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THE JEWISH QUESTION by Karl Marx Written: Autumn 1843; Formatted by Neil Jumonville, 2006. |
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Bruno Bauer,
The Jewish Question,
Braunschweig, 1843
The German Jews desire emancipation. What kind of emancipation
do they desire? Civic, political emancipation.
Bruno Bauer replies to them: No one in Germany is politically emancipated. We
ourselves are not free. How are we to free you? You Jews are egoists if you
demand a special emancipation for yourselves as Jews. As Germans, you ought
to work for the political emancipation of Germany, and as human beings, for
the emancipation of mankind, and you should feel the particular kind of your
oppression and your shame not as an exception to the rule, but on the contrary
as a confirmation of the rule.
Or do the Jews demand the same status as Christian subjects of the state? In
that case, they recognize that the Christian state is justified and they recognize,
too, the regime of general oppression. Why should they disapprove of their special
yoke if they approve of the general yoke? Why should the German be interested
in the liberation of the Jew, if the Jew is not interested in the liberation
of the German?
The Christian state knows only privileges. In this state, the Jew has the privilege
of being a Jew. As a Jew, he has rights which the Christians do not have. Why
should he want rights which he does not have, but which the Christians enjoy?
In wanting to be emancipated from the Christian state, the Jew is demanding
that the Christian state should give up its religious prejudice. Does he, the
Jew, give up his religious prejudice? Has he, then, the right to demand that
someone else should renounce his religion?
By its very nature, the Christian state incapable of emancipating the Jew; but,
adds Bauer, by his very nature the Jew cannot be emancipated. So long as the
state is Christian and the Jew is Jewish, the one is as incapable of granting
emancipation as the other is of receiving it.
The Christian state can behave towards the Jew only in the way characteristic
of the Christian state – that is, by granting privileges, by permitting
the separation of the Jew from the other subjects, but making him feel the pressure
of all the other separate spheres of society, and feel it all the more intensely
because he is in religious opposition to the dominant religion. But the Jew,
too, can behave towards the state only in a Jewish way – that is, by treating
it as something alien to him, by counterposing his imaginary nationality to
the real nationality, by counterposing his illusory law to the real law, by
deeming himself justified in separating himself from mankind, by abstaining
on principle from taking part in the historical movement, by putting his trust
in a future which has nothing in common with the future of mankind in general,
and by seeing himself as a member of the Jewish people, and the Jewish people
as the chosen people.
On what grounds, then, do you Jews want emancipation? On account of your religion?
It is the mortal enemy of the state religion. As citizens? In Germany, there
are no citizens. As human beings? But you are no more human beings than those
to whom you appeal.
Bauer has posed the question of Jewish emancipation in a new form, after giving
a critical analysis of the previous formulations and solutions of the question.
What, he asks, is the nature of the Jew who is to be emancipated and of the
Christian state that is to emancipate him? He replies by a critique of the Jewish
religion, he analyzes the religious opposition between Judaism and Christianity,
he elucidates the essence of the Christian state – and he does all this
audaciously, trenchantly, wittily, and with profundity, in a style of writing
what is as precise as it is pithy and vigorous.
How, then, does Bauer solve the Jewish question? What is the result? The formulation
of a question is its solution. The critique of the Jewish question is the answer
to the Jewish question. The summary, therefore, is as follows:
We must emancipated ourselves before we can emancipate others.
The most rigid form of the opposition between the Jew and the Christian is the
religious opposition. How is an opposition resolved? By making it impossible.
How is religious opposition made impossible? By abolishing religion. As soon
as Jew and Christian recognize that their respective religions are no more than
different stages in the development of the human mind, different snake skins
cast off by history, and that man is the snake who sloughed them, the relation
of Jew and Christian is no longer religious but is only a critical, scientific,
and human relation. Science, then, constitutes their unity. But, contradictions
in science are resolved by science itself.
The German Jew, in particular, is confronted by the general absence of political
emancipation and the strongly marked Christian character of the state. In Bauer’s
conception, however, the Jewish question has a universal significance, independent
of specifically German conditions. It is the question of the relation of religion
to the state, of the contradiction between religious constraint and political
emancipation. Emancipation from religion is laid down as a condition, both to
the Jew who wants to be emancipated politically, and to the state which is to
effect emancipation and is itself to be emancipated.
“Very well,” it is said, and the Jew himself says it, “the
Jew is to become emancipated not as a Jew, not because he is a Jew, not because
he possesses such an excellent, universally human principle of morality; on
the contrary, the Jew will retreat behind the citizen and be a citizen, although
he is a Jew and is to remain a Jew. That is to say, he is and remains a Jew,
although he is a citizen and lives in universally human conditions: his Jewish
and restricted nature triumphs always in the end over his human and political
obligations. The prejudice remains in spite of being outstripped by general
principles. But if it remains, then, on the contrary, it outstrips everything
else.”
“Only sophistically, only apparently, would the Jew be able to remain
a Jew in the life of the state. Hence, if he wanted to remain a Jew, the mere
appearance would become the essential and would triumph; that is to say, his
life in the state would be only a semblance or only a temporary exception to
the essential and the rule.” (“The Capacity of Present-Day Jews
and Christians to Become Free,” Einundzwanzig Bogen, pp. 57)
Let us hear, on the other hand, how Bauer presents the task of the state.
“France,” he says, “has recently shown us” (Proceedings
of the Chamber of Deputies, December 26, 1840) “in the connection with
the Jewish question – just as it has continually done in all other political
questions – the spectacle of a life which is free, but which revokes its
freedom by law, hence declaring it to be an appearance, and on the other hand
contradicting its free laws by its action.” (The Jewish Question, p. 64)
“In France, universal freedom is not yet the law, the Jewish question
too has not yet been solved, because legal freedom – the fact that all
citizens are equal – is restricted in actual life, which is still dominated
and divided by religious privileges, and this lack of freedom in actual life
reacts on law and compels the latter to sanction the division of the citizens,
who as such are free, into oppressed and oppressors.” (p. 65)
When, therefore, would the Jewish question be solved for France?
