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Christians and The Class-Struggle

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 October 2024

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Marxism is not a philosophy. It is a technique of revolution. Hence the critique of those whose minds are fixed in academic ways of thought nearly always misses the point. We are not dealing with a system of thinking which claims its confirmation in the identities of being, but with one which claims its confirmation in action and in practice. Moreover it does not confirm itself by referring back to traditional ways of action or established practice; it claims its verification in the unity of thought with revolutionary practice. And it is not merely catastrophic in its method; far less is it merely Utopian. That type of criticism, therefore, which paints Marxism as a Utopian system in order to ridicule it as such may have some bearing on the various forms of Utopian socialism which Marx and his followers always fiercely attacked, but practically none on Marxism.

The basic concept of dialectic materialism is matter in motion, and essentially so. “Motion,” says Engels (Anti-Dühring) “is the mode of existence of matter.” To apply this principle to society, the social situation must be understood in its process if we are to enter at all into the Marxian outlook. For Marxism is a system of social dynamics and it is often rejected at the cost of losing also any grasp of history as a real and living development rather than as a marginal note to an a priori thesis independent of our carnal lives.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1937 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

1 Catholicism, Protestantism and Capitalism, by Amintore Fanfani (Sheed & Ward).

2 Gf. Prof. Goetz Briefs, Le Prolétariat Industriel:“… envisages le travail à la façon d'une matière exploitable coûteuse et en faire me chose économique. Une matière d'exploitation doit être aussi bon marché que possible et cependant féconde. autant que possible susceptible d'adaptation, autant que possible d'un emploi pen onéreux et peu encombrant; il faut qu'elle se prête à une évaluation complète, qu'on puisse l' échanger sans surprise et à tout moment: tels sont aussi les caractères d'un travai ‘idéal’ envisagé du point de vue de l'exploitation et de l'entreprise.”

3 Cf. Jacques Maritain's Introduction to Goetz Briefs, op. cit.:“La division de la société en ‘classes’ est tout autre chose que la division de la société en ‘ordres,’ et il fallait que les ordres fussent abolis pour que les classes apparussent”.

4 Taistan d'Athayde: Fragments de sociologie chrétienne, cited by Fanfani, op. cit.

5 Quadragesimo Anno, C.T.S. translation, p. 62.