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Why are most Christians on the defensive with respect to Marxism?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 April 2024
Extract
The quality of Christian life partly depends on how those who believe in Jesus understand what religion is about. As a theologian I am not directly concerned with the pros and cons of Marxist theory and of Communist practice. My preoccupation is rather firstly to pay attention to Marx’s denying any permanent value to Christian ethics and religion; secondly to ask whether Marx’s assessment of Christian practice is compatible or not with the way most of the faithful have interpreted Christianity in the last few centuries; and thirdly to offer a few considerations on the possibility of partially overcoming religious idealism with the help of both psychology and Marxism.
I hope that it will become evident in due course that a certain number of Christians have been, are and will be on the defensive with respect to Marxism inasmuch as they are a very definite brand of believers, whom we may call ‘idealist’ believers. I shall argue that so far as we are idealist believers, we cannot but forthrightly reject Marxism en bloc, because to our idealist eyes, it necessarily looks like pure materialism. Being two extremes, sheer idealism and sheer materialism cannot but repudiate each other. And in contrast to this main reason for banning Marx from being a partner in fruitful dialogue, I consider as secondary all the other — often legitimate — reasons that we may have to criticize many aspects of both Marxist theory and Communist practice.
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- Copyright © 1983 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers
References
1 By ‘pure’ or ‘sheer’ materialism, I evidently do not mean Marx's dialectical materialism, but a somewhat mechanistic materialism which can coexist with idealism in the minds of people who think of themselves as being either Christian or Communist. For illuminating comments on materialism, see Macmurray, John, ‘The New Materialism’, in Murry, J M, ed. Marxism, London: Chapman & Hall, 1935, pp 43‐58Google Scholar; see also Lash, Nicholas, A Matter of Hope, London: Darton, Longman & Todd, 1981, ch 8‐12Google Scholar.
2 Early Writings, Penguin, 1975, p 244Google Scholar.
3 ‘Christian and Marxist Dialectic’, in MacKinnon, D M, ed. Christian Faith and Communist Faith, London: Macmillan, 1953, p 232Google Scholar.