Christian left
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The Christian left is a term originating in the United States, used to describe a spectrum of left-wing Christian political and social movements which largely embraces social justice.
The term often specifically refers to Christian beliefs and can be interchangeable with the term Religious left. Subsequently, the term has been used to describe groups and persons from countries outside the US. It is the counter-point to the Christian right, a spectrum of right-wing Christian political and social movements which largely embrace social conservatism.
As with any division inside the left- and right- wings of the political spectrum, such a label is an approximation, including within it groups and persons holding diverse viewpoints. The term left-wing might encompass a number of values which may or may not be held by different Christian movements and individuals.
As the unofficial title of a loose association of believers, it does provide a clear distinction from the more commonly known "Christian Right" or "Religious Right" and its key leaders and political views.
The most common religious viewpoint which might be described as 'left wing' is social justice, or care for the poor and the oppressed (see Minority groups). Supporters of this might encourage universal health care, generous welfare, subsidized education, foreign aid, and government subsidized schemes for improving the conditions of the disadvantaged. Stemming from egalitarian values, adherents of the Christian left consider it part of their religious duty to take actions on behalf of the oppressed. As nearly all major religions contain some kind of requirement to help others, social justice has been cited by various religions as in line with their faith.
The Christian Left holds that social justice, renunciation of power, humility, forgiveness, and private observation of prayer (as opposed to publicly mandated prayer), are mandated by the Gospel (Matthew 6:5-6). The Bible contains accounts of Jesus repeatedly advocating for the poor and outcast over the wealthy, powerful, and religious. The Christian Left maintains that such a stance is relevant and important. Adhering to the standard of "turning the other cheek", which they believe supersedes the Old Testament law of "an eye for an eye", the Christian Left often hearkens towards pacifism in opposition to policies advancing militarism.
While non-religious socialists sometimes find support for socialism in the Gospels (for example Mikhail Gorbachev citing Jesus as "the first socialist"),[1] the Christian Left does not find that socialism alone as an adequate end or means. Christian faith is the core of their belief which in turn demands social justice.
[edit] History
[edit] Early antagonism between the left and Christianity
For much of the early history of anti-establishment leftist movements such as socialism and communism (which was highly anti-clerical in the 19th century), established churches were led by a reactionary clergy who saw progress as a threat to their status and power. Most people viewed the church as part of the establishment. Revolutions in America, France, Russia and (much later) Spain were in part directed against the established churches (or rather their leading clergy) and instituted a separation of church and state.
However, in the 19th century, some writers and activists developed a school of thought, Christian socialism, a branch of Christian thought that was infused with socialism.
Early socialist thinkers such as Robert Owen, Charles Fourier, and the Duc de Saint-Simon based their theories of socialism upon Christian principles. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels reacted against these theories by formulating a secular theory of socialism in The Communist Manifesto.
[edit] Alliance of the left and Christianity
Starting in the late 19th century and early 20th century, some began to take on the view that "genuine" Christianity had much in common with a Leftist perspective. From St. Augustine of Hippo's City of God through St. Thomas More's Utopia major Christian writers had expounded upon views that socialists found agreeable. Of major intrest was the extremely strong thread of egalitarianism in the New Testament. Other common leftist concerns such as pacifism, social justice, racial equality, human rights, and the rejection of excessive wealth are also expressed strongly in the Bible. In the late 19th century, the Social Gospel movement arose (particularly among some Anglicans, Lutherans, Methodists and Baptists in North America and Britain,) which attempted to integrate progressive and socialist thought with Christianity to produce a faith-based social activism, promoted by movements such as Christian Socialism. Later, in the 20th century, the theology of liberation and Creation Spirituality was championed by such writers as Gustavo Gutierrez and Matthew Fox.
[edit] Christian left and campaigns for peace and human rights
Some Christian groups were closely associated with the peace movements against the Vietnam War as well as the 2003 Invasion of Iraq. Religious leaders in many countries have also been on the forefront of criticizing any cuts to social welfare programs. In addition, many prominent civil rights activists (such as Martin Luther King, Jr.) were religious figures.
[edit] Christian left in the United States
In the United States, members of the Christian Left come from a spectrum of denominations: Peace churches, elements of the Protestant mainline churches, elements of Roman Catholicism, and some parts of the evangelical community.
The Christian Left does not seem to be so well-organized or publicized as its right-wing counterparts. Opponents state that this is because it is less numerous. Supporters contend that it is actually more numerous but composed predominantly of persons less willing to voice political views in as forceful a manner as the Christian Right, possibly because of the aggressiveness of the Christian Right. Further, supporters contend that the Christian Left has had relatively little success securing widespread corporate, political, and major media patronage compared to the Right. In the aftermath of the 2004 election in the United States Progressive Christian leaders started to form groups of their own to combat the Religious Right; The Center For Progressive Christianity and The Christian Alliance For Progress are two such groups that have formed to promote the cause.