“The Jew, for example, would have ceased to be a Jew if he did not allow
himself to be prevented by his laws from fulfilling his duty to the state and
his fellow citizens, that is, for example, if on the Sabbath he attended the
Chamber of Deputies and took part in the official proceedings. Every religious
privilege, and therefore also the monopoly of a privileged church, would have
been abolished altogether, and if some or many persons, or even the overwhelming
majority, still believed themselves bound to fulfil religious duties, this fulfilment
ought to be left to them as a purely private matter.” (p. 65)
“There is no longer any religion when there is no longer any privileged
religion. Take from religion its exclusive power and it will no longer exist.”
(p. 66)
“Just as M. Martin du Nord saw the proposal to omit mention of Sunday
in the law as a motion to declare that Christianity has ceased to exist, with
equal reason (and this reason is very well founded) the declaration that the
law of the Sabbath is no longer binding on the Jew would be a proclamation abolishing
Judaism.” (p. 71)
Bauer, therefore, demands, on the one hand, that the Jew should renounce Judaism,
and that mankind in general should renounce religion, in order to achieve civic
emancipation. On the other hand, he quite consistently regards the political
abolition of religion as the abolition of religion as such. The state which
presupposes religion is not yet a true, real state.
“Of course, the religious notion affords security to the state. But to
what state? To what kind of state?” (p. 97)
At this point, the one-sided formulation of the Jewish question becomes evident.
It was by no means sufficient to investigate: Who is to emancipate? Who is to
be emancipated? Criticism had to investigate a third point. It had to inquire:
What kind of emancipation is in question? What conditions follow from the very
nature of the emancipation that is demanded? Only the criticism of political
emancipation itself would have been the conclusive criticism of the Jewish question
and its real merging in the “general question of time.”
Because Bauer does not raise the question to this level, he becomes entangled
in contradictions. He puts forward conditions which are not based on the nature
of political emancipation itself. He raises questions which are not part of
his problem, and he solves problems which leave this question unanswered. When
Bauer says of the opponents of Jewish emancipation: “Their error was only
that they assumed the Christian state to be the only true one and did not subject
it to the same criticism that they applied to Judaism” (op. cit., p. 3),
we find that his error lies in the fact that he subjects to criticism only the
“Christian state,” not the “state as such", that he does
not investigate the relation of political emancipation to human emancipation
and, therefore, puts forward conditions which can be explained only by uncritical
confusion of political emancipation with general human emancipation. If Bauer
asks the Jews: Have you, from your standpoint, the right to want political emancipation?
we ask the converse question: Does the standpoint of political emancipation
give the right to demand from the Jew the abolition of Judaism and from man
the abolition of religion?
The Jewish question acquires a different form depending on the state in which
the Jew lives. In Germany, where there is no political state, no state as such,
the Jewish question is a purely theological one. The Jew finds himself in religious
opposition to the state, which recognizes Christianity as its basis. This state
is a theologian ex professo. Criticism here is criticism of theology, a double-edged
criticism – criticism of Christian theology and of Jewish theology. Hence,
we continue to operate in the sphere of theology, however much we may operate
critically within it.
In France, a constitutional state, the Jewish question is a question of constitutionalism,
the question of the incompleteness of political emancipation. Since the semblance
of a state religion is retained here, although in a meaningless and self-contradictory
formula, that of a religion of the majority, the relation of the Jew to the
state retains the semblance of a religious, theological opposition.
Only in the North American states – at least, in some of them –
does the Jewish question lose its theological significance and become a really
secular question. Only where the political state exists in its completely developed
form can the relation of the Jew, and of the religious man in general, to the
political state, and therefore the relation of religion to the state, show itself
in its specific character, in its purity. The criticism of this relation ceases
to be theological criticism as soon as the state ceases to adopt a theological
attitude toward religion, as soon as it behaves towards religion as a state
– i.e., politically. Criticism, then, becomes criticism of the political
state. At this point, where the question ceases to be theological, Bauer’s
criticism ceases to be critical.
“In the United States there is neither a state religion nor a religion
declared to be that of the majority, nor the predominance of one cult over another.
The state stands aloof from all cults.” (Marie ou l’esclavage aux
Etats-Unis, etc., by G. de Beaumont, Paris, 1835, p. 214)
Indeed, there are some North American states where “the constitution does
not impose any religious belief or religious practice as a condition of political
rights.” (op. cit., p. 225)
Nevertheless, “in the United States people do not believe that a man without
religion could be an honest man.” (op. cit., p. 224)
Nevertheless, North America is pre-eminently the country of religiosity, as
Beaumont, Tocqueville, and the Englishman Hamilton unanimously assure us. The
North American states, however, serve us only as an example. The question is:
What is the relation of complete political emancipation to religion? If we find
that even in the country of complete political emancipation, religion not only
exists, but displays a fresh and vigorous vitality, that is proof that the existence
of religion is not in contradiction to the perfection of the state. Since, however,
the existence of religion is the existence of defect, the source of this defect
can only be sought in the nature of the state itself. We no longer regard religion
as the cause, but only as the manifestation of secular narrowness. Therefore,
we explain the religious limitations of the free citizen by their secular limitations.
We do not assert that they must overcome their religious narrowness in order
to get rid of their secular restrictions, we assert that they will overcome
their religious narrowness once they get rid of their secular restrictions.
We do not turn secular questions into theological ones. History has long enough
been merged in superstition, we now merge superstition in history. The question
of the relation of political emancipation to religion becomes for us the question
of the relation of political emancipation to human emancipation. We criticize
the religious weakness of the political state by criticizing the political state
in its secular form, apart from its weaknesses as regards religion. The contradiction
between the state and a particular religion, for instance Judaism, is given
by us a human form as the contradiction between the state and particular secular
elements; the contradiction between the state and religion in general as the
contradiction between the state and its presuppositions in general.
The political emancipation of the Jew, the Christian, and, in general, of religious
man, is the emancipation of the state from Judaism, from Christianity, from
religion in general. In its own form, in the manner characteristic of its nature,
the state as a state emancipates itself from religion by emancipating itself
from the state religion – that is to say, by the state as a state not
professing any religion, but, on the contrary, asserting itself as a state.
The political emancipation from religion is not a religious emancipation that
has been carried through to completion and is free from contradiction, because
political emancipation is not a form of human emancipation which has been carried
through to completion and is free from contradiction.
The limits of political emancipation are evident at once from the fact that
the state can free itself from a restriction without man being really free from
this restriction, that the state can be a free state [pun on word Freistaat,
which also means republic] without man being a free man. Bauer himself tacitly
admits this when he lays down the following condition for political emancipation:
“Every religious privilege, and therefore also the monopoly of a privileged
church, would have been abolished altogether, and if some or many persons, or
even the overwhelming majority, still believed themselves bound to fulfil religious
duties, this fulfilment ought to be left to them as a purely private matter.”
