewis takes this opportunity to hammer the point home. \u201cBy telling us to believe our forebears,\u201d writes Lewis, \u201cPlato is reminding us that <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">credulitas<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> must precede all instruction.\u201d<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> If we have human virtues and theological virtues, then <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">credulitas<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> is what we might call an educational or intellectual virtue.<\/span> <span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">This does not mean that the student mustn\u2019t learn to ask questions. Rather, it means that the student must learn to ask the <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">right <\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">questions. Instead of asking, \u201cIs that story real?\u201d Students would do better to ask themselves, \u201cWhy should such a story not be real?\u201d<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Why couldn\u2019t St. Peter scourge a faltering bishop in the middle of his sleep? For all their sins, men in the ancient and medieval periods seemed to possess a more believing posture of the heart and mind, which allowed them to learn, imagine, and create.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><br style=\"font-weight: 400;\" \/><br style=\"font-weight: 400;\" \/><\/p>\n<p>[\/et_pb_text][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section][et_pb_section fb_built=&#8221;1&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; background_color=&#8221;#363F1C&#8221; background_enable_image=&#8221;off&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;3px||0px|||&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_row _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_column type=&#8221;4_4&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_text _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h5><span style=\"font-weight: 400; color: #ffffff;\">Perhaps the greatest threat to handing on a classical Christian paideia is the besetting sin of our secular world: incredulity. For those who can no longer wonder at a God who can break into the cosmos in such a way as to allow for St. Alban\u2019s executioner to miraculously fall dead, the ability to learn is lost<\/span><\/h5>\n<p>[\/et_pb_text][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section][et_pb_section fb_built=&#8221;1&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; background_enable_image=&#8221;off&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;0px||0px|||&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_row _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_column type=&#8221;4_4&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_text _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;]<\/p>\n<p><b>On Being Taken In<\/b><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Owen Barfield once remarked on what he called C. S. Lewis\u2019s great \u201cpresence of mind,\u201d that \u201csomehow what he thought about everything was secretly present in what he said about anything.\u201d<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Alan Jacobs believes Barfield\u2019s observation was rooted in something deeper: \u201cthat Lewis\u2019s mind was above all characterized by a willingness to be enchanted and that it was this openness to enchantment that held together the various strands of his life.\u201d It is no surprise, then, that Lewis seems to defend <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">credulitas<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> in narrative form as well, particularly upon initiation into the land of Narnia. When Peter and Susan first hear of Lucy\u2019s experience in that country, they do not believe her. Professor Digory Kirke later reproaches them for their incredulity, for their small and cramped vision of the world, and for their <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">illogical<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> disbelief in their sister\u2019s report. Similarly, Eustace must also learn to see the universe with new eyes. Ramandu admonishes Eustance that even in his \u201creal\u201d world, stars are more than the mere composition of collected flaming gas.<\/span> <span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">There is a difference here: on the one hand, we have an analytic knowledge that is limited by our attention to only physical things; on the other, we have wonder, which is open and calibrated rightly enough to behold those things beyond our most immediate senses.<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">But what if Lucy were deceived? What if she were wrong about the wardrobe? We moderns are terribly afraid of being \u201ctaken in\u201d by anything that could be untrue. We would rather play the part of cool-headed Theseus, \u201cI never may believe these antique fables, nor these fairy toys.\u201d<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u00a0 Skepticism might sound wise and knowing and perfectly fitting for the Christian since it is our duty to care about the truth. But Christians educating in the modern world face a different problem. We are not in danger of too readily believing in what Michael S. Heiser calls \u201cThe Unseen Realm.\u201d<\/span> <i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Whether<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> a supernatural reality exists is an incoherent inquiry. To be Christian necessarily means one accepts and believes in a Reality that comprises \u201call things visible and invisible.\u201d<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Where we ought to aim our skepticism instead is at the atheistic fables of materialism and the cunning myths of Marx, which are far more corrosive than the old pagan myths. In the modern stories, the gods are dead, and the world beyond a lie. The modern stories tell us that man was not made in God\u2019s image \u201ca little lower than the angels\u201d yet \u201ccrowned with glory and honor\u201d but that \u201chis grandfather was a chimpanzee and his father a wild man of the woods, caught by hunters and tamed into something like intelligence.\u201d<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> The Museum of Natural History in Washington, D. C. is a monument to this effect, complete with the epic hymnody of Australopithecus and Cro-Magnon man.