There is a passage in G.K. Chesterton’s little book on St. Francis of Assisi —
titled, appropriately enough, St. Francis
of Assisi (1923) — that seems to baffle many people. It is the one where “G.K.” related how St. Francis was such
a one-man earthquake or revolution that, had he been so inclined, he could have
founded a new religion. Ironically, that
is precisely what some of the followers of “Il Poverello” (“the Little Poor
Man”) evidently thought he was doing, although they still called it
“Christianity.” As Chesterton made his
case,
St. Francis of Assisi |
The principal
target of St. Francis’s followers was (as we might expect), the institution of
property. Not only did they want to
abolish private property, but property itself!
As Chesterton related, “[S]ome Franciscans, invoking the authority of
Francis on their side, went further than this and further I think than anybody
else has ever gone. They proposed to abolish not only private property but
property.” (Ibid., 173.)
These
“Fraticelli” (“Little Brothers”) went so far as to declare that property
(private or otherwise) was not, in fact, good at all, or part of human nature. Rather, they insisted that property is
actually something evil, although permitted as an expedient on account of man’s
sinfulness.
Private property in capital is good, not evil. |
Abolishing
private property — or property entirely — is not something that should be
forced on others as the socialists insist.
In so doing, they effectively create the new religion that calls itself “Christianity,” but is
anything but, and that Chesterton criticized.
Nor was
Chesterton the only one to make such a claim.
We have no idea how familiar Chesterton was with the writings of Orestes
A. Brownson (we’re pretty certain they never met, as Chesterton was two years
old when Brownson died, and in another country), or even if G.K. had any
familiarity at all, but it doesn’t matter.
In 1849, three-quarters of a century before Chesterton wrote of the
followers of St. Francis inventing a new religion, Brownson related how the
socialists did the same thing. As he
said,
Brownson: socialism deceptive by its very nature. |
And if anyone
wonders how something so obviously contrary to what common sense teaches can
spread so rapidly and gain adherents of such fanatical devotion, Brownson could
have explained it in one word: flattery.
By the simple expedient of telling people what they want to hear, and
making them feel more virtuous than those sordid souls who focus their
attention on things other than the lot of the poor, socialists are able to pull
the wool over the eyes of even the most intelligent and devout.
To maintain the
ovine imagery, by cloaking their activities with Christian language, and
hijacking people like St. Francis of Assisi to serve ends directly at odds with
the message Il Poverello and others
tried to convey, socialists become “wolves in sheep’s clothing.” They have thereby managed to make tremendous
inroads into otherwise orthodox Christian thought. As Brownson continued,
Socialism is a wolf in sheep's clothing. |
Perhaps the most
astounding thing of all, however, is the fact that a significant number of
Chesterton’s modern followers appear to have fallen victim to this predator in
the fold. For example, the Fabian
Society openly declares that its chief tactic is to infiltrate and transform
organized religion — and has adopted the wolf in sheep’s clothing as the badge
of the Society. Nevertheless, some of
today’s Chestertonians and distributists can be found not merely reading and
studying the works of socialists such as Henry George, Arthur Penty, Major
Douglas, R.H. Tawney, E.F. Schumacher, and others (including Karl
Marx), but advocating the thought of these writers as consistent with Catholic
social teaching!
It’s enough to
make one wonder. . . .
#30#