[The Jewish Question, p. 65]
It is possible, therefore, for the state to have emancipated itself from religion
even if the overwhelming majority is still religious. And the overwhelming majority
does not cease to be religious through being religious in private.
But, the attitude of the state, and of the republic [free state] in particular,
to religion is, after all, only the attitude to religion of the men who compose
the state. It follows from this that man frees himself through the medium of
the state, that he frees himself politically from a limitation when, in contradiction
with himself, he raises himself above this limitation in an abstract, limited,
and partial way. It follows further that, by freeing himself politically, man
frees himself in a roundabout way, through an intermediary, although an essential
intermediary. It follows, finally, that man, even if he proclaims himself an
atheist through the medium of the state – that is, if he proclaims the
state to be atheist – still remains in the grip of religion, precisely
because he acknowledges himself only by a roundabout route, only through an
intermediary. Religion is precisely the recognition of man in a roundabout way,
through an intermediary. The state is the intermediary between man and man’s
freedom. Just as Christ is the intermediary to whom man transfers the burden
of all his divinity, all his religious constraint, so the state is the intermediary
to whom man transfers all his non-divinity and all his human constraint.
The political elevation of man above religion shares all the defects and all
the advantages of political elevation in general. The state as a state annuls,
for instance, private property, man declares by political means that private
property is abolished as soon as the property qualification for the right to
elect or be elected is abolished, as has occurred in many states of North America.
Hamilton quite correctly interprets this fact from a political point of view
as meaning:
“the masses have won a victory over the property owners and financial
wealth.” [Thomas Hamilton, Men and Manners in America, 2 vols, Edinburgh,
1833, p. 146.]
Is not private property abolished in idea if the non-property owner has become
the legislator for the property owner? The property qualification for the suffrage
is the last political form of giving recognition to private property.
Nevertheless, the political annulment of private property not only fails to
abolish private property but even presupposes it. The state abolishes, in its
own way, distinctions of birth, social rank, education, occupation, when it
declares that birth, social rank, education, occupation, are non-political distinctions,
when it proclaims, without regard to these distinction, that every member of
the nation is an equal participant in national sovereignty, when it treats all
elements of the real life of the nation from the standpoint of the state. Nevertheless,
the state allows private property, education, occupation, to act in their way
– i.e., as private property, as education, as occupation, and to exert
the influence of their special nature. Far from abolishing these real distinctions,
the state only exists on the presupposition of their existence; it feels itself
to be a political state and asserts its universality only in opposition to these
elements of its being. Hegel, therefore, defines the relation of the political
state to religion quite correctly when he says:
“In order [...] that the state should come into existence as the self-knowing,
moral reality of the mind, its distraction from the form of authority and faith
is essential. But this distinction emerges only insofar as the ecclesiastical
aspect arrives at a separation within itself. It is only in this way that the
state, above the particular churches, has achieved and brought into existence
universality of thought, which is the principle of its form” (Hegel’s
Philosophy of Right, 1st edition, p. 346).
Of course! Only in this way, above the particular elements, does the state constitute
itself as universality.
The perfect political state is, by its nature, man’s species-life, as
opposed to his material life. All the preconditions of this egoistic life continue
to exist in civil society outside the sphere of the state, but as qualities
of civil society. Where the political state has attained its true development,
man – not only in thought, in consciousness, but in reality, in life –
leads a twofold life, a heavenly and an earthly life: life in the political
community, in which he considers himself a communal being, and life in civil
society, in which he acts as a private individual, regards other men as a means,
degrades himself into a means, and becomes the plaything of alien powers. The
relation of the political state to civil society is just as spiritual as the
relations of heaven to earth. The political state stands in the same opposition
to civil society, and it prevails over the latter in the same way as religion
prevails over the narrowness of the secular world – i.e., by likewise
having always to acknowledge it, to restore it, and allow itself to be dominated
by it. In his most immediate reality, in civil society, man is a secular being.
Here, where he regards himself as a real individual, and is so regarded by others,
he is a fictitious phenomenon. In the state, on the other hand, where man is
regarded as a species-being, he is the imaginary member of an illusory sovereignty,
is deprived of his real individual life and endowed with an unreal universality.
Man, as the adherent of a particular religion, finds himself in conflict with
his citizenship and with other men as members of the community. This conflict
reduces itself to the secular division between the political state and civil
society. For man as a bourgeois [i.e., as a member of civil society, “bourgeois
society” in German], “life in the state” is “only a
semblance or a temporary exception to the essential and the rule.” Of
course, the bourgeois, like the Jew, remains only sophistically in the sphere
of political life, just as the citoyen [‘citizen’ in French, i.e.,
the participant in political life] only sophistically remains a Jew or a bourgeois.
But, this sophistry is not personal. It is the sophistry of the political state
itself. The difference between the merchant and the citizen [Staatsbürger],
between the day-laborer and the citizen, between the landowner and the citizen,
between the merchant and the citizen, between the living individual and the
citizen. The contradiction in which the religious man finds himself with the
political man is the same contradiction in which the bourgeois finds himself
with the citoyen, and the member of civil society with his political lion’s
skin.
This secular conflict, to which the Jewish question ultimately reduces itself,
the relation between the political state and its preconditions, whether these
are material elements, such as private property, etc., or spiritual elements,
such as culture or religion, the conflict between the general interest and private
interest, the schism between the political state and civil society – these
secular antitheses Bauer allows to persist, whereas he conducts a polemic against
their religious expression.
“It is precisely the basis of civil society, the need that ensures the
continuance of this society and guarantees its necessity, which exposes its
existence to continual dangers, maintains in it an element of uncertainty, and
produces that continually changing mixture of poverty and riches, of distress
and prosperity, and brings about change in general.” (p. 8)
Compare the whole section: “Civil Society” (pp. 8-9), which has
been drawn up along the basic lines of Hegel’s philosophy of law. Civil
society, in its opposition to the political state, is recognized as necessary,
because the political state is recognized as necessary.
Political emancipation is, of course, a big step forward. True, it is not the
final form of human emancipation in general, but it is the final form of human
emancipation within the hitherto existing world order. It goes without saying
that we are speaking here of real, practical emancipation.