Members of the Christian Left who work on interfaith issues are part of building the Progressive Reconstructionist movement.
[edit] Liberation Theology
One of the largest strains of Christian Left thinking has been in the developing world, especially Latin America.[citation needed]Since the 1960s, Catholic thinkers have integrated left-wing thought and Catholicism, giving rise to Liberation Theology.[citation needed] It arose at a time when Catholic thinkers who opposed the despotic leaders in South and Central America allied themselves with the communist opposition.[citation needed] However, the Vatican decided that, while Liberation Theology is partially compatible with Catholic social teaching, certain Marxist elements of it (such as the doctrine of perpetual class struggle) are against Church teachings.[citation needed] However, by today's standards, the Catholic Church maintains a fairly moderate viewpoint overall.[citation needed]
It should be noted that outside Latin America and in particular, in the United States, the Christian left has no substantive connection to Liberation Theology.[citation needed]
[edit] Christian left and issues
The Christian Left sometimes differs from other Christian political groups on issues including homosexuality. This is often not a matter of different religious ideas, but one of focus — viewing the prohibitions against killing, or the criticism of concentrations of wealth, as far more important than social issues emphasized by the religious right, such as opposition to homosexuality.
Other members of the Christian left affirm that some homosexual practices are compatible with the Christian life and believe common biblical arguments used to condemn homosexuality are misinterpreted. Such views hold that the prohibition was actually against a specific type of homosexual sex act, pederasty or the sodomizing of young boys by older men. Thus, it is irrelevant when considering modern same-sex relationships.[2][3][4][5]
[edit] The Consistent Life Ethic
A related strain of thought is the (Catholic and evangelical leftist) Consistent Life Ethic, which sees opposition to capital punishment, militarism, euthanasia, abortion and the global unequal distribution of wealth as being related. It is an idea shared by Abrahamic religions as well as Buddhists, Hindus, and members of other religions. Sojourners is particularly associated with this strand of thought.
Jim Wallis believes that one of the biggest problems that faces the left is to reach out to evangelical and Catholic religious voters.[6] Catholics for a Free Choice has responded that these progressive evangelical and Catholic pro-life people have difficulties dealing with the implications of feminist theology and ethics for Christian faith.[7]
[edit] Notable Christian leftists
[edit] Argentina
- Elisa Carrió, leftist politician
[edit] Australia
- Frank Brennan, Jesuit and advocate for Australia's indigenous peoples
- Tim Costello, Baptist minister, CEO of World Vision in Australia
- Peter Garrett, rock singer and politician for the Australian Labor Party and member of Greenpeace
- Brian Howe, AM, Australian politician, was Deputy Prime Minister in the Labor government of Paul Keating from 1991 to 1995.
- Kevin Rudd, Prime Minister from 2007 and federal leader for the Australian Labor Party
[edit] Austria
[edit] Brazil
- Leonardo Boff, academic and social activist
- Sister Dorothy Stang - Roman Catholic nun murdered in Brazil for helping the landless and poor
[edit] Canada
- Richard Allen, politician and historian of Christian socialism
- Charlie Angus, writer and politician
- Bill Blaikie, minister and politician
- Andrew Brewin, politician and author
- Lorne Calvert, minister and politician and premier of Saskatchewan
- Cheri DiNovo, minister and politician
- Tommy Douglas, voted the "Greatest Canadian". Leader of the first avowedly socialist government in North America in Saskatchewan. Introduced universal medicare, former Baptist Minister.
- David Hart, minister and activist.
- Stanley Knowles, minister and politician
- James Loney (peace activist)
- Desmond McGrath, priest, trade union organizer and activist
- Bill Phipps, church leader and activist
- Bill Siksay, politician, former theological student, partner of a minister
- Frank Scott, poet and constitutional expert
- William Horace Temple, politician, minister, and trade union activist
- J. S. Woodsworth, minister and politician.
[edit] Colombia
- Camilo Torres Restrepo, Liberation theologian and guerrilla
[edit] Cuba
[edit] East Timor
- Carlos Felipe Ximenes Belo-Nobel Peace Prize winning Archbishop linked to East Timorese independence.
[edit] Ecuador
- Rafael Correa, incumbent president and former finance minister.
- Leonidas Proaño, liberation theology bishop.