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Note, credulity is present in any case. It is the old \u201cnot <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">whether<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> but <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">which<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u201d situation: which account of the world is closer to Reality, the modern skeptic or the medieval mystic? An unfair choice, perhaps, but it does raise questions about the orientation of our epistemology: Upon what foundation does our understanding rest? What do we really want to believe about the world? Chesterton puts it this way:\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The fierce poet of the Middle Ages wrote, \u201cAbandon hope, all ye who enter here,\u201d over the gates of the lower world. The emancipated poets of today have written it over the gates of this world. But if we are to understand the story that follows, we must erase that apocalyptic writing, if only for an hour. We must recreate the faith of our fathers, if only as an artistic atmosphere. If, then, you are a pessimist, in reading this story, forego for a little the pleasures of pessimism. Dream for one mad moment that the grass is green. Unlearn that sinister learning that you think so clear; deny that deadly knowledge that you think you know. Surrender the very flower of your culture; give up the very jewel of your pride; abandon hopelessness, all ye who enter here.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">It would seem credulity requires not only a charitable epistemology but some amount of courage as well.<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> It is easier to be a skeptic, and it is often preferable to the prospect of being made a gullible fool. Chesterton reminds us, \u201cHis soul will never starve for exploits or excitements who is wise enough to be made a fool of.\u201d Consider how a bit of marshwigglian wisdom can allay the fear of being \u201ctaken in\u201d by stories of a cosmos haunted by the numinous and stalked by the Transcendent.\u00a0\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><br style=\"font-weight: 400;\" \/><br style=\"font-weight: 400;\" \/><\/p>\n<p>[\/et_pb_text][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section][et_pb_section fb_built=&#8221;1&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; background_color=&#8221;#363800&#8243; background_enable_image=&#8221;off&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;4px||4px|||&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_row _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_column type=&#8221;4_4&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_text _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;]<\/p>\n<h5><span style=\"color: #ffffff;\"><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u00a0<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">There is a difference here: on the one hand, we have an analytic knowledge that is limited by our attention to only physical things; on the other, we have wonder, which is open and calibrated rightly enough to behold those things beyond our most immediate senses.<\/span><\/span><\/h5>\n<p>[\/et_pb_text][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section][et_pb_section fb_built=&#8221;1&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; background_enable_image=&#8221;off&#8221; custom_padding=&#8221;2px|||||&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_row _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_column type=&#8221;4_4&#8243; _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_text _builder_version=&#8221;4.27.4&#8243; _module_preset=&#8221;default&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;]<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Towards the climax of <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The Silver Chair<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, Puddleglum summons up the courage to break the spell of the Witch, who has told them that there is no outside world\u2014no sun, no moon, and nothing called \u201cOverland\u201d:\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Suppose we have only dreamed, or made up, all those things\u2014trees and grass<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">and sun and moon and stars and Aslan himself. Suppose we have. Then all I can say is that, in that case, the made-up things seem a good deal more important than the real ones. Suppose this black pit of a kingdom of yours is the only world. Well, it strikes me as a pretty poor one. And that&#8217;s a funny thing when you come to think of it. We\u2019re just babies making up a game if you&#8217;re right. But four babies playing a game can make a play-world that licks your real-world hollow. That\u2019s why I\u2019m going to stand by the play-world. I&#8217;m on Aslan&#8217;s side even if there isn&#8217;t any Aslan to lead it. I&#8217;m going to live as like a Narnian as I can, even if there isn\u2019t any Narnia.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Behold the stubborn <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">credulitas<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> of Puddleglum. Although it may make some uncomfortable, Lewis gives us a daring model of how credulity is a kind of talisman against philosophical naturalism, a spell that still hangs in the air of modern life like a fog.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">As for the fear of being taken in, keep in mind the warning of stricter judgment comes against those who deceive rather than against those who believe. There perhaps are worse things than being bamboozled. In his chapter on \u201cPickwick\u201d in <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Charles Dickens<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, Chesterton defends even the gullible, arguing that the believing man is the one who gets the most out of life. The credulous are those who possess that \u201cgod-like gullibility, which is the key to all adventures.\u201d<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> For those who avoid being \u201ctaken in,\u201d however, to them is given the reward of a dull life. But \u201cTo be taken in everywhere,\u201d writes Chesterton, \u201cis to see the inside of everything. It is the hospitality of circumstance. With torches and trumpets, like a guest, the greenhorn is taken in by Life. And the skeptic is cast out by it.