Man emancipates himself politically from religion by banishing it from the sphere
of public law to that of private law. Religion is no longer the spirit of the
state, in which man behaves – although in a limited way, in a particular
form, and in a particular sphere – as a species-being, in community with
other men. Religion has become the spirit of civil society, of the sphere of
egoism, of bellum omnium contra omnes. It is no longer the essence of community,
but the essence of difference. It has become the expression of man’s separation
from his community, from himself and from other men – as it was originally.
It is only the abstract avowal of specific perversity, private whimsy, and arbitrariness.
The endless fragmentation of religion in North America, for example, gives it
even externally the form of a purely individual affair. It has been thrust among
the multitude of private interests and ejected from the community as such. But
one should be under no illusion about the limits of political emancipation.
The division of the human being into a public man and a private man, the displacement
of religion from the state into civil society, this is not a stage of political
emancipation but its completion; this emancipation, therefore, neither abolished
the real religiousness of man, nor strives to do so.
The decomposition of man into Jew and citizen, Protestant and citizen, religious
man and citizen, is neither a deception directed against citizenhood, nor is
it a circumvention of political emancipation, it is political emancipation itself,
the political method of emancipating oneself from religion. Of course, in periods
when the political state as such is born violently out of civil society, when
political liberation is the form in which men strive to achieve their liberation,
the state can and must go as far as the abolition of religion, the destruction
of religion. But it can do so only in the same way that it proceeds to the abolition
of private property, to the maximum, to confiscation, to progressive taxation,
just as it goes as far as the abolition of life, the guillotine. At times of
special self-confidence, political life seeks to suppress its prerequisite,
civil society and the elements composing this society, and to constitute itself
as the real species-life of man, devoid of contradictions. But, it can achieve
this only by coming into violent contradiction with its own conditions of life,
only by declaring the revolution to be permanent, and, therefore, the political
drama necessarily ends with the re-establishment of religion, private property,
and all elements of civil society, just as war ends with peace.
Indeed, the perfect Christian state is not the so-called Christian state –
which acknowledges Christianity as its basis, as the state religion, and, therefore,
adopts an exclusive attitude towards other religions. On the contrary, the perfect
Christian state is the atheistic state, the democratic state, the state which
relegates religion to a place among the other elements of civil society. The
state which is still theological, which still officially professes Christianity
as its creed, which still does not dare to proclaim itself as a state, has,
in its reality as a state, not yet succeeded in expressing the human basis –
of which Christianity is the high-flown expression – in a secular, human
form. The so-called Christian state is simply nothing more than a non-state,
since it is not Christianity as a religion, but only the human background of
the Christian religion, which can find its expression in actual human creations.
The so-called Christian state is the Christian negation of the state, but by
no means the political realization of Christianity. The state which still professes
Christianity in the form of religion, does not yet profess it in the form appropriate
to the state, for it still has a religious attitude towards religion –
that is to say, it is not the true implementation of the human basis of religion,
because it still relies on the unreal, imaginary form of this human core. The
so-called Christian state is the imperfect state, and the Christian religion
is regarded by it as the supplementation and sanctification of its imperfection.
For the Christian state, therefore, religion necessarily becomes a means; hence,
it is a hypocritical state. It makes a great difference whether the complete
state, because of the defect inherent in the general nature of the state, counts
religion among its presuppositions, or whether the incomplete state, because
of the defect inherent in its particular existence as a defective state, declares
that religion is its basis. In the latter case, religion becomes imperfect politics.
In the former case, the imperfection even of consummate politics becomes evident
in religion. The so-called Christian state needs the Christian religion in order
to complete itself as a state. The democratic state, the real state, does not
need religion for its political completion. On the contrary, it can disregard
religion because in it the human basis of religion is realized in a secular
manner. The so-called Christian state, on the other hand, has a political attitude
to religion and a religious attitude to politics. By degrading the forms of
the state to mere semblance, it equally degrades religion to mere semblance.
In order to make this contradiction clearer, let us consider Bauer’s projection
of the Christian state, a projection based on his observation of the Christian-German
state.
“Recently,” says Bauer, “in order to prove the impossibility
or non-existence of a Christian state, reference has frequently been made to
those sayings in the Gospel with which the [present-day] state not only does
not comply, but cannot possibly comply, if it does not want to dissolve itself
completely [as a state].” “But the matter cannot be disposed of
so easily. What do these Gospel sayings demand? Supernatural renunciation of
self, submission to the authority of revelation, a turning-away from the state,
the abolition of secular conditions. Well, the Christian state demands and accomplishes
all that. It has assimilated the spirit of the Gospel, and if it does not reproduce
this spirit in the same terms as the Gospel, that occurs only because it expresses
this spirit in political forms, i.e., in forms which, it is true, are taken
from the political system in this world, but which in the religious rebirth
that they have to undergo become degraded to a mere semblance. This is a turning-away
from the state while making use of political forms for its realization.”
(p. 55)
Bauer then explains that the people of a Christian state is only a non-people,
no longer having a will of its own, but whose true existence lies in the leader
to whom it is subjected, although this leader by his origin and nature is alien
to it – i.e., given by God and imposed on the people without any co-operation
on its part. Bauer declares that the laws of such a people are not its own creation,
but are actual revelations, that its supreme chief needs privileged intermediaries
with the people in the strict sense, with the masses, and that the masses themselves
are divided into a multitude of particular groupings which are formed and determined
by chance, which are differentiated by their interests, their particular passions
and prejudices, and obtain permission as a privilege, to isolate themselves
from one another, etc. (p. 56)
However, Bauer himself says:
“Politics, if it is to be nothing but religion, ought not to be politics,
just as the cleaning of saucepans, if it is to be accepted as a religious matter,
ought not to be regarded as a matter of domestic economy.” (p. 108)
In the Christian-German state, however, religion is an “economic matter”
just as “economic matters” belong to the sphere of religion. The
domination of religion in the Christian-German state is the religion of domination.
