This article addresses the question of the capability of the workig class to
establish democracy.

When the author says: 
Given the gift of hindsight, it is not difficult to specify what they needed
at this juncture.  They needed a secular (materialist) account of the origin
of religion separate from the origin of ideology.  This would allow religion
to function (later on) as the keystone of ruling-class ideology, yet not
preclude explaining its liberationist phases by reference to particular
historical circumstances (such as colonial regimes, for example, or the
importation of slaves, or "guest" workers).  At the same time, and perhaps
more important, it would situate religion in the earliest stages of human
development, before division of labor and the advent of class society.

^^^^^
CB: We might start to give answer to this in reference to ancestor
"worship"/kinship as the foundattion of human society, but not class
inflected religion.



CB 

^^^
http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/saxton071206.html


Marxism and Religion
by Alexander Saxton 

The Break from Hegelian Idealism

Religion and the Human Prospect <http://monthlyreview.org/rathp.htm> 
RELIGION AND THE HUMAN PROSPECT
by Alexander Saxton <http://monthlyreview.org/rathp.htm> 
BUY THIS BOOK
<http://monthlyrevieworg.nationprotect.net/miva/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Sto
re_Code=MRS&Product_Code=PB1331>        
Marx and Engels tell us their break from Hegelian idealism -- and presumably
from religion as well -- was inspired by Ludwig Feuerbach
<http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/feuerbach/index.htm> 's Essence
of Christianity
<http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/feuerbach/works/essence/index.htm
>  (1841).  Feuerbach had proposed a materialist account of religion, to the
effect that humans in primeval times imagined gods in their own image, then
projected and worshipped those same gods; as they came to realize the gods
were reflections of themselves, they would gradually recognize the divine
essence of their humanity.  Marx and Engels adopted a similarly
"materialist" (but no less ambiguous) formulation.  Was this real or
metaphorical?  Or somewhere in between?  The Prometheus
<http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1841/dr-theses/foreword.htm>  of
Marx's doctoral thesis
<http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1841/dr-theses/index.htm>
appears profoundly Feuerbachian, as does the fuzziness of the boundary drawn
there between human and divine.  Well versed though he was in Greek
mythology -- knowing that Prometheus, born of gods and titans, had to be a
god -- Marx nonetheless assigned him human status: "noblest of saints and
martyrs in the calendar of philosophy."  Whence came this divine aspiration
attributed to the human species?  Was it inherent in the cosmos?  Had
Feuerbach simply substituted a Spinozean pantheism for Christianity's
orthodox theism?  And did Marx and Engels concur?  They soon distanced
themselves from Feuerbach, yet they would not hesitate to impose on
proletarians the god-like tasks of Prometheus.

Despite these ambivalences of concept and explanation, Marx and Engels
remained nonbelievers and foes of institutionalized religion.  This heritage
from the Left Enlightenment they powerfully transmitted to their followers
thus helping to ensure that through the next century and a half Marxist
parties would serve as prime targets for religion's multitudinous defenders.
At the same time -- more than any other nineteenth-century tendency of
radical anti-capitalism -- Marxism remained open to labor unionism and
working-class politics.  Marxist activists proved influential leaders in
both these enterprises.  It may not be irrelevant, therefore, to ask how
successful they were in pursuing the party line on religion and whether it
proved an asset or hindrance in organizing workers, nor to inquire why Marx
and Engels themselves had chosen to make criticism of religion the "premise"
for their project in revolutionary political economy.  Such questions may
seem more pertinent to our own times than to those in which Marx and Engels
actually lived.  Any investigation of their stance toward religion must
begin by noting that their careers fell within the opening century of the
Age of Secularism.  Nonbelief, for the first time in more than fifteen
hundred years was becoming intellectually -- even to some extent socially --
tolerable.

