INTRODUCTION.
let them go on as they are doing.) In free competition the
most able succeed, and this should be our desire. Nothing
could be more absurd than to endeavour, by misdirec e
charity, to preserve those whom nature has condemned to
disappear, and thus place obstacles in the way of progress.
Yield place to the strong, for might makes right.
Christianity and Socialism hold quite another language.
They declare war against the strong, that is to say, the rich,
and aspire to raise up the poor and the down-trodden, d rey
subordinate these so-called natural laws to the law of Justice.
Let there be full liberty, but only under the guidance of right.
In the words of the Sermon on the Mount, “ Blessed are they
which do hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall
be filled.” It is impossible to understand by what strange
blindness Socialists adopt Darwinian theories, which condemn
their claims of equality, while at the same time they reject
Christianity, whence those claims have issued and whence
their justification may be found. At all events, we may
conclude that the religion which has shaped us all, advocates
as well as adversaries, has formulated in the clearest terms the
principles of Socialism, and that it is precisely in Christian
countries that socialistic doctrines have taken deepest root
Let us now consider the way in which religious Socialism
has become the political Socialism of our day. When the
Declaration of Independence in the United States, and t e
French Revolution, proclaimed the sovereignty of the people,
and inscribed the equality of men among the articles of the
constitution, the principle of the brotherhood of man descended
from the heights of the ideal and from the dreams of Utopia
to become thenceforth the watchword of the radical party in
every country to which the ideas that triumphed in America
and Paris have spread. Equality of political rights leads
inevitably to the demand for equality of conditions, that
is to say, the apportionment of well-being according to work
accomplished. Universal suffrage demands as its complement
universal well-being ; for it is a paradox that the people should
be at once wretched and sovereign. As Aristotle and Montes
quieu so continually insist, democratic institutions presuppose