The separation of the “spirit of the Gospel” from the “letter
of the Gospel” is an irreligious act. A state which makes the Gospel speak
in the language of politics – that is, in another language than that of
the Holy Ghost – commits sacrilege, if not in human eyes, then in the
eyes of its own religion. The state which acknowledges Christianity as its supreme
criterion, and the Bible as its Charter, must be confronted with the words of
Holy Scripture, for every word of Scripture is holy. This state, as well as
the human rubbish on which it is based, is caught in a painful contradiction
that is insoluble from the standpoint of religious consciousness when it is
referred to those sayings of the Gospel with which it “not only does not
comply, but cannot possibly comply, if it does not want to dissolve itself completely
as a state.” And why does it not want to dissolve itself completely? The
state itself cannot give an answer either to itself or to others. In its own
consciousness, the official Christian state is an imperative, the realization
of which is unattainable, the state can assert the reality of its existence
only by lying to itself, and therefore always remains in its own eyes an object
of doubt, an unreliable, problematic object. Criticism is, therefore, fully
justified in forcing the state that relies on the Bible into a mental derangement
in which it no longer knows whether it is an illusion or a reality, and in which
the infamy of its secular aims, for which religion serves as a cloak, comes
into insoluble conflict with the sincerity of its religious consciousness, for
which religion appears as the aim of the world. This state can only save itself
from its inner torment if it becomes the police agent of the Catholic Church.
In relation to the church, which declares the secular power to be its servant,
the state is powerless, the secular power which claims to be the rule of the
religious spirit is powerless.
It is, indeed, estrangement which matters in the so-called Christian state,
but not man. The only man who counts, the king, is a being specifically different
from other men, and is, moreover, a religious being, directly linked with heaven,
with God. The relationships which prevail here are still relationships dependent
of faith. The religious spirit, therefore, is still not really secularized.
But, furthermore, the religious spirit cannot be really secularized, for what
is it in itself but the non-secular form of a stage in the development of the
human mind? The religious spirit can only be secularized insofar as the stage
of development of the human mind of which it is the religious expression makes
its appearance and becomes constituted in its secular form. This takes place
in the democratic state. Not Christianity, but the human basis of Christianity
is the basis of this state. Religion remains the ideal, non-secular consciousness
of its members, because religion is the ideal form of the stage of human development
achieved in this state.
The members of the political state are religious owning to the dualism between
individual life and species-life, between the life of civil society and political
life. They are religious because men treat the political life of the state,
an area beyond their real individuality, as if it were their true life. They
are religious insofar as religion here is the spirit of civil society, expressing
the separation and remoteness of man from man. Political democracy is Christian
since in it man, not merely one man but everyman, ranks as sovereign, as the
highest being, but it is man in his uncivilized, unsocial form, man in his fortuitous
existence, man just as he is, man as he has been corrupted by the whole organization
of our society, who has lost himself, been alienated, and handed over to the
rule of inhuman conditions and elements – in short, man who is not yet
a real species-being. That which is a creation of fantasy, a dream, a postulate
of Christianity, i.e., the sovereignty of man – but man as an alien being
different from the real man – becomes, in democracy, tangible reality,
present existence, and secular principle.
In the perfect democracy, the religious and theological consciousness itself
is in its own eyes the more religious and the more theological because it is
apparently without political significance, without worldly aims, the concern
of a disposition that shuns the world, the expression of intellectual narrow-mindedness,
the product of arbitrariness and fantasy, and because it is a life that is really
of the other world. Christianity attains, here, the practical expression of
its universal-religious significance in that the most diverse world outlooks
are grouped alongside one another in the form of Christianity and still more
because it does not require other people to profess Christianity, but only religion
in general, any kind of religion (cf. Beaumont’s work quoted above). The
religious consciousness revels in the wealth of religious contradictions and
religious diversity.
We have, thus, shown that political emancipation from religion leaves religion
in existence, although not a privileged religion. The contradiction in which
the adherent of a particular religion finds himself involved in relation to
his citizenship is only one aspect of the universal secular contradiction between
the political state and civil society. The consummation of the Christian state
is the state which acknowledges itself as a state and disregards the religion
of its members. The emancipation of the state from religion is not the emancipation
of the real man from religion.
Therefore, we do not say to the Jews, as Bauer does: You cannot be emancipated
politically without emancipating yourselves radically from Judaism. On the contrary,
we tell them: Because you can be emancipated politically without renouncing
Judaism completely and incontrovertibly, political emancipation itself is not
human emancipation. If you Jews want to be emancipated politically, without
emancipating yourselves humanly, the half-hearted approach and contradiction
is not in you alone, it is inherent in the nature and category of political
emancipation. If you find yourself within the confines of this category, you
share in a general confinement. Just as the state evangelizes when, although
it is a state, it adopts a Christian attitude towards the Jews, so the Jew acts
politically when, although a Jew, he demands civic rights.
[ * ]
But, if a man, although a Jew, can be emancipated politically and receive civic
rights, can he lay claim to the so-called rights of man and receive them? Bauer
denies it.
“The question is whether the Jew as such, that is, the Jew who himself
admits that he is compelled by his true nature to live permanently in separation
from other men, is capable of receiving the universal rights of man and of conceding
them to others.”
“For the Christian world, the idea of the rights of man was only discovered
in the last century. It is not innate in men; on the contrary, it is gained
only in a struggle against the historical traditions in which hitherto man was
brought up. Thus the rights of man are not a gift of nature, not a legacy from
past history, but the reward of the struggle against the accident of birth and
against the privileges which up to now have been handed down by history from
generation to generation. These rights are the result of culture, and only one
who has earned and deserved them can possess them.”
“Can the Jew really take possession of them? As long as he is a Jew, the
restricted nature which makes him a Jew is bound to triumph over the human nature
which should link him as a man with other men, and will separate him from non-Jews.
He declares by this separation that the particular nature which makes him a
Jew is his true, highest nature, before which human nature has to give way.”
“Similarly, the Christian as a Christian cannot grant the rights of man.”
(p. 19,20)
According to Bauer, man has to sacrifice the “privilege of faith”
to be able to receive the universal rights of man. Let us examine, for a moment,
the so-called rights of man – to be precise, the rights of man in their
authentic form, in the form which they have among those who discovered them,
the North Americans and the French. These rights of man are, in part, political
rights, rights which can only be exercised in community with others. Their content
is participation in the community, and specifically in the political community,
in the life of the state. They come within the category of political freedom,
the category of civic rights, which, as we have seen, in no way presuppose the
incontrovertible and positive abolition of religion – nor, therefore,
of Judaism. There remains to be examined the other part of the rights of man
– the droits d’homme, insofar as these differ from the droits d’citoyen.