Orthodox religionists, Protestant or Catholic, still controlled most major
institutions such as city and state governments and universities throughout
western Europe, yet they faced increasingly articulate resistance from
educated opponents among the upper classes.  Thus, for example, when John
Stuart Mill
<http://www.la.utexas.edu/research/poltheory/mill/three/utilrelig.html>  in
England declared that the "whole of the prevalent metaphysics of the present
century" constitutes a "tissue of suborned evidence in favor of religion,"
he was saying approximately what Marx and Engels were saying, and targeting
the same German idealist metaphysics they were rebelling against.  While for
Mill the main enemy was Kant, it was of course Hegel for Marx and Engels.
Different though the systems of these philosophers were, it would not be
inaccurate to describe both as idealist constructions designed to protect
religion.  To protect it against what?  Against the oncoming Era of
Secularism: against the rise of skeptical rationalism; against cumulative
disillusionments attached to the memory of religious wars that had raged
across Europe for almost two hundred years; against the encroachments of
empirical science into orthodox belief.  Marx and Engels in all these
controversial areas stood on solid ground to the extent that their peers in
class status and education were likely to remain tolerant toward criticisms
of religion that many of them already shared.  Yet obviously no such
immunity would attach to radical criticisms of class hierarchy.

>From Feuerbach to the Manifesto

 The Hegelian dialectic in a broad sense had idealized the cosmos as an
ongoing spiritual process.  More narrowly, that portion of it that
paralleled human history could be analogized to Christian doctrine.  God's
decision to create a world populated by creatures (including humans)
established the antithesis.  Conflict stemmed from the willed act of human
creatures to use their God-given liberty for rebellion against the creator.
Resolution, after many turns of the dialectic, must await the advent of
Christ, begotten out of mortal flesh by divine spirit, and thus providing
the synthesis within which the opposites -- mortal and divine, creator and
created -- will at last be rejoined.  According to the famous legend, Marx
had arrived at his class interpretation of human history by an intellectual
tour de force, that is, by translating Hegel's idealist dialectic into a
materialist one.  Thus, instead of pushing the narrative through a sequence
of metaphysical abstractions, the dialectic would now be made to convey
human class struggles in the language of historical realism.

A full-dress presentation of the materialist dialectic occurs in the
Communist Manifesto
<http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1848/communist-manifesto/index.h
tm>  (1848).  There are some baffling conceptual problems about this
transformation, of which I will mention (at this point) only one.  If
history comprises a series of struggles in which exploited (therefore
antithetical) classes overpower one another to establish each in turn its
own dominance, there would seem no possible escape from this repetition
unless a class formation occurred that somehow had the power (or lack of
power!) to break out of the circle.  Recalling the original model -- that
is, the Hegelian dialectic that symbolically enacted the Christian story --
it is obvious the crucial role belonged to Christ, who by his sacrificial
death terminates the long chain of contradictions between creator and
created.  Yet when the idealist dialectic is turned upside down and all the
actors become "real, active men, as they are conditioned by a definite
development of their productive forces," what sort of class formation could
be expected to play a comparable role?  "The idea --fundamental for Marx
from then on," writes the Marxist historian, Eric Hobsbawm, "that the
proletariat was a class which could not liberate itself without thereby
liberating society as a whole, first appears as 'a philosophical deduction
rather than a product of observation.' . . .  [Thus] 'the proletariat makes
its first appearance in Marx's writings as the social force needed to
realize the aims of German philosophy.'"  Needed, that is, to materialize
the idealized figure of Prometheus.

Did Hobsbawm say deduction?  He did.  Marx and Engels always insisted on
their socialist theory as scientific, rather than Christian or utopian.
Science, however (at least as understood in the nineteenth century), rests
not on deduction from alleged universals, but inductions from empirical
observation.  Engels, in The Condition of the English Working Class
<http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1845/condition-working-class/>
(1845), had provided an empirical and shattering portrayal of the beginnings
of capitalist manufacturing.  His work undoubtedly contributed to the
predictive accuracy of Capital, on which the two authors later collaborated,
yet hardly offers much evidence for the Promethean (or Christ-like) role
assigned to proletarians in The Communist Manifesto.  "A horde of ragged
women and children swarm about here, as filthy as the swine that thrive upon
the garbage heaps," Engels wrote, describing a typical industrial slum.
"The race that lives in these ruinous cottages . . .  must really have
reached the lowest stage of humanity. . . .  The neglect to which the great
mass of workingmen's children are condemned . . . brings the enfeeblement of
the whole race. . . .   Liquor is almost their only source of pleasure . . .
.  As inevitably as a great number of working men fall prey to drink, just
so inevitably does it manifest its ruinous influence upon the body and mind
of its victims."