[edit] El Salvador
- Archbishop Óscar Romero, archbishop
[edit] Finland
[edit] France
- Bishop Jacques Gaillot, Roman Catholic Bishop of Partenia, social activist
- Abbé Pierre, Roman Catholic social activist
- Personalism (Emmanuel Mounier, etc.)
[edit] Germany
- Alfred Delp, Jesuit involved in resistance to Nazi Germany
- Christoph Blumhardt, Lutheran theologian
- Rudi Dutschke, student protest leader
- Emil Fuchs, Quaker theologian
- Helmut Gollwitzer, Lutheran theologian
- Johann Baptist Metz, Catholic theologian
- Dorothee Sölle, Lutheran theologian
[edit] Haiti
- Jean-Bertrand Aristide, former President of Haiti
- Gérard Jean-Juste, liberation theologian
[edit] India
- E. Stanley Jones, Methodist Missionary and close friend of Mahatma Gandhi.
[edit] Ireland
- Ciaron O'Reilly, Catholic Worker, Christian Anarchist
[edit] Italy
- Ermanno Gorrieri, trade union activist, economist and co-founder of Social Christians
- Pierre Carniti, trade union leader and co-founder of Social Christians
[edit] Netherlands
- Huub Oosterhuis, theologian and poet
[edit] Nicaragua
- Ernesto Cardenal, Liberation theologian
[edit] New Zealand
- Lloyd Geering, theologian
- Walter Nash, prime minister
- Arnold Nordmeyer, minister and politician
[edit] Norway
- Helen Bjørnøy, minister of the environment and Lutheran minister
[edit] Peru
- Gustavo Gutiérrez, founder of liberation theology
[edit] Philippines
- Benigno S. Aquino, Jr. - anti-Marcos dictatorship hero and martyr of Philippine democracy, who described himself as a 'born again' Catholic and a Christian Socialist
- José Burgos - Filipino priest and independence activist
- Gregorio Aglipay - Supreme Bishop of the Iglesia Filipina Independiente Aglipayan Church
- Jaime Cardinal Sin, - leader of the Catholic Church in the Philippines and pillar of the People Power movement
[edit] Poland
- Stanisław Adamski - Polish priest and workers' activist.
[edit] Russia
- Leo Tolstoy, writer and social reformer
[edit] Slovenia
- Vekoslav Grmič, Slovenian Roman Catholic bishop and theologian
- Edvard Kocbek, Poet, Essayist and politician
- Boris Pahor, Writer and essayist
[edit] South Africa
- Nelson Mandela, former South African president
- Desmond Tutu, former Anglican Archbishop of South Africa
[edit] South Korea
[edit] Sweden
- K. G. Hammar, former Archbishop of Uppsala
- Lukas Moodysson, film writer and director
[edit] Switzerland
- Karl Barth, neo-orthodox theologian
- Hans Küng, Catholic theologian
- Hermann Kutter, Reformed theologian
- Leonhard Ragaz, Reformed theologian
[edit] United States
[edit] Leaders (political)
- Tim Ryan U.S. congressman
- Walt Brown, ex-Oregon state Senator, Socialist Party USA
- William Jennings Bryan three time presidential nominee
- Jimmy Carter former U.S. President
- Robert Casey, former Pennsylvania governor
- Nick Clooney Roman Catholic activist/Congressional candidate
- Diane Drufenbrock, nun, Socialist Party USA
- John Edwards, former United States Senator and past Presidential candidate
- Al Gore, former Vice President of the United States and activist
- Thomas J. Hagerty, founding member of IWW
- Ammon Hennacy, Wobbly
- Hubert Humphrey, former Vice President of the United States
- Jesse Jackson, politician and civil rights leader
- Dennis Kucinich, U.S. congressman and past Presidential candidate
- John Lewis, U.S. congressman and civil rights leader
- George McGovern Methodist, former Senator for South Dakota and Democratic nominee for the Presidency
- Walter Mondale, former Vice President of the United States
- Brian P. Moore, Socialist Party USA
- Barack Obama, current president
- Franklin Delano Roosevelt, former President
- Norman Thomas, Socialist Party of America presidential candidate
- Al Sharpton, 2004 Democratic presidential candidate and civil rights leader
- Robert Drinan, Congressman and Roman Catholic Jesuit priest.
- Frank P. Zeidler, ex-Mayor of Milwaukee, Socialist Party USA
- Frank Ford (farmer)
[edit] Leaders a/o activists (civil)
- Rosey Grier
- Joseph Cardinal Bernardin Bishop
- Everett Francis Briggs POW and Labor activist.