Included among them is freedom of conscience, the right to practice any religion
one chooses. The privilege of faith is expressly recognized either as a right
of man or as the consequence of a right of man, that of liberty.
Déclaration des droits de l’droits et du citoyen, 1791, Article
10: “No one is to be subjected to annoyance because of his opinions, even
religious opinions.” “The freedom of every man to practice the religion
of which he is an adherent.”
Declaration of the Rights of Man, etc., 1793, includes among the rights of man,
Article 7: “The free exercise of religion.” Indeed, in regard to
man’s right to express his thoughts and opinions, to hold meetings, and
to exercise his religion, it is even stated: “The necessity of proclaiming
these rights presupposes either the existence or the recent memory of despotism.”
Compare the Constitution of 1795, Section XIV, Article 354.
Constitution of Pennsylvania, Article 9, § 3: “All men have received
from nature the imprescriptible right to worship the Almighty according to the
dictates of their conscience, and no one can be legally compelled to follow,
establish, or support against his will any religion or religious ministry. No
human authority can, in any circumstances, intervene in a matter of conscience
or control the forces of the soul.”
Constitution of New Hampshire, Article 5 and 6: “Among these natural rights
some are by nature inalienable since nothing can replace them. The rights of
conscience are among them.” (Beaumont, op. cit., pp. 213,214)
Incompatibility between religion and the rights of man is to such a degree absent
from the concept of the rights of man that, on the contrary, a man’s right
to be religious, in any way he chooses, to practise his own particular religion,
is expressly included among the rights of man. The privilege of faith is a universal
right of man.
The droits de l’homme, the rights of man, are, as such, distinct from
the droits du citoyen, the rights of the citizen. Who is homme as distinct from
citoyen? None other than the member of civil society. Why is the member of civil
society called “man,” simply man; why are his rights called the
rights of man? How is this fact to be explained? From the relationship between
the political state and civil society, from the nature of political emancipation.
Above all, we note the fact that the so-called rights of man, the droits de
l’homme as distinct from the droits du citoyen, are nothing but the rights
of a member of civil society – i.e., the rights of egoistic man, of man
separated from other men and from the community. Let us hear what the most radical
Constitution, the Constitution of 1793, has to say:
Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen.
Article 2. “These rights, etc., (the natural and imprescriptible rights)
are: equality, liberty, security, property.”
What constitutes liberty?
Article 6. “Liberty is the power which man has to do everything that does
not harm the rights of others,” or, according to the Declaration of the
Rights of Man of 1791: “Liberty consists in being able to do everything
which does not harm others.”
Liberty, therefore, is the right to do everything that harms no one else. The
limits within which anyone can act without harming someone else are defined
by law, just as the boundary between two fields is determined by a boundary
post. It is a question of the liberty of man as an isolated monad, withdrawn
into himself. Why is the Jew, according to Bauer, incapable of acquiring the
rights of man?
“As long as he is a Jew, the restricted nature which makes him a Jew is
bound to triumph over the human nature which should link him as a man with other
men, and will separate him from non-Jews.”
But, the right of man to liberty is based not on the association of man with
man, but on the separation of man from man. It is the right of this separation,
the right of the restricted individual, withdrawn into himself.
The practical application of man’s right to liberty is man’s right
to private property.
What constitutes man’s right to private property?
Article 16. (Constitution of 1793): “The right of property is that which
every citizen has of enjoying and of disposing at his discretion of his goods
and income, of the fruits of his labor and industry.”
The right of man to private property is, therefore, the right to enjoy one’s
property and to dispose of it at one’s discretion (à son gré),
without regard to other men, independently of society, the right of self-interest.
This individual liberty and its application form the basis of civil society.
It makes every man see in other men not the realization of his own freedom,
but the barrier to it. But, above all, it proclaims the right of man
“of enjoying and of disposing at his discretion of his goods and income,
of the fruits of his labor and industry.”
There remains the other rights of man: égalité and sûreté.
Equality, used here in its non-political sense, is nothing but the equality
of the liberté described above – namely: each man is to the same
extent regarded as such a self-sufficient monad. The Constitution of 1795 defines
the concept of this equality, in accordance with this significance, as follows:
Article 3 (Constitution of 1795): “Equality consists in the law being
the same for all, whether it protects or punishes.”
And security?
Article 8 (Constitution of 1793): “Security consists in the protection
afforded by society to each of its members for the preservation of his person,
his rights, and his property.”
Security is the highest social concept of civil society, the concept of police,
expressing the fact that the whole of society exists only in order to guarantee
to each of its members the preservation of his person, his rights, and his property.
It is in this sense that Hegel calls civil society “the state of need
and reason.”
The concept of security does not raise civil society above its egoism. On the
contrary, security is the insurance of egoism.
None of the so-called rights of man, therefore, go beyond egoistic man, beyond
man as a member of civil society – that is, an individual withdrawn into
himself, into the confines of his private interests and private caprice, and
separated from the community. In the rights of man, he is far from being conceived
as a species-being; on the contrary, species-like itself, society, appears as
a framework external to the individuals, as a restriction of their original
independence. The sole bond holding them together it natural necessity, need
and private interest, the preservation of their property and their egoistic
selves.
It is puzzling enough that a people which is just beginning to liberate itself,
to tear down all the barriers between its various sections, and to establish
a political community, that such a people solemnly proclaims (Declaration of
1791) the rights of egoistic man separated from his fellow men and from the
community, and that indeed it repeats this proclamation at a moment when only
the most heroic devotion can save the nation, and is therefore imperatively
called for, at a moment when the sacrifice of all the interest of civil society
must be the order of the day, and egoism must be punished as a crime. (Declaration
of the Rights of Man, etc., of 1793.) This fact becomes still more puzzling
when we see that the political emancipators go so far as to reduce citizenship,
and the political community, to a mere means for maintaining these so-called
rights of man, that, therefore, the citoyen is declared to be the servant of
egotistic homme, that the sphere in which man acts as a communal being is degraded
to a level below the sphere in which he acts as a partial being, and that, finally,
it is not man as citoyen, but man as private individual [bourgeois] who is considered
to be the essential and true man.
“The aim of all political association is the preservation of the natural
and imprescriptible rights of man.” (Declaration of the Rights, etc.,
of 1791, Article 2.)
“Government is instituted in order to guarantee man the enjoyment of his
natural and imprescriptible rights.” (Declaration, etc., of 1793, Article
1.)
