Labour and the Free Churches, 1918-1939: Radicalism, Righteousness and Religion

Labour and the Free Churches, 1918-1939: Radicalism, Righteousness and Religion

by Peter Catterall
Labour and the Free Churches, 1918-1939: Radicalism, Righteousness and Religion

Labour and the Free Churches, 1918-1939: Radicalism, Righteousness and Religion

by Peter Catterall

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Overview

Did the Labour Party, in Morgan Phillips' famous phrase, owe 'more to Methodism than Marx'? Were the founding fathers of the party nurtured in the chapels of Nonconformity and shaped by their emphases on liberty, conscience and the value of every human being in the eyes of God? How did the Free Churches, traditionally allied to the Liberal Party, react to the growing importance of the Labour Party between the wars? This book addresses these questions at a range of levels: including organisation; rhetoric; policies and ideals; and electoral politics. It is shown that the distinctive religious setting in which Labour emerged indeed helps to explain the differences between it and more Marxist counterparts on the Continent, and that this setting continued to influence Labour approaches towards welfare, nationalisation and industrial relations between the wars. In the process Labour also adopted some of the righteousness of tone of the Free Churches.

This setting was, however, changing. Dropping their traditional suspicion of the State, Nonconformists instead increasingly invested it with religious values, helping to turban it through its growing welfare functions into the provider of practical Christianity. This nationalisation of religion continues to shape British attitudes to the welfare state as well as imposing narrowly utilitarian and material tests of relevance upon the churches and other social institutions. The elevation of the State was not, however, intended as an end in itself. What mattered were the social and individual outcomes. Socialism, for those Free Churchmen and women who helped to shape Labour in the early twentieth century, was about improving society as much as systems.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781441115898
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 10/06/2016
Pages: 336
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.81(d)

About the Author


Peter Catterall is Reader in History at the University of Westminster, UK. In addition, he teaches on democracy and public policy for the Hansard Society. He is also chair of the George Lansbury Memorial Trust. He has published widely on 20th-century British history and his most recent work is Labour and the Politics of Alcohol: The Decline of a Cause (2014).

Table of Contents

1. Introduction
2. Theological and Political Changes amongst the Free Church Leadership
3. The Nonconformist Conscience
4. Changes in Chapel Society
5. The Politics of Pewmanship
6. Free Churchmen and Women in the Labour Party
7. The Nonconformist Conscience and the Labour Party
8. The Free Churches and Class Consciousness
9. The Kingdom, the State and Socialism
10. Conclusions
Appendices on Nonconformist Candidatures in General Elections 1918-35
Bibliography
Index

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