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<h2> KEIR HARDIE ON CHRIST. </h2>
<p>For some time the Labor leaders have been assiduously courted by the
Churches. It is reckoned good business to have one on exhibition at
Congresses and Conferences. Ben Tillett is in frequent request as a
preacher. Tom Mann, who was once heterodox, is now declared by the <i>Christian
Commonwealth</i> to be a member of a Christian Church. "We are not aware,"
our contemporary says, "that John Burns is opposed to the religion of
Jesus Christ."</p>
<p>This appropriation of the Labor leaders is an excellent piece of strategy.
Churches have seldom had the harmlessness of doves, but they have
generally had the cunning of serpents. They often stoop, but always to
conquer. And this is precisely what they are doing in the present case.</p>
<p>A year or two ago a leading Socialist, who is also an Atheist, remarked to
us how the clericals were creeping into the Socialist movement. "Yes," we
observed, "and they will appropriate and stifle it. They will talk about
the Socialism of Jesus Christ, bamboozle your followers, and get them out
of your control. Then the Socialism will gradually disappear, and Jesus
Christ will be left in sole possession of the field. The clericals, in
fact, will trump your best cards, if you let them take part in the game."</p>
<p>We warn the Labor leaders, whether they listen to us or not, that they are
coquetting with the historic enemy of the people. All religion is a
consecration of the past, and every minister is at heart a priest. The
social and political object of Churches is to keep things as they are; or,
if they <i>must</i> be altered, to control the alteration in the interest
of wealth and privilege. Fine words may be uttered and popular sentiments
may be echoed; but history teaches us that when the leaders of religion
talk in this way, they are serving their one great purpose as surely as
when they curse and damn the rebellious multitude.</p>
<p>The course of events will show whether we are right or wrong. Meanwhile
let us "return to our sheep." Not that Mr. Keir Hardie is a sheep. We
don't mean that, though he is certainly being attended to by the wolves.</p>
<p>Mr. Keir Hardie has been interviewed by the <i>Christian Commonwealth</i>.
"His father," we are informed, "is a very vigorous and militant Atheist,
so that the son was brought up without any religious belief." To some
extent we believe this is true. Mr. Hardie's brother, and another member
of the family, attended our last lectures at Glasgow. But we do not
understand that Mr. Keir Hardie was ever a professed Atheist, or a member
of any Freethought society. The scepticism he was "weaned from" by the
Evangelical Union Church could hardly have been of a very robust order. He
seems to have imbibed a sentimental form of Christianity as easily and
comfortably as a cat laps milk.</p>
<p>During his last election contest the statement was circulated that Mr.
Keir Hardie was an Atheist. "Whereupon," we are told, "Dr. James Morison,
the venerable founder of the Evangelical Union, and Dr. Fergus Ferguson,
of Glasgow, both wrote in the most eulogistic terms to a local clergyman
as to Mr. Hardie's moral character and religious work in Scotland." This
is extremely affecting. It is good to see parliamentary candidates walking
about with certificates of moral character—written out by a local
minister. It is also reassuring to find that such a certificate is an
absolute answer to the charge of Atheism, No doubt Mr. Keir Hardie will
print the testimonial as a postscript to his next election address at West
Ham.</p>
<p>Mr. Keir Hardie calls himself a Christian. He does not say, however, if he
believes in the supernatural part of the Gospels. Does he accept the New
Testament miracles? Does he embrace the Incarnation and Resurrection? If
he does, he is a Christian. If he does not, he has no more right to call
himself a Christian than we have to be designated a Buddhist or a
Mohammedan.</p>
<p>The Christianity of the schools, Mr. Keir Hardie says, is dead or dying.
By this he means "the old theological sects." But here we should like him
to be more explicit. Does he think there can be a Christianity <i>without</i>
"theology"? Or does he mean that the "sects" comprise all persons who have
more theology than himself?</p>
<p>But if the Christianity of the schools is dead or dying, the "humanitarian
Christianity of Christ is again coming to the front." Now what <i>is</i>
this humanitarian Christianity of Christ? Upon this point Mr. Keir Hardie
throws but a single ray of light. "The whole of Christ's teachings and
conduct," he says, "proves that he was intensely interested in the bodily
welfare of those with whom he came in contact as a preparative to their
spiritual well-being." This is a clear statement; all we now want is the
clear proof. Mr. Keir Hardie should give it. We believe he cannot; nay, we
defy him to do so. It is idle to cite the so-called "miracles of healing."