Hence, even in moments when its enthusiasm still has the freshness of youth
and is intensified to an extreme degree by the force of circumstances, political
life declares itself to be a mere means, whose purpose is the life is civil
society. It is true that its revolutionary practice is in flagrant contradiction
with its theory. Whereas, for example, security is declared one of the rights
of man, violation of the privacy of correspondence is openly declared to be
the order of the day. Whereas “unlimited freedom of the press” (Constitution
of 1793, Article 122) is guaranteed as a consequence of the right of man to
individual liberty, freedom of the press is totally destroyed, because “freedom
of the press should not be permitted when it endangers public liberty.”
(“Robespierre jeune,” Historie parlementaire de la Révolution
française by Buchez and Roux, vol.28, p. 159.) That is to say, therefore:
The right of man to liberty ceases to be a right as soon as it comes into conflict
with political life, whereas in theory political life is only the guarantee
of human rights, the rights of the individual, and therefore must be abandoned
as soon as it comes into contradiction with its aim, with these rights of man.
But, practice is merely the exception, theory is the rule. But even if one were
to regard revolutionary practice as the correct presentation of the relationship,
there would still remain the puzzle of why the relationship is turned upside-down
in the minds of the political emancipators and the aim appears as the means,
while the means appears as the aim. This optical illusion of their consciousness
would still remain a puzzle, although now a psychological, a theoretical puzzle.
The puzzle is easily solved.
Political emancipation is, at the same time, the dissolution of the old society
on which the state alienated from the people, the sovereign power, is based.
What was the character of the old society? It can be described in one word –
feudalism. The character of the old civil society was directly political –
that is to say, the elements of civil life, for example, property, or the family,
or the mode of labor, were raised to the level of elements of political life
in the form of seigniory, estates, and corporations. In this form, they determined
the relation of the individual to the state as a whole – i.e., his political
relation, that is, his relation of separation and exclusion from the other components
of society. For that organization of national life did not raise property or
labor to the level of social elements; on the contrary, it completed their separation
from the state as a whole and constituted them as discrete societies within
society. Thus, the vital functions and conditions of life of civil society remained,
nevertheless, political, although political in the feudal sense – that
is to say, they secluded the individual from the state as a whole and they converted
the particular relation of his corporation to the state as a whole into his
general relation to the life of the nation, just as they converted his particular
civil activity and situation into his general activity and situation. As a result
of this organization, the unity of the state, and also the consciousness, will,
and activity of this unity, the general power of the state, are likewise bound
to appear as the particular affair of a ruler isolated from the people, and
of his servants.
The political revolution which overthrew this sovereign power and raised state
affairs to become affairs of the people, which constituted the political state
as a matter of general concern, that is, as a real state, necessarily smashed
all estates, corporations, guilds, and privileges, since they were all manifestations
of the separation of the people from the community. The political revolution
thereby abolished the political character of civil society. It broke up civil
society into its simple component parts; on the one hand, the individuals; on
the other hand, the material and spiritual elements constituting the content
of the life and social position of these individuals. It set free the political
spirit, which had been, as it were, split up, partitioned, and dispersed in
the various blind alleys of feudal society. It gathered the dispersed parts
of the political spirit, freed it from its intermixture with civil life, and
established it as the sphere of the community, the general concern of the nation,
ideally independent of those particular elements of civil life. A person’s
distinct activity and distinct situation in life were reduced to a merely individual
significance. They no longer constituted the general relation of the individual
to the state as a whole. Public affairs as such, on the other hand, became the
general affair of each individual, and the political function became the individual’s
general function.
But, the completion of the idealism of the state was at the same time the completion
of the materialism of civil society. Throwing off the political yoke meant at
the same time throwing off the bonds which restrained the egoistic spirit of
civil society. Political emancipation was, at the same time, the emancipation
of civil society from politics, from having even the semblance of a universal
content.
Feudal society was resolved into its basic element – man, but man as he
really formed its basis – egoistic man.
This man, the member of civil society, is thus the basis, the precondition,
of the political state. He is recognized as such by this state in the rights
of man.
The liberty of egoistic man and the recognition of this liberty, however, is
rather the recognition of the unrestrained movement of the spiritual and material
elements which form the content of his life.
Hence, man was not freed from religion, he received religious freedom. He was
not freed from property, he received freedom to own property. He was not freed
from the egoism of business, he received freedom to engage in business.
The establishment of the political state and the dissolution of civil society
into independent individuals – whose relation with one another on law,
just as the relations of men in the system of estates and guilds depended on
privilege – is accomplished by one and the same act. Man as a member of
civil society, unpolitical man, inevitably appears, however, as the natural
man. The “rights of man” appears as “natural rights,”
because conscious activity is concentrated on the political act. Egoistic man
is the passive result of the dissolved society, a result that is simply found
in existence, an object of immediate certainty, therefore a natural object.
The political revolution resolves civil life into its component parts, without
revolutionizing these components themselves or subjecting them to criticism.
It regards civil society, the world of needs, labor, private interests, civil
law, as the basis of its existence, as a precondition not requiring further
substantiation and therefore as its natural basis. Finally, man as a member
of civil society is held to be man in his sensuous, individual, immediate existence,
whereas political man is only abstract, artificial man, man as an allegorical,
juridical person. The real man is recognized only in the shape of the egoistic
individual, the true man is recognized only in the shape of the abstract citizen.
Therefore, Rousseau correctly described the abstract idea of political man as
follows:
“Whoever dares undertake to establish a people’s institutions must
feel himself capable of changing, as it were, human nature, of transforming
each individual, who by himself is a complete and solitary whole, into a part
of a larger whole, from which, in a sense, the individual receives his life
and his being, of substituting a limited and mental existence for the physical
and independent existence. He has to take from man his own powers, and give
him in exchange alien powers which he cannot employ without the help of other
men.”
All emancipation is a reduction of the human world and relationships to man
himself.
Political emancipation is the reduction of man, on the one hand, to a member
of civil society, to an egoistic, independent individual, and, on the other
hand, to a citizen, a juridical person.
Only when the real, individual man re-absorbs in himself the abstract citizen,
and as an individual human being has become a species-being in his everyday
life, in his particular work, and in his particular situation, only when man
has recognized and organized his “own powers” as social powers,
and, consequently, no longer separates social power from himself in the shape
of political power, only then will human emancipation have been accomplished.