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n<p><b>The Higher Naivet\u00e9\u00a0<\/b><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Consider a final application of this principle for classical educators. In a lecture on the Dark Ages of Greece, former Yale professor Donald Kagan surveys the ways in which the \u201ccritical\u201d schools of the eighteenth century affected a significant change in the epistemological attitude towards the past:<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">[I]f you look at people, say an Englishman writing about Ancient Greece in the late eighteenth century, they tell the story of the early days based upon the legends as though the legends were reliable information to some degree. When you get to say the middle of the nineteenth century and the work of the great English historian of Ancient Greece, George Grote, he begins his story in 776 with the Olympic Games. He does tell you all about the legends first, but he puts them aside and says they\u2019re just legends\u2014now let\u2019s talk history, and he doesn\u2019t begin that until the eighth century B.C. And so there is this critical school that says, \u201cI won\u2019t believe anything unless it is proven to me.\u201d At the other extreme, there\u2019s me, the most gullible historian imaginable. My principle is this. I believe anything written in ancient Latin or Greek unless I can\u2019t. Now, things that prevent me from believing what I read are that they are internally contradictory, or what they say is impossible, or different ones contradict each other, and they can\u2019t both be right. So, in those cases I abandon the ancient evidence. Otherwise, you\u2019ve got to convince me that they\u2019re not true.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Note how Kagan does not shy away from playing the \u201cgullible\u201d historian but wears it almost as a badge of honor. And to make his points further he cites the case study of Heinrich Schliemann and his discovery of ancient Troy. <\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Schliemann, the then unlearned businessman, did not merely believe <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">in<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> Homer as the single poet behind <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The Iliad<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> and <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The Odyssey<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">. He also believed in the gods and in the events of the Homeric epics, and at a time when the academic world relegated such things to the fictions of deluded poets or to the clever tricks of national sophistry. Almost no scholar at the time took Schliemann\u2019s claims seriously. Then he found Troy, along with Helen\u2019s jewelry and the death \u201cMask of Agamemnon.\u201d Although Kagan tempers his view of Schliemann\u2019s discoveries, he nevertheless admits that it has forced him to arrive at an epistemological position he calls the \u201cHigher Naivet\u00e9.\u201d We come to the Higher Naivet\u00e9 by a combination of two virtues: serious study and scholastic humility. Kagan explains:<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Now, you might think of this as, indeed, gullible. \u2026 I like to claim this approach, the position of scholarship, which we call the higher naivet\u00e9. The way this works is, that you start out, you don\u2019t know anything, and you\u2019re na\u00efve. You believe everything. Next, you get a college education and you don\u2019t believe anything, and then you reach the level of wisdom, the higher naivet\u00e9, and you know what to believe even though you can\u2019t prove it. \u2026 I\u2019m a practitioner of the higher naivet\u00e9. So, I think the way to deal with legends is to regard them as different from essentially sophisticated historical statements, but as possibly deriving from facts, which have obviously been distorted and misunderstood, misused, and so on. But it would be reckless, it seems to me, to just put them aside and not ask yourself the question, \u2018Can there be something believable at the root of this?\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">The \u201cHigher Naivet\u00e9\u201d<\/span> <span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">is but the seed of full-fledged belief. Here Kagan puts skepticism in its proper place, and thus, the full revolution of modern learning has been achieved. To borrow Chesterton\u2019s mighty image in <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">Orthodoxy<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, the student goes out in search of giants in his primary education; in college, however, he is told giants don\u2019t exist; later, he finds at the return of his long scholarly pilgrimage that he was living on the grandest of all giants the entire time. But how much better to simply begin with the educational virtue of <\/span><i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">credulitas<\/span><\/i><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">, and not end with it? It seems that modern people are doomed to rediscover as true and good and beautiful those things that were told to us in the nursery.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\">God has made the world, and Solomon tells us that He has made it with glorious matters hidden and \u201cconcealed\u201d within. God has also made mankind with the expectation that he will, as a king, \u201csearch out a matter.\u201d<\/span><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"> We might even say that man is given the burden and blessing of searching out matter itself for the truth behind the physical appearance. In this sense, the example of Henry Schliemann offers a fitting object lesson for all classical educators: learning is a kind of treasure hunt. Classical Christian education is an excavation of the past, a labor that begins not with skepticism but with credulity. For the claims of the past will necessarily collide with the claims of the modern mind. And so our task as classical educators in the modern world is to suspend our disbelief\u2014to, as Chesterton says, \u201cUnlearn that sinister learning that you think so clear; deny that deadly knowledge that you think you know.\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><\/span><\/p>\n<h2>Notes<\/h2>\n<div class=\"footnotes\">\n<hr \/>\n<ol>\n<li id=\"fn1\">And before any pedant wants to clarify the record with <em>De Rerum Natura<\/em>, Lucretius is not an atheist, nor is he a <em>modern<\/em> materialist. For him, physical things were not <em>merely<\/em> matter. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref1\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn2\">G. K. Chesterton, <em>A Short History of England<\/em>, from the 1917 Chatto &amp; Windus Edition (\u00c6gypan Press: La Vergne, TN: 2011), 18. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref2\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn3\">For another defense of legend and traditional folk talk, see also Chesterton\u2019s &#8220;Prefatory Note\u201d in <em>The Ballad of the White Horse<\/em>. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref3\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn4\">Chesterton, <em>A Short History of England<\/em>, 19. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref4\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn5\">This is a jab at Critical Theory. I am, of course, contrasting this older and more charitable form of \u201ctext reception\u201d with the modern interpretative positions of Critical Theory. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref5\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn6\">C. S. Lewis, <em>The Discarded Image<\/em> (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1964), 53.\u00a0<a href=\"#fnref6\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn7\"><em>Ibid<\/em>. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref7\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn8\">The word \u201cintellectual\u201d is technical here. I am referring to the medieval distinction between two types of mental activity: the reasoning labor of the \u201cratio\u201d and the leisured, open perception of the \u201cintellectus.\u201d For additional treatment of these terms, see Joseph Peiper\u2019s <em>Leisure: The Basis of Culture<\/em>. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref8\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn9\">Owen Barfield, <em>Owen Barfield on C.S. Lewis<\/em>, ed. G.B. Tennyson (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 1989), 22.\u00a0<a href=\"#fnref9\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn10\">C. S. Lewis,<em> The Voyage of the Dawn Treader <\/em>(San Francisco: HarperTrophy, 1998), 209. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref10\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn11\">See the work of The neuroscientist and philosopher Iain Migilcrest (<em>The Master and His Emissary<\/em>, <em>The Matter With Things<\/em>, etc.) for a treatment on the way in which \u201cattention\u201d affects our ability to properly grasp reality. In his lecture on \u201cThe Mystery of Consciousness,\u201d Migilcrist notes that even our grasp of matter is weak. \u201cMaterialists,\u201d he argues, \u201care not people who overvalue matter; they\u2019re people who undervalue matter.\u201d Accessed 15 Nov. 2024: <a href=\"https:\/\/youtu.be\/3V3_Y_FuMYk?si=dfgWbMbUvzoOTqLR\">https:\/\/youtu.be\/3V3_Y_FuMYk?si=dfgWbMbUvzoOTqLR<\/a>. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref11\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn12\">Shakespeare, <em>A Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream<\/em>, V.i.3-5. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref12\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn13\">See <em>The Unseen Realm: Recovering the Supernatural Worldview of the Bible<\/em> by Michael S. Heiser (Lexham Press, 2015). \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref13\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn14\"><em>The Nicene Creed<\/em>.\u00a0<a href=\"#fnref14\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn15\">G. K. Chesterton, <em>A Short History of England<\/em>, 20. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref15\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn16\">C. S. Lewis, <em>The Silver Chair <\/em>(San Francisco: HarperTrophy, 1998) 181-182.\u00a0<a href=\"#fnref16\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn17\">G. K. Chesterton, <em>Charles Dickens<\/em> (Cornwall, UK: House of Stratus, 2001) 42. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref17\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn18\">Donald Kagan, \u201cCLCV 205: Introduction to Ancient Greek History, Lecture 3 \u2013 The Dark Ages (Cont.),\u201d <em>Open Yale Courses<\/em>, Accessed 19 Nov. 2024, <a href=\"https:\/\/oyc.yale.edu\/classics\/clcv-205\/lecture-3\">https:\/\/oyc.yale.edu\/classics\/clcv-205\/lecture-3<\/a>. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref18\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn19\">Heinrich Schliemann, <em>Troy and its Remains: A Narrative of Researches and Discoveries Made on the site of Ilium, and in the Trojan Plain<\/em>, (London: J. Murray Publishers, 1875).\u00a0<a href=\"#fnref19\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<li id=\"fn20\"><em>Proverbs<\/em> 25:2.\u00a0<a href=\"#fnref20\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<\/div>\n<p>[\/et_pb_text][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Credulitas and The Way back to the Real &nbsp; August 13, 2025 Written by: Devin O&#8217;Donnell Originally published in ClassisFall 2024, Volume XXXII Issue 2Originally Published In ClassisVolume XXXII, Issue 1 On any given day of the school year, one might walk into the average classroom of an Humanities course situated in the Rhetoric school [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":7,"featured_media":1227,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"on","_et_pb_old_content":"<p>By Devin O'Donnell<\/p><p>On any given day of the school year, one might walk into the average classroom of an Humanities course situated in the Rhetoric school and find students gathered around a text. Surely, there would be a teacher present, either at the front of the room, on a stool, addressing students from behind a podium, or seated with them around a table, asking questions about the text <em>sotto voce<\/em>. If the text were written before the seventeenth or eighteenth century\u2014be it from the Golden Age of Greece or from Late Antiquity in Carthage or at the high noon of Renaissance Italy or at the evening of Dark Age Britain\u2014then the author of that text almost certainly shares an epistemology which the students reading do not. This is revealed quickly, especially when the text is the historical record of an ancient Greek or medieval monk.<\/p><p>Consider an account in Bede\u2019s <em>Ecclesiastical History of the English Nation<\/em>. In Book 2, Bede the Venerable recounts the conversion of King Eabald. The story is told almost in passing\u2014a small vignette in the larger drama of the gospel going forth among the pagan Anglo-Saxons. But Britania has proven a hard field to plow. In Chapter VI, Laurentius, a rather exasperated bishop and fellow missionary, is frustrated with the uncouth barbarians. He is about to give up and quit England for good. Before leaving and following Mellitus and Justus back to Rome, Laurentius sleeps in the Church of the Blessed Apostles Peter and Paul. That night he is visited by St. Peter in a dream.<\/p><p>\u201cIn the dead of night,\u201d Bede tells us, \u201cthe blessed prince of the apostles appeared to him, and scourging him a long time with apostolical severity, asked of him, \u2018Why he would forsake the flock which he had committed to him? Or to what shepherds he would commit Christ\u2019s sheep that were in the midst of wolves?