- Tony Campolo, Baptist evangelist and sociologist
- Forrester Church, Unitarian Universalist minister, author
- William Sloane Coffin, Jr., UCC minister and peace activist
- Florence Nightingale
- Helen Keller
- Daniel Berrigan, Catholic priest & peace activist
- Kim Bobo, founder, Interfaith Worker Justice
- Stephen Colbert, host of The Colbert Report and Sunday School Teacher
- John Cort, writer, editor for Commonweal, Peacework, Religious Socialism
- Jerome Davis, labor organizer and sociologist
- Dorothy Day, Catholic Worker Movement cofounder, Wobbly
- James A. Forbes, minister at Riverside Church
- Tom Gabel, Anarcho-Catholic and Punk Rock Icon
- Jeannine Gramick, Roman Catholic nun and founder of New Ways Ministry
- Thomas Gumbleton, Roman Catholic bishop of Detroit and social activist
- Coretta Scott King, civil rights activist and wife of Martin Luther King, Jr.
- Martin Luther King, Jr. - Nobel Prize winning civil-rights activist.
- Rev. Joseph Lowery Civil Rights Leader.
- Barry W. Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State
- Pauli Murray, first female Episcopal minister and co-founder of the National Organization for Women
- Mike Papantonio
- Charles Owen Rice, Catholic priest, labor leader, and civil rights activist
- Frank Schaeffer
- Ron Sider, president of Evangelicals for Social Action.
- Katherine Jefferts Schori, Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church
- Jim Wallis, editor of Sojourners Magazine
- Barry Welsh Congressional Candidate and Minister (United Methodist Church)
- Jeremiah Wright former pastor of the Trinity United Church of Christ
- Ava Lowery Up and coming Activist (United Methodist Church)
- Cindy Sheehan peace activist.
- Rev. Lennox Yearwood Veteran and anti-Iraq War Activist
- Daniel Berrigan ([1])
- Philip Berrigan, anti-war activist
- Rev. Robert Drinan, - former U.S. Congressman from Massachusetts
- Leonardo Boff, Liberation Theology activist ([2])
- César Chávez Mexican American labor and social activist
- Karl Keating - Catholic writer and apologist who created Catholic Answers
- Charles Kekumano - activist Hawaiian priest
- Angelo Liteky - former priest, soldier, activist
- Georges Pire - "Peace University" and Nobel Peace Prize for work with refugees ([3])
- Sister Helen Prejean - anti-death penalty activist (portrayed in movie Dead Man Walking by actress Susan Sarandon)
- Mitch Snyder, - convert; advocate for the homeless
- Rev. George Foreman
- Rev Richard Penniman AKA Little Richard
- Peter Boyle actor, studied to be a Priest.
- Martin Sheen Roman Catholic activist/actor.
- Carmen Trotta Roman Catholic pacifist
- Rev. Roger McClellan - Co-founder/Progressive Christian Alliance
[edit] Thinkers
- Peter Agre, awarded the Nobel Prize for Chemistry [4]
- David Ray Griffin, Theology professor and 9/11 Truth author
- Chris Hedges
- Stanley Hauerwas, theologian and ethicist
- Anne Lamott, author
- Peter Maurin Catholic Worker co-founder
- Charles Clayton Morrison
- Brian McLaren, Emerging Church Leader
- Troy Perry, founder of Metropolitan Community Church
- Walter Rauschenbusch, social gospel thinker
- Anthony Paul Kennedy Shriver Son of Sargent Shriver member of the Kennedy family holds a Degree in Theology.
- John Shelby Spong, retired bishop and liberal political activist
- Kathleen Kennedy Townshend
- John Howard Yoder, biblical scholar and ethicist
- Randall Wallace Academy Award Winning Author holds a Degree in Theology.
- Cornel West, theologian, academic, activist
- Jim Winkler leading member of the United Methodist Church
[edit] Promoters
- Val Kilmer has done promotional videos for his denomination.
- Brian Welch former member of Korn now performs Christian metal.
- Johnny Cash, singer/songwriter promoted Christianity in a number of songs and public appearances.
