Anthony A. J. Williams

The Christian Left


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proceeds upon the principle of unscrupulous competition, of treating human labour as a mere commodity, and human beings as mere ‘pawns’ in the game of making money, as mere means to a selfish end; of taking advantage of one man’s poverty and necessity, and of another man’s ignorance; which sanctions the law of might, and not of right, and the principle of survival of the fittest for success in the scramble for material wealth – no such system […] can by any stretch of generosity be called Christian.73

      While no slavish adherent of Marx – Keeble doubted the labour theory of value, for example – he nevertheless valued the insight of Marx and Engels on the systematic ways in which capitalism exploits the working class.74 Keeble did not believe that state ownership of industry should be the universal rule but, like Scott Holland, favoured a system in which both local and national government would regulate the economy to prevent such exploitation.75 This, he held, was required by ‘the great Christian principles of the Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood of Man’.76 The Christian Gospel, Keeble explained, had two elements, individual and social, and ‘[t]he social gospel is as sacred and as indispensable as the individual gospel’.77

      Temple continued to assert that right, nowhere more so than in Christianity and the Social Order (1942), an exploration of the Christian principles that should underpin the post-war reconstruction of society. Temple declared that the capitalist system was not condemned merely on the selfish say-so of those who did not benefit from it, but precisely because, in favouring a small class of wealthy people and exploiting the rest, such a system outraged the principles of justice.80 No individual should be subject to exploitation because – contrary to what appearances would suggest – all people are equal, for ‘all are children of one Father […] all are equal heirs of a status in comparison with which the apparent differences of quality and capacity are unimportant’.81 Temple echoed Gore – and, indeed, his friend Tawney – in asserting that property rights were not absolute, as well as Scott Holland in his argument that ‘[l]aw exists to preserve and extend real freedom’. Here, Temple also asserts a positive conception of liberty: freedom, he argued, ‘must be freedom for something as well as freedom from something’.82 A system that produces material benefits, even where those benefits are not absolutely restricted to the wealthiest class, is nevertheless condemned insofar as it does not conform to the principles of justice, equality and freedom.

      Hardie’s Marxism, though, was inconsistent. He appealed to Marx to support his own political activism, arguing that the policy and methods of the ILP and the Labour Party were in keeping with those laid down by Marx and Engels, and was happy to refer to Marxist analysis in order to denounce capitalism.90 Yet he was no systematic Marxist, his biographer Bob Holman suggesting that ‘Hardie read some Marx and selected bits which fitted with his own views of an ethical and peaceful socialism’.91 Hardie’s assertion that the teaching and arguments of Jesus Christ were the basis of his socialism must be taken seriously; anything else, even the theories of Marx and Engels, was an optional extra. In this Hardie stands as representative for the labour movement and the mainstream British Left, which holds to a non-Marxist ethical socialism of which Christianity was a key component. This differs from the social democratic parties of Europe – the German SPD being the chief example (see Chapter 3) – which, whether orthodox or revisionist, absorbed an anticlericalism and, indeed, an atheism that remained a minority position in the early days of the Labour Party.