\u2019\u201d Peter continues to rebuke Laurentius, leaving the stripes on his back to remind him of his oath to shepherd the flock. Immediately after he wakes up, Larentius does what any medieval bishop would do next. He presents his wounds from St. Peter\u2019s chastisement to King Eabald, who, being a wise pagan, does not doubt the story but was instead \u201cmuch frightened when he heard that the bishop had suffered so much at the hands of the apostle of Christ for his salvation.\u201d Thus, the culture was transformed by the virtue of <em>credulity<\/em>: \u201cThen,\u201d writes Bede, \u201cabjuring the worship of idols, and renouncing his unlawful marriage, [King Eabald] embraced the faith of Christ, and being baptized, promoted the affairs of the church to the utmost of his power.\u201d<\/p><p>A glorious story. In fact, Bede includes in his record the many miracles which took place in the conversion of Britain. This raises a few questions: What is the role of a proper historian? Does he record only those things that a materialist would accept? Or does he record even the mysterious things he cannot explain? In my experience, students seem convinced of the former. What interests students more than the conversion of a pagan kingdom is whether any of the miracles actually happened. They might ask, \u201cDid that thing about Laurentius getting flogged in his sleep <em>really<\/em> happen?\u201d Or, \u201cWas it true that St. Alban\u2019s beheading caused a miraculous spring to flow from the ground?\u201d It may even be that the teacher approaches the text with similar suspicion, and if we are honest with ourselves, such questions immediately come to mind when we read such things. Whenever I have encountered skepticism in my students, convincing them otherwise\u2014that miracles, dragons, fairies, and ghosts are real\u2014is an experience not unlike an exorcism. Students do not ask such questions out of joy but out of skepticism. They often want teachers to comfort them with safe answers that affirm their jaded disbelief in even the possibility of such accounts.<\/p><p>Some students might possibly reach for a psychoanalytic explanation of things, that St. Peter was really a projection of Laurentius\u2019s own guilt or something along those lines. But this is tenuous, and most students maintain a default reluctance to accept any record that sounds too fantastical. Keep in mind that these students come from Christian families. They grow up reading in Scripture the unambiguous accounts of angels and demons and\u2014if they pay any attention to pre-World War II translations of the Bible\u2014monsters and dragons and satyrs (and so on). They read in the Book of Acts how Paul\u2019s handkerchief, like some kind of talisman, mysteriously becomes a relic to heal the infirmities of those who touch it. And yet, upon hearing similar claims in other texts, these 15-year-old students are suddenly transformed into 55-year-old materialists, looking at events reported from the past with a sideways glance, their squinted eyes jaundiced with incredulity.<\/p><p>And in the end it may be sufficient for students to give a mild assent to the plausibility of Bede\u2019s account. This may be enough for the seed of learning to flourish. But we are not in the business of chronological snobbery. The goal for the instructor is not to make students <em>believe<\/em> in whatever fantastical claim comes from old books simply on the basis that it is old. The goal for classical educators is to preserve the small candle of <em>possibility<\/em> that the winds of modern skepticism would otherwise blow out. Whether it is Bede\u2019s account of Laurentius or Herodotus\u2019s camel-killing ants, Plato\u2019s Atlantis, or Monmouth\u2019s Arthur, the point is not to <em>state<\/em>, \u201cThis could not happen,\u201d but to <em>ask<\/em>, \u201cWhy couldn\u2019t this happen?\u201d<\/p><p><strong>The Discarded Intellectual Virtue<\/strong><\/p><p>Old books are not easily thrown down. They bear the weight of glory. As the reader interprets this kind of text, the text interprets the reader. What does this mean? For one thing, it means that if we read books that come before the seventeenth century, we should not be surprised when a kind of functional atheism is revealed. But materialism is neither Christian nor classical.<sup id=\"fnref1\"><a href=\"#fn1\" rel=\"footnote\">1<\/a><\/sup> This disposition constitutes a poor study of history. The most important parts of history, G. K. Chesterton argued, are the strange, the mysterious, the miraculous elements that often go overlooked by the modern historian, who looks to physical causes as the more authentic and authoritative explanation.<\/p><p>For instance, the modern historian might find the legends of Arthur, however charming they might sound, to be silly and dubious historical evidence. Instead, \u201cThe nineteenth-century historians went on the curious principle of dismissing all people of whom tales are told and concentrating upon people of whom nothing is told.\u201d<sup id=\"fnref2\"><a href=\"#fn2\" rel=\"footnote\">2<\/a><\/sup> But while modern progressives fuss over whether \u201clegend\u201d can be validated as historically reliable, Chesterton argues that \u201ccredulity is certainly much more sane than incredulity.\u201d<sup id=\"fnref3\"><a href=\"#fn3\" rel=\"footnote\">3<\/a><\/sup> It is nothing more than common sense. \u201cThat fictitious stories are told about a person is, nine times out of ten, extremely good evidence that there was somebody to tell them about.\u201d A \u201cthoughtless skepticism\u201d is the only other alternative. \u201cI do not understand,\u201d says Chesterton, \u201cthe attitude which holds that there was an Ark and a man named Noah, but cannot believe in the existence of Noah\u2019s Ark.\u201d<sup id=\"fnref4\"><a href=\"#fn4\" rel=\"footnote\">4<\/a><\/sup><\/p><p>It may be easy to blame modern historians who seek to diminish or debunk the almost fairytale-like events on which the course of history often turns. But students and teachers in classical Christian schools are functionally not much different. Perhaps the greatest threat to handing on a classical Christian paideia is the besetting sin of our secular world: incredulity. For those who can no longer wonder at a God who can break into the cosmos in such a way as to allow for St. Alban\u2019s executioner to miraculously fall dead, the ability to learn is lost. The student is not benefited by his incredulity. The student is in no way advantaged by his skepticism. Faith is the basis of knowledge. How can a student gain knowledge if he does not first believe?<\/p><p>In <em>The Discarded Image<\/em>, C. S. Lewis makes this point almost in passing. Credulity, he argues, must come first. It is an idea of massive consequence and one that is not only the byproduct of an older Christian worldview. In a passage dealing with Plato\u2019s <em>Timaeus<\/em>, Lewis comments on the way in which Plato enjoins his readers to accept the claims of past authors, which seems to mark a <em>classical<\/em> standard for \u201creception\u201d of a text.