Contemporaries Karl Marx
(1818-1883), Friedrich Engels (1820-1895) and Charles Dickens (1812-1870) were concerned
about the social question: Why in an
industrial economy that promises upward mobility is there so much misery?
By the
mid-1800s prosperity was arriving for “factory and mill and transportation
interests,” writes Les Standiford in his intriguing biography of Dickens, The Man Who Invented Christmas (Crown,
2008). In addition to business owners, “a growing number of managerial workers
were beginning to enjoy the relative ease of a middle class. But most of those
who made the factories run were laborers, and they and their families lived in
squalor.”
In his
early 20s Engels was in Manchester, working and researching. Appalled by child
labor, pollution and slum housing there, he began writing about the evils of
capitalism. Standiford says that Manchester in 1843 set the stage for Engels.
Had he “come of age in some more pleasant surroundings such as London, The Communist Manifesto might not have
been written the way it was.”
Dickens
gave a talk in Manchester in fall 1843. He too was appalled. He returned to
London and in a fury wrote his anti-capitalist manifesto, A Christmas Carol. Dickens “had no use for revolt or violence as
suggested by supporters of Mark and Engels,” Standiford writes. His novels are
about the working poor, but they dwell on character not on macro-economics. The
stories hinge on the tension between bad people and bad institutions, on one
hand, and the possibility of redemption on the other.
The good
guys (the poor) in Dickens’ stories are complex. He does not romanticize them.
Poverty in itself does not make a person noble or worthy of pity. A poor person
might drink, carouse, cheat and make bad decisions at times. Dickens’ premise,
however, is that being poor is not a sin; the system is at fault.
The holy
season of Advent is designed to convey this lesson: Charity is not romantic; it
is a duty. Poor individuals are often not charming. They do, however, deserve
help with no heavy moral judgment attached.
St. Luke
wrote an inspired story about the social question (poverty). Like A Christmas Carol, it is popular at this
time of year. The creator of the whole universe, the story goes, comes to visit
his created planet. His holy family cannot get a room at Trump Tower and so
they go to a barn. The creator is greeted there by poor shepherds. He eventually
spends his life among the poor, all of whom St. Luke says have defects in their
character but are open to redemption.
These weeks
are the best time to read St. Luke (his first two chapters) and also Dickens’
tale. Get a decorative copy of A Christmas
Carol from Acta (www.actapublications.com).
Acta’s chief executive Grinch sits all day near the building’s front window,
looking forlornly down Clark St., waiting until April 9, 2018 when he can take
his seat in Wrigley Field, home of the Cubs (92-70 in 2017). Meanwhile, the
joyous elves in Acta’s cramped warehouse can for $14.95 get A Christmas Carol into your mailbox, as
quickly as any mega-supplier.
Droel edits a free newsletter on
faith and work, INITIATIVES (PO Box
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