How could a "race" so reduced in vital energy and self-esteem find courage
to break free from religious superstition and raise the banner of revolt?
Engels, no less an enthusiast than Marx, did his best to discover empirical
answers to this question. "Faulty education," he speculated, "saves [the new
proletarian] from religious prepossessions, he . . .  knows nothing of the
fanaticism that holds the bourgeoisie bound. . . ."  For Engels, raised in a
hardshell Protestant milieu, any estrangement from religion, even if arrived
at by default, was a positive factor; and he found hope also in the first
flickerings of class consciousness.  "The English workingman who can
scarcely read and still less write, nevertheless knows very well where his
own interest and that of the nation lies."  "They begin to perceive that,
though feeble as individuals, they form a power united. . . .  The
consciousness of oppression awakens . . . the workers attain social and
political importance."  Entries such as these remain few in number, cautious
and tentative in tone, whereas the overwhelming thrust of Engel's book is on
despair and degradation -- disease, malnutrition, wretchedness of the
workers, suffering and death of their women and children.  Yet only three
years later, when these same proletarians reappear in the Communist
Manifesto, they have taken a new lease on life.  A key passage describing
their "condition" -- and announcing their historic mission -- runs as
follows:

Modern industrial labor, modern subjection to capital, the same in England
as in France, in America as in Germany, has stripped him [the proletarian]
of every trace of national character. Law, morality, religion, are to him so
many bourgeois prejudices, behind which lurk in ambush just as many
bourgeois interests. . . .  All previous historical movements were movements
of minorities . . .  The proletarian movement is the self-conscious,
independent movement of the immense majority. . . .  The proletariat, the
lowest stratum of our present society, cannot stir, cannot raise itself up,
without the whole superincumbent strata of official society being sprung
into the air.

What a contrast!  The industrial worker, reborn, transcends not only
bourgeois nationalism, but bourgeois law, morality, religion as well, and
not by default but as a result of purposeful thought.  Deconstructing the
mysteries of ideology, the proletarian energizes "the immense majority" of
humankind (there is no empirical evidence whatever in Engels' book to
support this assertion) whose fate now rests on the integrity of
working-class consciousness.  Here is a transformation comparable to the
last movement of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, and we need to understand they
share some of the same ingredients.  Marxist theory's worldwide impact would
be inconceivable without the Promethean hero, who becomes a teacher, first
of other segments of the working class, then of the human species at large.

Dialectics of  the Welfare State

Two mistakes of Marx and Engels in the 1840s were their anticipation of
immediate revolution and their belief that proletarians must necessarily
reject religion.  On both points, Engels had pushed beyond what his
observations of English working-class life could sustain, and Marx went
along with this.  Together, they developed a historical argument building
upward from peasant revolts in the seventeenth century, through the great
revolutions of the eighteenth and Chartism in the nineteenth, all anchored
within real (empirical) history, but then leaping to an imagined future
insurrection led by England's proletarians that would engulf the nations of
the world.  Revolution, Engels wrote in 1845, soon "must break out . . . in
comparison with which the French Revolution . . . will prove to have been
child's play."  They supported the revolutions of 1848 (Engels in military
action in the Rhineland), but viewed these as bourgeois and
constitutionalist -- merely preliminary to the proletarian insurrection they
were predicting.  Many years later, blaming himself for their failed
prophecy, Engels ascribed it to "youthful ardor."  I am concerned here with
Marxism itself, not with apportioning credits and demerits between its
founders.  I suppose Marx to have been no less youthfully ardent than
Engels; they were barely two years apart in age; both were gripped by
Promethean visions that perhaps led them to transcend -- or at least go
beyond -- what the empirical evidence warranted.