<sup id=\"fnref5\"><a href=\"#fn5\" rel=\"footnote\">5<\/a><\/sup> The context for this passage is about the \u201cGod who created the gods,\u201d and all the genealogies of the gods that follow. Plato writes,<\/p><p>We must accept what was said about them by our ancestors who, according to their own account, were actually their descendants. Surely they must have been well informed about their own progenitors! And who could disbelieve the children of gods?\u2019<sup id=\"fnref6\"><a href=\"#fn6\" rel=\"footnote\">6<\/a><\/sup><\/p><p>Lewis takes this opportunity to hammer the point home. \u201cBy telling us to believe our forebears,\u201d writes Lewis, \u201cPlato is reminding us that <em>credulitas<\/em> must precede all instruction.\u201d<sup id=\"fnref7\"><a href=\"#fn7\" rel=\"footnote\">7<\/a><\/sup> If we have human virtues and theological virtues, then <em>credulitas<\/em> is what we might call an educational or intellectual virtue.<sup id=\"fnref8\"><a href=\"#fn8\" rel=\"footnote\">8<\/a><\/sup> This does not mean that the student mustn\u2019t learn to ask questions. Rather, it means that the student must learn to ask the <em>right <\/em>questions. Instead of asking, \u201cIs that story real?\u201d Students would do better to ask themselves, \u201cWhy should such a story not be real?\u201d Why couldn\u2019t St. Peter scourge a faltering bishop in the middle of his sleep? For all their sins, men in the ancient and medieval periods seemed to possess a more believing posture of the heart and mind, which allowed them to learn, imagine, and create.<\/p><p><strong>On Being Taken In<\/strong><\/p><p>Owen Barfield once remarked on what he called C. S. Lewis\u2019s great \u201cpresence of mind,\u201d that \u201csomehow what he thought about everything was secretly present in what he said about anything.\u201d<sup id=\"fnref9\"><a href=\"#fn9\" rel=\"footnote\">9<\/a><\/sup> Alan Jacobs believes Barfield\u2019s observation was rooted in something deeper: \u201cthat Lewis\u2019s mind was above all characterized by a willingness to be enchanted and that it was this openness to enchantment that held together the various strands of his life.\u201d It is no surprise, then, that Lewis seems to defend <em>credulitas<\/em> in narrative form as well, particularly upon initiation into the land of Narnia. When Peter and Susan first hear of Lucy\u2019s experience in that country, they do not believe her. Professor Digory Kirke later reproaches them for their incredulity, for their small and cramped vision of the world, and for their <em>illogical<\/em> disbelief in their sister\u2019s report. Similarly, Eustace must also learn to see the universe with new eyes. Ramandu admonishes Eustance that even in his \u201creal\u201d world, stars are more than the mere composition of collected flaming gas.<sup id=\"fnref10\"><a href=\"#fn10\" rel=\"footnote\">10<\/a><\/sup> There is a difference here: on the one hand, we have an analytic knowledge that is limited by our attention to only physical things; on the other, we have wonder, which is open and calibrated rightly enough to behold those things beyond our most immediate senses.<sup id=\"fnref11\"><a href=\"#fn11\" rel=\"footnote\">11<\/a><\/sup><\/p><p>But what if Lucy were deceived? What if she were wrong about the wardrobe? We moderns are terribly afraid of being \u201ctaken in\u201d by anything that could be untrue. We would rather play the part of cool-headed Theseus, \u201cI never may believe these antique fables, nor these fairy toys.\u201d<sup id=\"fnref12\"><a href=\"#fn12\" rel=\"footnote\">12<\/a><\/sup> Skepticism might sound wise and knowing and perfectly fitting for the Christian since it is our duty to care about the truth. But Christians educating in the modern world face a different problem. We are not in danger of too readily believing in what Michael S. Heiser calls \u201cThe Unseen Realm.\u201d<sup id=\"fnref13\"><a href=\"#fn13\" rel=\"footnote\">13<\/a><\/sup> <em>Whether<\/em> a supernatural reality exists is an incoherent inquiry. To be Christian necessarily means one accepts and believes in a Reality that comprises \u201call things visible and invisible.\u201d<sup id=\"fnref14\"><a href=\"#fn14\" rel=\"footnote\">14<\/a><\/sup> Where we ought to aim our skepticism instead is at the atheistic fables of materialism and the cunning myths of Marx, which are far more corrosive than the old pagan myths. In the modern stories, the gods are dead, and the world beyond a lie. The modern stories tell us that man was not made in God\u2019s image \u201ca little lower than the angels\u201d yet \u201ccrowned with glory and honor\u201d but that \u201chis grandfather was a chimpanzee and his father a wild man of the woods, caught by hunters and tamed into something like intelligence.\u201d<sup id=\"fnref15\"><a href=\"#fn15\" rel=\"footnote\">15<\/a><\/sup> The Museum of Natural History in Washington, D. C. is a monument to this effect, complete with the epic hymnody of Australopithecus and Cro-Magnon man.<\/p><p>Note, credulity is present in any case. It is the old \u201cnot <em>whether<\/em> but <em>which<\/em>\u201d situation: which account of the world is closer to Reality, the modern skeptic or the medieval mystic? An unfair choice, perhaps, but it does raise questions about the orientation of our epistemology: Upon what foundation does our understanding rest? What do we really want to believe about the world? Chesterton puts it this way:<\/p><p>The fierce poet of the Middle Ages wrote, \u201cAbandon hope, all ye who enter here,\u201d over the gates of the lower world. The emancipated poets of today have written it over the gates of this world. But if we are to understand the story that follows, we must erase that apocalyptic writing, if only for an hour. We must recreate the faith of our fathers, if only as an artistic atmosphere. If, then, you are a pessimist, in reading this story, forego for a little the pleasures of pessimism. Dream for one mad moment that the grass is green. Unlearn that sinister learning that you think so clear; deny that deadly knowledge that you think you know. Surrender the very flower of your culture; give up the very jewel of your pride; abandon hopelessness, all ye who enter here.<\/p><p>It would seem credulity requires not only a charitable epistemology but some amount of courage as well. It is easier to be a skeptic, and it is often preferable to the prospect of being made a gullible fool. Chesterton reminds us, \u201cHis soul will never starve for exploits or excitements who is wise enough to be made a fool of.\u201d Consider how a bit of marshwigglian wisdom can allay the fear of being \u201ctaken in\u201d by stories of a cosmos haunted by the numinous and stalked by the Transcendent.