They were occasional and special; they had as much effect on the "bodily
welfare" of the Jewish people as tickling has on the gait of an elephant;
and as for their being a "preparative to spiritual well-being," we may ask
the "humanitarian Christians of Christ" to tell us, if they can, how much
of this quality was afterwards displayed by the ladies and gentlemen who
were the lucky subjects (or objects) of Christ's miracles. Mr. Keir Hardie
might also recollect that the said miracles, if they ever happened, are of
no "bodily" importance to the present generation. Humanitarians of to-day
are unable to work miracles; they have to sow the seed of progress, and
await its natural harvest.</p>
<p>Mr. Keir Hardie is undoubtedly an earnest social reformer. We wish him all
success in his efforts to raise the workers and procure for them a just
share of the produce of their industry. Some of his methods may be
questionable without affecting his sincerity. If we all saw eye to eye
there would be no problems to settle. What we object to is the fond
imagination that any light upon the labor question, or any actual social
problem, can be found in the teachings of Christ. Jesus of Nazareth never
taught industry, or forethought, or any of the robuster virtues of
civilisation. On one occasion he said that his kingdom was not of this
world. He might certainly have said so of his teaching. It is all very
well for Mr. Keir Hardie to assert that our "industrial system is foreign
to the spirit of Christianity." What <i>is</i> the spirit of Christianity?
Twenty different things in as many different minds. <i>Some</i> industrial
system is a necessity, and whatever it is you will never find its real
principles in the Gospels. Christ's one social panacea was "giving to the
poor," and this is the worst of all "reformations." It only disguises
social evils. The world could do very well without "charity" if it only
had justice and common sense.</p>
<p>Charles Bradlaugh, the Atheist, was laughed at for advocating the
compulsory cultivation of waste lands. He wanted to see labor and capital
employed upon them, even if they yielded no rent to landlords. Mr. Keir
Hardie, the Christian, also desires to bring the people into "contact with
nature and mother earth," though his recipe, of "open spaces laid down in
grass" seems ludicrously inadequate. The loss of this contact, he told his
interviewer, is "accountable for much of the Atheism which is a natural
product of city life." This "tender thought" was spoken in a voice "which
sank almost to a whisper." Very naturally it struck the interviewer as
"the finest and most beautiful of Mr. Hardie's utterances."</p>
<p>Both the interviewer and Mr. Keir Hardie forgot a fact of Christian
history. Christianity spread in the towns of the Roman Empire. The pagans
were the villagers—<i>paganus</i> meaning a countryman or rustic.
Possibly some of the pagans said to themselves, "Ah, this Christianity is
a natural product of the towns."</p>
<p>The diagnosis is in both cases empirical. In a certain sense, however, Mr.
Keir Hardie has touched a truth. Progressive ideas must always originate
in the keen life of cities. But in another sense Mr. Keir Hardie is
mistaken. He seems to regard Atheism as a city malady, like rickets and
anemia. Now this is untrue. It is also absurd. Mr. Keir Hardie would find
a good many of these "afflicted" Atheists able to make mincemeat of his
"humanitarian Christianity of Christ." He would also find, if he cared to
look, a great many of them in the Socialist camp. It would be rare sport
to see Mr. Keir Hardie defending his "new school" Christianity against the
young bloods of the Fabian Society, though it might necessitate the
interference of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty.</p>
<p>But we do not wish to part from Mr. Keir Hardie in a spirit of sarcasm. If
he is a hopeless sentimentalist there is no more to be said; but, if he is
capable of reason in matters of religion, we appeal to him, in all
sincerity, not to press the new wine of Humanitarianism into the old
bottles of Christianity. He will only break the bottles and lose the wine.
We also implore him to cease talking nonsense about Christianity being "a
life, and not a doctrine." It never can be the one without the other.
Finally, we beg him to consider what is the real value of Christianity if,
after all these centuries, it is necessary to put "humanitarian" in front
of it, in order to give it a chance in decent society.</p>
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