Moreover, they were hampered by misperceptions inherent in their class
background, especially with respect to religion.  Secularism, as I noted
earlier, had, by the early nineteenth century, become tolerable in educated
middle-class circles.  But this was not the case for lower-class cultures.
Engels acknowledged that most of what he knew about religion in the mill
towns came from reports of Anglican or Unitarian investigative committees.
Anglicans were Conservative, Unitarians Liberal, each had their own agendas
to push.  Both would be suspicious of Methodist chapels and hostile to
radical sectaries such as those described by E. P. Thompson
<http://www.amazon.com/Making-English-Working-Class-Thompson/dp/0394703227>
, or, for an earlier period, Christopher Hill
<http://www.marxists.org/archive/hill-christopher/english-revolution/index.h
tm> .  The mills were already recruiting Irish immigrants, some doubtless
brought their Catholic faith, which to Anglicans as well as Unitarians would
seem worse than none at all.  I suspect that Engels, with respect to
religion, missed a good deal of what was going on around him in Manchester
and Birmingham.  So, for a variety of reasons, Marx and Engels were mistaken
both in their prediction of revolution and their belief that industrial
workers would reject religion.  The latter especially seemed crucial to them
during the 1840s because they believed loss of religion necessary to that
total alienation from bourgeois values that they expected would launch the
proletarians into revolutionary orbit.

Nonoccurrence of the revolution determined the political landscape within
which Marxism and religious faith pursued their complex relationships
through the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.  Since the political
economy of that landscape has already been thoroughly mapped, I will simply
note several of its main features and set them aside for reference.
Industrial capitalism burgeoned in western Europe and North America.  So
also did the industrial working class.  Because industrialists required some
degree of willing cooperation from their work force, a symbiotic
relationship which we now call welfare-state capitalism developed between
the two.  The keynote of welfare states was industrial growth.  The bigger
the pie the larger its individual slices.  Growth made possible the
maintenance -- sometimes even improvement -- of working-class living
standards without requiring changes in the hierarchical structure of
society.  Thus it mitigated class conflict and provided a buffer against
revolution.  Welfare states faced outward.  Both sets of partners (capital
and labor) strove to upgrade the enterprise at the expense of other nations,
including similarly structured welfare states.  We know by hindsight that
world war would be the eventual outcome, but such grim scenarios were not
yet readily visible during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Labor radicalism, inside each welfare state, shorn of revolution, produced a
cadre of radical workers together with a pseudo-middle class of trade union
officials and social democratic politicians who served their constituents as
spokesmen and mediators.  Continuing across successive life spans, these
circumstances generated a class consciousness that was unique to the labor
force of industrial capitalism.  The more diligently each worker strove to
keep self, family (and party comrades) alive, the more invincible became
those institutions they hoped eventually to abolish.  One might describe
this as the "dialectic of the welfare state."

Outwardly functioning as partnerships, welfare states worked inwardly as
controlled arenas of class conflict.  Although the conflict was basically
that of labor against capital, both sets of contestants (labor especially)
remained internally divided.  A Weberian  image of this apparatus would look
like a seesaw with the socialist workers on one end and religious workers at
the other.  The capitalist-controlled government in the middle gives
occasional nudges this way or that for fine tuning.  We are now deep into
the Era of Secularism, which as we know, penetrated working classes less
than other levels of society.  Details differ from nation to nation and time
to time, but the seesaw image remains approximately accurate, I think, for
welfare states throughout the Western world.  The social relationships it
portrays entail several important corollaries.  Based in working-class
communities more religious than the society at large, Marxist activists
often found themselves targeted for teaching disbelief and corrupting
Christian morals.  Already known as members of a movement that denied
religion, they would be hampered in defending themselves.  Their logical
counter-strategy would involve appeals to class solidarity combined with
accusations that the Church -- whatever branch happened to be dominant in
that particular community -- had betrayed its working-class constituency by
supporting the capitalist employers.  Such indictments, containing enough
empirical reality to make them persuasive, nonetheless introduced subtle
shifts in the original Marxist stance on religion -- shifts, that is, from
critiques of religion itself to forms of anticlericalism that often seemed
more concerned with purifying the church than criticizing religion.

