Anthony A. J. Williams

The Christian Left


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responsibly, thereby demonstrating their neighbourly commitment to one another. ‘The Municipality is sacred to us. It is our only instrument by which to fulfil the commandment of our Lord – “You shall love your neighbour as yourself”.’50 Yet, Holland adds, there is another instrument that can achieve even more – the state itself. Given Holland’s view of the interconnectedness of the national and international economy, it is the state by which Christian love may be demonstrated to all the inhabitants of a nation and to those in other nations. ‘We invoke the State, then. We call upon it to relieve our individual conscience by doing for us what we are powerless to do for ourselves.’51 This, argues Holland, is not an abdication of responsibility but the recognition of a practical reality – economic relations have grown into such a complex system that the structures of local and national government must be brought into play in order to establish the social ethics of Christianity. It might not be necessary for the state to do all the things that socialists desire, but some regulation of the economy is necessary in order to enshrine love for neighbour. ‘Law is liberty’, declares Holland. ‘Why do we fail to see this?’52

      To twenty-first-century readers Scott Holland’s invocation of the state sounds troublingly authoritarian, the slogan ‘Law is liberty’ alarmingly Orwellian. Holland, though, has nothing so sinister in mind. His view here is, for example, of factory legislation, which frees workers from the exploitative demands of their employers, or welfare reforms, which set individuals at liberty from the fear and the threat of destitution.53 This is a positive conception of liberty, which to be sure may lend itself to an authoritarian agenda – but such was not Holland’s agenda. Individuals had inalienable rights. Local government kept a check on national government, and viceversa. Democracy ensured that the state served the people rather than the people serving the state.54 There was no reason that legislating Christian ethics would lead to authoritarianism; rather, it would lead to ‘a Kingdom of earthly righteousness and social happiness […] The Holy Jerusalem descends from heaven to Earth: the City of God.’55

      Gore was ambivalent on whether he regarded himself as a socialist, suggesting that society would do well to take a few steps towards socialism without going the whole way.62 This argument, taken alongside Gore’s denial of absolute rights to property and Holland’s view that the state could and should bound the economy with regulations, suggests that their vision was one that today we would label as social democratic – not the abolition but the management of capitalism. The CSU was ‘definitely anticapitalist and indefinitely socialist’.63 The CSU however, though it did support important reforms, did not declare any firm programme for economic or political change, retaining a ‘non-committal attitude’ which, despite Gore and Holland’s awareness that this was an issue, ‘began to make the more radical Christian Socialists somewhat disillusioned’.64

      Noel and Headlam both held that a sacramental Christianity was the only legitimate basis for socialism; they looked down on low-church and evangelical Anglicans, reserving particular scorn for Nonconformists. Yet church socialism was not an exclusively Anglo-Catholic phenomenon, nor was it reserved for the established church. A key figure was John Clifford (1836–1923), President of the Baptist Union of England and Wales, who also served as president of the predominantly Nonconformist Christian Socialist League, as well as being active in the Free Church Socialist League. The declaration of this latter organisation expressed its commitment to socialism in a manner that, excepting the lack of sacramental emphasis, would have satisfied Noel or Headlam:

      Believing that the principle of Brotherhood as taught by Jesus Christ cannot adequately be wrought out under existing industrial and commercial conditions, and that the faithful and commonplace application of this principle must result in the Socialization of all natural resources, as well as the instruments of production, distribution and exchange, the League exists to assist in the work of eliminating the former by building the latter Social Order.70

      Another notable representative of Nonconformist socialism was Samuel E. Keeble (1853–1946), a Wesleyan Methodist minister and founder of the Wesleyan Methodist Union for Social Service along similar lines to the CSU. As well as being committed to social service, Keeble was a gifted student of economics and a prolific writer, producing many books and pamphlets on social and economic – as well as theological – issues. Chief among these was Industrial Day-Dreams (1896)