<\/p><p>Towards the climax of <em>The Silver Chair<\/em>, Puddleglum summons up the courage to break the spell of the Witch, who has told them that there is no outside world\u2014no sun, no moon, and nothing called \u201cOverland\u201d:<\/p><p>Suppose we have only dreamed, or made up, all those things\u2014trees and grass<\/p><p>and sun and moon and stars and Aslan himself. Suppose we have. Then all I can say is that, in that case, the made-up things seem a good deal more important than the real ones. Suppose this black pit of a kingdom of yours is the only world. Well, it strikes me as a pretty poor one. And that's a funny thing when you come to think of it. We\u2019re just babies making up a game if you're right. But four babies playing a game can make a play-world that licks your real-world hollow. That\u2019s why I\u2019m going to stand by the play-world. I'm on Aslan's side even if there isn't any Aslan to lead it. I'm going to live as like a Narnian as I can, even if there isn\u2019t any Narnia.<sup id=\"fnref16\"><a href=\"#fn16\" rel=\"footnote\">16<\/a><\/sup><\/p><p>Behold the stubborn <em>credulitas<\/em> of Puddleglum. Although it may make some uncomfortable, Lewis gives us a daring model of how credulity is a kind of talisman against philosophical naturalism, a spell that still hangs in the air of modern life like a fog.<\/p><p>As for the fear of being taken in, keep in mind the warning of stricter judgment comes against those who deceive rather than against those who believe. There perhaps are worse things than being bamboozled. In his chapter on \u201cPickwick\u201d in <em>Charles Dickens<\/em>, Chesterton defends even the gullible, arguing that the believing man is the one who gets the most out of life. The credulous are those who possess that \u201cgod-like gullibility, which is the key to all adventures.\u201d<sup id=\"fnref17\"><a href=\"#fn17\" rel=\"footnote\">17<\/a><\/sup> For those who avoid being \u201ctaken in,\u201d however, to them is given the reward of a dull life. But \u201cTo be taken in everywhere,\u201d writes Chesterton, \u201cis to see the inside of everything. It is the hospitality of circumstance. With torches and trumpets, like a guest, the greenhorn is taken in by Life. And the skeptic is cast out by it.\u201d<\/p><p><strong>The Higher Naivet\u00e9 <\/strong><\/p><p>Consider a final application of this principle for classical educators. In a lecture on the Dark Ages of Greece, former Yale professor Donald Kagan surveys the ways in which the \u201ccritical\u201d schools of the eighteenth century affected a significant change in the epistemological attitude towards the past:<\/p><p>[I]f you look at people, say an Englishman writing about Ancient Greece in the late eighteenth century, they tell the story of the early days based upon the legends as though the legends were reliable information to some degree. When you get to say the middle of the nineteenth century and the work of the great English historian of Ancient Greece, George Grote, he begins his story in 776 with the Olympic Games. He does tell you all about the legends first, but he puts them aside and says they\u2019re just legends\u2014now let\u2019s talk history, and he doesn\u2019t begin that until the eighth century B.C. And so there is this critical school that says, \u201cI won\u2019t believe anything unless it is proven to me.\u201d At the other extreme, there\u2019s me, the most gullible historian imaginable. My principle is this. I believe anything written in ancient Latin or Greek unless I can\u2019t. Now, things that prevent me from believing what I read are that they are internally contradictory, or what they say is impossible, or different ones contradict each other, and they can\u2019t both be right. So, in those cases I abandon the ancient evidence. Otherwise, you\u2019ve got to convince me that they\u2019re not true.<sup id=\"fnref18\"><a href=\"#fn18\" rel=\"footnote\">18<\/a><\/sup><\/p><p>Note how Kagan does not shy away from playing the \u201cgullible\u201d historian but wears it almost as a badge of honor. And to make his points further he cites the case study of Heinrich Schliemann and his discovery of ancient Troy. <sup id=\"fnref19\"><a href=\"#fn19\" rel=\"footnote\">19<\/a><\/sup><\/p><p>Schliemann, the then unlearned businessman, did not merely believe <em>in<\/em> Homer as the single poet behind <em>The Iliad<\/em> and <em>The Odyssey<\/em>. He also believed in the gods and in the events of the Homeric epics, and at a time when the academic world relegated such things to the fictions of deluded poets or to the clever tricks of national sophistry. Almost no scholar at the time took Schliemann\u2019s claims seriously. Then he found Troy, along with Helen\u2019s jewelry and the death \u201cMask of Agamemnon.\u201d Although Kagan tempers his view of Schliemann\u2019s discoveries, he nevertheless admits that it has forced him to arrive at an epistemological position he calls the \u201cHigher Naivet\u00e9.\u201d We come to the Higher Naivet\u00e9 by a combination of two virtues: serious study and scholastic humility. Kagan explains:<\/p><p>Now, you might think of this as, indeed, gullible. \u2026 I like to claim this approach, the position of scholarship, which we call the higher naivet\u00e9. The way this works is, that you start out, you don\u2019t know anything, and you\u2019re na\u00efve. You believe everything. Next, you get a college education and you don\u2019t believe anything, and then you reach the level of wisdom, the higher naivet\u00e9, and you know what to believe even though you can\u2019t prove it. \u2026 I\u2019m a practitioner of the higher naivet\u00e9. So, I think the way to deal with legends is to regard them as different from essentially sophisticated historical statements, but as possibly deriving from facts, which have obviously been distorted and misunderstood, misused, and so on. But it would be reckless, it seems to me, to just put them aside and not ask yourself the question, \u2018Can there be something believable at the root of this?\u201d<\/p><p>The \u201cHigher Naivet\u00e9\u201d is but the seed of full-fledged belief. Here Kagan puts skepticism in its proper place, and thus, the full revolution of modern learning has been achieved. To borrow Chesterton\u2019s mighty image in <em>Orthodoxy<\/em>, the student goes out in search of giants in his primary education; in college, however, he is told giants don\u2019t exist; later, he finds at the return of his long scholarly pilgrimage that he was living on the grandest of all giants the entire time. But how much better to simply begin with the educational virtue of <em>credulitas<\/em>, and not end with it? It seems that modern people are doomed to rediscover as true and good and beautiful those things that were told to us in the nursery.