- Pete Maravich, Hall of Fame basketball player
- Alonzo Mourning, basketball player
[edit] United Kingdom
The medieval Lollards, particularly John Ball, took up many anti-establishment causes. During the English Civil War many of the more radical Parliamentarians, such as John Lilburne and the Levellers, based their belief in universal suffrage and proto-socialism on their reading of the Bible. Other people on the Christian left include:
- William Gladstone, Prime Minister
- William Wilberforce, Strong slavery critic and MP
- George Fox, Quaker
- William Blake, poet, painter, Christian mystic
- Stewart Headlam, Anglo-Catholic
- Charles Gore, Anglo-Catholic
- Conrad Noel, Anglo-Catholic
- Bishop B.F. Westcott, Anglo-Catholic and spiritualist
- R. H. Tawney, economist and historian
- Chris Bryant, Labour MP and former priest
- John Lewis, philosopher
- David Cairns, Labour MP and former priest
- Maurice Reckitt, writer
- Mark Ballard, Green Member of the Scottish Parliament
- Tony Benn, former Labour MP
- George Galloway, former Labour MP and current RESPECT MP for Bethnal Green and Bow
- Rowan Williams, Archbishop of Canterbury
- David Ford, leader of the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland
- Dave Gahan, lead vocalist of Depeche Mode
- Paul Heaton, pop musician
- Christopher Isham, scientist
- George B. Chambers, writer and Anglican priest
[edit] Vatican
- Sister Rose Thering - During Vatican II helped in exonerating Jews from Christ's death; social and human rights activist.
[edit] Parties of the Christian left
- Social Christians (Italy)
- Democratic Party (Italy)
- Christian Social Party (Switzerland) (Catholic)
- Evangelical People's Party (The Netherlands)
- Christian Socialist Party (USA)
- Christian Democratic Party (Uruguay)
- Christian Left Party (Chile)
- COPEI (Venezuela)
- Christian Socialist Movement (United Kingdom; the Christian wing of the UK Labour Party)
[edit] References
- ^ "Mikhail S. Gorbachev Quotes". Brainyquote.com. http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/m/mikhail_s_gorbachev.html. Retrieved on 2007-02-23.
- ^ Why TCPC Advocates Equal Rights for Gay and Lesbian People
- ^ Equality for Gays and Lesbians
- ^ http://www.pflagdetroit.org/BibleandHomosexuality.html
- ^ http://www.whosoever.org/gayxian/articles.html
- ^ "And there are literally millions of votes at stake in this liberal miscalculation. Virtually everywhere I go, I encounter moderate and progressive Christians who find it painfully difficult to vote Democratic given the party’s rigid, ideological stance on this critical moral issue, a stance they regard as "pro-abortion." Except for this major and, in some cases, insurmountable obstacle, these voters would be casting Democratic ballots." from Make Room for Pro-Life Democrats, Jim Wallis, Sojourners Magazine, hosted on beliefnet
- ^ Reframing Social Justice, Feminism and Abortion
[edit] See also
[edit] Early Christianity
- Christian anarchism
- Christian communism
- Early Christian anti-materialism
- Opposition to Rome
[edit] Movements
A number of movements of the past had similarities to today's Christian Left:
- Anabaptists
- Fifth Monarchists, Diggers, Quakers
- Heretical movements such as the Cathars
- Liberation theology
- Lollard
- Old-Catholicism
- Peace churches
- German Peasants' War
- Role of Christians in the Peasants' Revolt in England, See Lollard priest John Ball.
- Waldenses
[edit] Groups
[edit] Other
- Christian democracy
- Christian pacifism
- Christian socialism
- Christian communism
- Creation Spirituality
- Evangelical left
- Homosexuality and Christianity
- International League of Religious Socialists
- Jewish left
- Liberal Christianity
- Pacifism
- Populism
- Progressive Christianity
- Progressive Reconstructionist
- Religion and abortion
- Religious left
- Religious Society of Friends
- Social Gospel
- Contrast: Religious right, Christian right, Secular left, Secular right
[edit] External links
- Anglo-Catholic Socialism
- CrossLeft: Balancing the Christian Voice, Organizing the Christian Left
- The Christian Leftist: The 'Religious' 'Right' Is Neither
- Religious Movements Homepage: Call to Renewal: Christians for a New Political Vision
- Every Church a Peace Church
- Left-wing Christian politics from an American perspective
- NOW with Bill Moyers:The Christian Left?
- Musings from the Christian Left by Michael Bindner
- The Christian Libertarian Party Manifesto by Michael Bindner
- Points of Unity for Social Democratic Branches within the USA
- Religion and Socialism Commission of the Democratic Socialists of America
- Socialism and Faith Commission of the Socialist Party USA
- Sojourners Magazine
- Social Redemption
- Turn-Left.com - Religious Left Goods
- The Center for Progressive Christianity
- The Christian Alliance for Progress
- The Living Hour & Lord's Prayer Christian Left Meditations
- Totalitarian Daydreams and Christian Humanism At the Crossroads
- Known Author - discussion forum for liberal Christians
- Tribal Church
See: Christian politics (index) for articles related to this subject. |
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