The Problem of Liberation Theology

Marx and Engels both portrayed early Christianity as driven by the
desperation of enslaved and exploited populations in the Roman empire;
Engels represented the Hussites and Anabaptists as religiously inspired
rebels fighting to liberate peasants from feudalism.  Why might not religion
then inspire working-class rebels against industrial capitalism?  The fact
is it has done so -- a dramatic (and recent) example being that of
liberation theology in Latin America.  While it is true that most such
movements were crushed by their respective ruling classes and dominant
clergies, these outcomes could be explained by pointing out that wherever
religion became institutionalized, it generated privileged clerical
hierarchies that merged into the existing ruling class.  Marx and Engels
usually (but not always) characterized religion as reactionary because it
was prone to being captured by ruling-class ideologies.  Ideology they
treated invidiously, as obscurantism intended to conceal class exploitation.
They sometimes spoke of religion and ideology as identical or of the one
(religion) as contained within the other.  They even suggested that religion
had been invented for ideological purposes.

All this made for an empirically based and politically powerful explanatory
system, yet contained two big difficulties.  The first was the absence of
any satisfactory way of accounting for instances (acknowledged by Marx and
Engels both), when religion actually functioned as a liberating rather than
repressive force.  The second difficulty is more complicated, but takes us
to the heart of the matter.  Ideological explanations necessarily locate
religion's starting point late in human culture since they begin by
attaching, or equating, religion to ideology.  Ideology, however --
understood as a rationalization, and camouflage, for class and gender
exploitation -- could hardly have originated before the division of labor.
But that left dangling the question of whether religion itself existed prior
to class society.  If so, it could not be explained as an ideological
construct, and its existence would precede, perhaps even run separately
from, the dialectic of class struggle that for Marxist theory provides the
motive force of social development.  "The history of all past society has
consisted in the development of class antagonisms," Marx and Engels wrote in
the Communist Manifesto, ". . . whatever form they may have taken, one fact
is common to all past ages, viz., the exploitation of one part of society by
the other."  Was religion, then, moving on a track separate from the rest of
human history?  But that would not be an attractive alternative for
nonbelievers, because it came perilously close to concurring with an
idealist notion of religion.

Given the gift of hindsight, it is not difficult to specify what they needed
at this juncture.  They needed a secular (materialist) account of the origin
of religion separate from the origin of ideology.  This would allow religion
to function (later on) as the keystone of ruling-class ideology, yet not
preclude explaining its liberationist phases by reference to particular
historical circumstances (such as colonial regimes, for example, or the
importation of slaves, or "guest" workers).  At the same time, and perhaps
more important, it would situate religion in the earliest stages of human
development, before division of labor and the advent of class society.

________________________________

Alexander Saxton is emeritus professor of history at UCLA.  He is the author
of three novels and several historical works, including The Rise and Fall of
the White Republic: Class Politics and Mass Culture in Nineteenth-Century
America
<http://www.amazon.com/Rise-Fall-White-Republic-Nineteenth/dp/1859844677/sr=
1-1/qid=1165543920/ref=sr_1_1/002-0405041-2785629?ie=UTF8&s=books> .  This
essay is excerpted and adapted from Chapter 11 ("Marxism and the Failed
Critique of Religion") of his new book Religion and the Human Prospect
<http://monthlyreview.org/rathp.htm>  (Monthly Review Press, 2006).  See,
also, Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, "Freedom from Religion: An Interview with
Alexander Saxton" <http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/dunbarortiz091106.html>
(MRZine, 9 November 2006). 


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