<\/p><p>God has made the world, and Solomon tells us that He has made it with glorious matters hidden and \u201cconcealed\u201d within. God has also made mankind with the expectation that he will, as a king, \u201csearch out a matter.\u201d<sup id=\"fnref20\"><a href=\"#fn20\" rel=\"footnote\">20<\/a><\/sup> We might even say that man is given the burden and blessing of searching out matter itself for the truth behind the physical appearance. In this sense, the example of Henry Schliemann offers a fitting object lesson for all classical educators: learning is a kind of treasure hunt. Classical Christian education is an excavation of the past, a labor that begins not with skepticism but with credulity. For the claims of the past will necessarily collide with the claims of the modern mind. And so our task as classical educators in the modern world is to suspend our disbelief\u2014to, as Chesterton says, \u201cUnlearn that sinister learning that you think so clear; deny that deadly knowledge that you think you know.\u201d<\/p><p><!-- Footnotes themselves at the bottom. --><\/p><h2>Notes<\/h2><div class=\"footnotes\"><hr \/><ol><li id=\"fn1\">And before any pedant wants to clarify the record with <em>De Rerum Natura<\/em>, Lucretius is not an atheist, nor is he a <em>modern<\/em> materialist. For him, physical things were not <em>merely<\/em> matter. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref1\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn2\">G. K. Chesterton, <em>A Short History of England<\/em>, from the 1917 Chatto & Windus Edition (\u00c6gypan Press: La Vergne, TN: 2011), 18. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref2\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn3\">For another defense of legend and traditional folk talk, see also Chesterton\u2019s \"Prefatory Note\u201d in <em>The Ballad of the White Horse<\/em>. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref3\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn4\">Chesterton, <em>A Short History of England<\/em>, 19. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref4\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn5\">This is a jab at Critical Theory. I am, of course, contrasting this older and more charitable form of \u201ctext reception\u201d with the modern interpretative positions of Critical Theory. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref5\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn6\">C. S. Lewis, <em>The Discarded Image<\/em> (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1964), 53.\u00a0<a href=\"#fnref6\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn7\"><em>Ibid<\/em>. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref7\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn8\">The word \u201cintellectual\u201d is technical here. I am referring to the medieval distinction between two types of mental activity: the reasoning labor of the \u201cratio\u201d and the leisured, open perception of the \u201cintellectus.\u201d For additional treatment of these terms, see Joseph Peiper\u2019s <em>Leisure: The Basis of Culture<\/em>. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref8\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn9\">Owen Barfield, <em>Owen Barfield on C.S. Lewis<\/em>, ed. G.B. Tennyson (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 1989), 22.\u00a0<a href=\"#fnref9\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn10\">C. S. Lewis,<em> The Voyage of the Dawn Treader <\/em>(San Francisco: HarperTrophy, 1998), 209. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref10\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn11\">See the work of The neuroscientist and philosopher Iain Migilcrest (<em>The Master and His Emissary<\/em>, <em>The Matter With Things<\/em>, etc.) for a treatment on the way in which \u201cattention\u201d affects our ability to properly grasp reality. In his lecture on \u201cThe Mystery of Consciousness,\u201d Migilcrist notes that even our grasp of matter is weak. \u201cMaterialists,\u201d he argues, \u201care not people who overvalue matter; they\u2019re people who undervalue matter.\u201d Accessed 15 Nov. 2024: <a href=\"https:\/\/youtu.be\/3V3_Y_FuMYk?si=dfgWbMbUvzoOTqLR\">https:\/\/youtu.be\/3V3_Y_FuMYk?si=dfgWbMbUvzoOTqLR<\/a>. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref11\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn12\">Shakespeare, <em>A Midsummer Night\u2019s Dream<\/em>, V.i.3-5. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref12\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn13\">See <em>The Unseen Realm: Recovering the Supernatural Worldview of the Bible<\/em> by Michael S. Heiser (Lexham Press, 2015). \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref13\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn14\"><em>The Nicene Creed<\/em>.\u00a0<a href=\"#fnref14\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn15\">G. K. Chesterton, <em>A Short History of England<\/em>, 20. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref15\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn16\">C. S. Lewis, <em>The Silver Chair <\/em>(San Francisco: HarperTrophy, 1998) 181-182.\u00a0<a href=\"#fnref16\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn17\">G. K. Chesterton, <em>Charles Dickens<\/em> (Cornwall, UK: House of Stratus, 2001) 42. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref17\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn18\">Donald Kagan, \u201cCLCV 205: Introduction to Ancient Greek History, Lecture 3 \u2013 The Dark Ages (Cont.),\u201d <em>Open Yale Courses<\/em>, Accessed 19 Nov. 2024, <a href=\"https:\/\/oyc.yale.edu\/classics\/clcv-205\/lecture-3\">https:\/\/oyc.yale.edu\/classics\/clcv-205\/lecture-3<\/a>. \u00a0<a href=\"#fnref18\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn19\">Heinrich Schliemann, <em>Troy and its Remains: A Narrative of Researches and Discoveries Made on the site of Ilium, and in the Trojan Plain<\/em>, (London: J. Murray Publishers, 1875).\u00a0<a href=\"#fnref19\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><li id=\"fn20\"><em>Proverbs<\/em> 25:2.\u00a0<a href=\"#fnref20\" rev=\"footnote\">\u21a9<\/a><\/li><\/ol><\/div>","_et_gb_content_width":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[10],"tags":[31],"class_list":["post-1226","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-article","tag-classical-education"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v25.1 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Credulitas and the Way Back to the Real - Classis<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/classicalchristian.org\/classis\/credulitas\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Credulitas and the Way Back to the Real - 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