Anthony A. J. Williams

The Christian Left


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Magnificat and in the life and teaching of Christ, as a ‘revolutionary’ creed with which the church can and should seek to remodel society. If taken seriously, the Christian message ‘destroys alike the arbitrary power of the few and the slavery of many’.114 Political historians Matt Beech and Kevin Hickson conclude that, ‘for Tawney democratic socialism is only possible because it flows from his Christian faith’.115

      Tawney, despite this overlap with conservatism, was most certainly a socialist. In another of his key works, Equality, published in 1931, he urged a socialist vision committed to tackling the inequalities caused by capitalism. Tawney did not suggest that all individuals are naturally equal to one another, as though ‘all men are equally intelligent or equally virtuous, any more than they are equally tall or equally fat’, but that ‘it is the mark of a civilized society to aim at eliminating such inequalities as have their source, not in individual differences, but in its own organization’.124 Equality of opportunity, argued Tawney, was an illusion in a society that systematically excluded whole classes of people from educational opportunities, the highest-paying jobs, and all positions of power and influence; it was necessary to seek equality of outcome, or at least to minimise inequality of outcome. Without this ‘the phrase equality of opportunity is obviously a jest, to be described as amusing or heartless according to taste’.125 It was not in Tawney’s view necessary to observe a strict equalisation of incomes, even if such a thing were possible; rather, the aim was ‘the pooling of [the nation’s] surplus resources by means of taxation, and the use of the funds thus obtained to make accessible to all, irrespective of their income, occupation, or social position the conditions of civilization, which, in the absence of such measures, can only be enjoyed by the rich’.126 It is this vision that Tawney commended to the Labour Party, and which the party set about putting into practice at the end of the Second World War.

      It was F.D. Maurice, Charles Kingsley and John Ludlow who provided the theological grounding for the Christian Socialist vision, expounding the universal Fatherhood of God and the consequent brotherhood of all people, as well as asserting co-operation to be the natural outworking of these spiritual truths. The next generation of church socialists expanded this political theology into a recognisably socialist or social democratic vision of a whole society characterised by equality, co-operation and democracy.127 Unlike European socialism, which, following Marx and Engels, remained largely opposed to religion as a reactionary force and a form of false consciousness, this Christian Socialist vision also had adherents in the Labour Party: James Keir Hardie, George Lansbury, John Wheatley and others. After two unsuccessful terms in office the Labour Party, guided by figures such as William Temple and R.H. Tawney, finally succeeded in translating this vision into a programme of real social and economic change.

      1 1. Chris Bryant, Possible Dreams: A Personal History of the British Christian Socialists (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1996), pp. 81–2.

      2 2. James Keir Hardie, ‘Labour and Christianity: is the labour movement against Christianity?’, in Labour and Religion: by Ten Members of Parliament and Other Bodies (London: n.p, 1910), p. 49.

      3 3. Bryant, Possible Dreams, p. 41.

      4 4. John C. Cort, Christian Socialism: An Informal History (Maryknoll NY: Orbis Books, 2020 [1988]), p. 159.

      5 5. Bryant, Possible Dreams, p. 37.

      6 6. Gary Dorrien, Social Democracy in the Making: Political and Religious Roots of European Socialism (Yale CT: Yale University Press, 2019), p. 43.

      7 7. Cort, Christian Socialism, p. 161.

      8 8. Jeremy Morris, ‘F.D. Maurice and the myth of Christian Socialist origins’, in Stephen Spencer, ed., Theology Reforming Society: Revisiting Anglican Social Theology (London: SCM Press, 2017), p. 5; Bryant, Possible Dreams, p. 43.

      9 9. Morris, ‘F.D. Maurice’, p. 5

      10 10. F.D. Maurice, ‘Tracts on Christian Socialism, Tract 1 (1850)’ in Ellen K. Wondra, ed., Reconstructing Christian Ethics: Selected Writings of F.D. Maurice (Louisville KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 1995), p. 196.

      11 11. Ibid., pp. 202 and 205.

      12 12. Alan Wilkinson, Christian Socialism: Scott Holland to Tony Blair (London: SCM Press, 1998), p. 18.

      13 13. Jeremy Morris, F.D. Maurice and the Crisis of Christian Authority (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008), pp. 135 and 146.

      14 14. Ibid., pp. 146, 158 and 67.

      15 15.