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Life & Wisdom Quote by Gilbert K. Chesterton

"Buddhism is not a creed, it is a doubt"

About this Quote

Chesterton lands the jab with the elegance of someone who can praise an opponent while still slipping in the knife. “Buddhism is not a creed, it is a doubt” reads like a definition, but it’s really a polemic: a Christian apologist reframing a rival tradition as a mood rather than a message. By calling it “doubt,” he denies Buddhism the thing creeds claim to offer - a firm account of reality, a yes you can stand on. In Chesterton’s world, doubt isn’t neutral curiosity; it’s spiritual anemia, a refusal to risk conviction.

The line also reveals his deeper fear of modernity’s cool, cultivated uncertainty. Early 20th-century Western intellectual life was flirting with “Eastern wisdom,” skepticism, and the idea that liberation comes from loosening the self’s grip on certainty. Chesterton’s counter-move is rhetorical: if Christianity is a story with a spine (creation, sin, redemption), Buddhism becomes the elegant shrug. He’s not engaging Buddhist doctrine so much as the Western reception of it - the way it can be imported as an aesthetic of detachment, a philosophy for people exhausted by moral and metaphysical claims.

The craft is in the antithesis: “creed” suggests communal speech, a shared declaration; “doubt” suggests a private posture, endlessly self-revising. Chesterton knows a culture can survive disagreement, but it can’t organize around hesitation. The subtext is blunt: a civilization that canonizes doubt will end up with a spirituality that can soothe, but not command.

Quote Details

TopicReason & Logic
Source
Verified source: The Man Who Was Thursday (Gilbert K. Chesterton, 1908)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Sunday has taught me the last and the worst doubts, the doubts of a spiritualist. I am a Buddhist, I suppose; and Buddhism is not a creed, it is a doubt. (Chapter XIV (“The Six Philosophers” / “The Six Philosophers”)). This wording appears in Chesterton’s own text (a novel), spoken by the character “the Professor” during Chapter XIV. This is a primary source in Chesterton’s published work. While many quote sites attribute the line generally to Chesterton, the earliest verifiable appearance I can confirm in a primary source is in this 1908 novel (not in Orthodoxy). I have not, in this search pass, located an earlier occurrence in Chesterton’s essays/speeches prior to 1908; the claim that it is in Orthodoxy ch. 6 appears to be a secondary-source error.
Other candidates (1)
Father Brown: The Works G. K. Chesterton (Gilbert Keith Chesterton, 2016) compilation95.0%
... Buddhism is not a creed, it is a doubt. My poor dear Bull, I do not believe that you really have a face. I have n...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Chesterton, Gilbert K. (2026, February 9). Buddhism is not a creed, it is a doubt. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/buddhism-is-not-a-creed-it-is-a-doubt-7365/

Chicago Style
Chesterton, Gilbert K. "Buddhism is not a creed, it is a doubt." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/buddhism-is-not-a-creed-it-is-a-doubt-7365/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Buddhism is not a creed, it is a doubt." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/buddhism-is-not-a-creed-it-is-a-doubt-7365/. Accessed 11 Feb. 2026.

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Buddhism is Not a Creed, It is a Doubt - Chesterton
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Gilbert K. Chesterton

Gilbert K. Chesterton (May 29, 1874 - June 14, 1936) was a Writer from England.

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