II
Bruno Bauer,
“The Capacity of Present-day Jews and Christians to Become Free,”
Einundzwanzig Bogen aus der Schweiz, pp. 56-71
It is in this form that Bauer deals with the relation between the Jewish and
the Christian religions, and also with their relation to criticism. Their relation
to criticism is their relation “to the capacity to become free.”
The result arrived at is:
“The Christian has to surmount only one stage, namely, that of his religion,
in order to give up religion altogether,”
and therefore become free.
“The Jew, on the other hand, has to break not only with his Jewish nature,
but also with the development towards perfecting his religion, a development
which has remained alien to him.” (p. 71)
Thus, Bauer here transforms the question of Jewish emancipation into a purely
religious question. The theological problem as to whether the Jew or the Christian
has the better prospect of salvation is repeated here in the enlightened form:
which of them is more capable of emancipation. No longer is the question asked:
Is it Judaism or Christianity that makes a man free? On the contrary, the question
is now: Which makes man freer, the negation of Judaism or the negation of Christianity?
“If the Jews want to become free, they should profess belief not in Christianity,
but in the dissolution of Christianity, in the dissolution of religion in general,
that is to say, in enlightenment, criticism, and its consequences, free humanity.”
(p. 70)
For the Jew, it is still a matter of a profession of faith, but no longer a
profession of belief in Christianity, but of belief in Christianity in dissolution.
Bauer demands of the Jews that they should break with the essence of the Christian
religion, a demand which, as he says himself, does not arise out of the development
of Judaism.
Since Bauer, at the end of his work on the Jewish question, had conceived Judaism
only as crude religious criticism of Christianity, and therefore saw in it “merely”
a religious significance, it could be foreseen that the emancipation of the
Jews, too, would be transformed into a philosophical-theological act.
Bauer considers that the ideal, abstract nature of the Jew, his religion, is
his entire nature. Hence, he rightly concludes:
“The Jew contributes nothing to mankind if he himself disregards his narrow
law,” if he invalidates his entire Judaism. (p. 65)
Accordingly, the relation between Jews and Christians becomes the following:
the sole interest of the Christian in the emancipation of the Jew is a general
human interest, a theoretical interest. Judaism is a fact that offends the religious
eye of the Christian. As soon as his eye ceases to be religious, this fact ceases
to be offensive. The emancipation of the Jew is, in itself, not a task for the
Christian.
The Jew, on the other hand, in order to emancipate himself, has to carry out
not only his own work, but also that of the Christian – i.e., the Critique
of the Evangelical History of the Synoptics and the Life of Jesus, etc.
“It is up to them to deal with it: they themselves will decide their fate;
but history is not to be trifled with.” (p. 71)
We are trying to break with the theological formulation of the question. For
us, the question of the Jew’s capacity for emancipation becomes the question:
What particular social element has to be overcome in order to abolish Judaism?
For the present-day Jew’s capacity for emancipation is the relation of
Judaism to the emancipation of the modern world. This relation necessarily results
from the special position of Judaism in the contemporary enslaved world.
Let us consider the actual, worldly Jew – not the Sabbath Jew, as Bauer
does, but the everyday Jew.
Let us not look for the secret of the Jew in his religion, but let us look for
the secret of his religion in the real Jew.
What is the secular basis of Judaism? Practical need, self-interest. What is
the worldly religion of the Jew? Huckstering. What is his worldly God? Money.
Very well then! Emancipation from huckstering and money, consequently from practical,
real Judaism, would be the self-emancipation of our time.
An organization of society which would abolish the preconditions for huckstering,
and therefore the possibility of huckstering, would make the Jew impossible.
His religious consciousness would be dissipated like a thin haze in the real,
vital air of society. On the other hand, if the Jew recognizes that this practical
nature of his is futile and works to abolish it, he extricates himself from
his previous development and works for human emancipation as such and turns
against the supreme practical expression of human self-estrangement.
We recognize in Judaism, therefore, a general anti-social element of the present
time, an element which through historical development – to which in this
harmful respect the Jews have zealously contributed – has been brought
to its present high level, at which it must necessarily begin to disintegrate.
In the final analysis, the emancipation of the Jews is the emancipation of mankind
from Judaism.
The Jew has already emancipated himself in a Jewish way.
“The Jew, who in Vienna, for example, is only tolerated, determines the
fate of the whole Empire by his financial power. The Jew, who may have no rights
in the smallest German state, decides the fate of Europe. While corporations
and guilds refuse to admit Jews, or have not yet adopted a favorable attitude
towards them, the audacity of industry mocks at the obstinacy of the material
institutions.” (Bruno Bauer, The Jewish Question, p. 114)
This is no isolated fact. The Jew has emancipated himself in a Jewish manner,
not only because he has acquired financial power, but also because, through
him and also apart from him, money has become a world power and the practical
Jewish spirit has become the practical spirit of the Christian nations. The
Jews have emancipated themselves insofar as the Christians have become Jews.
Captain Hamilton, for example, reports:
“The devout and politically free inhabitant of New England is a kind of
Laocoön who makes not the least effort to escape from the serpents which
are crushing him. Mammon is his idol which he adores not only with his lips
but with the whole force of his body and mind. In his view the world is no more
than a Stock Exchange, and he is convinced that he has no other destiny here
below than to become richer than his neighbor. Trade has seized upon all his
thoughts, and he has no other recreation than to exchange objects. When he travels
he carries, so to speak, his goods and his counter on his back and talks only
of interest and profit. If he loses sight of his own business for an instant
it is only in order to pry into the business of his competitors.”
Indeed, in North America, the practical domination of Judaism over the Christian
world has achieved as its unambiguous and normal expression that the preaching
of the Gospel itself and the Christian ministry have become articles of trade,
and the bankrupt trader deals in the Gospel just as the Gospel preacher who
has become rich goes in for business deals.
“The man who you see at the head of a respectable congregation began as
a trader; his business having failed, he became a minister. The other began
as a priest but as soon as he had some money at his disposal he left the pulpit
to become a trader. In the eyes of very many people, the religious ministry
is a veritable business career.” (Beaumont, op. cit., pp. 185,186.)
According to Bauer, it is
“a fictitious state of affairs when in theory the Jew is deprived of political
rights, whereas in practice he has immense power and exerts his political influence
en gros, although it is curtailed en détail.” (Die Judenfrage,
p. 114)
The contradiction that exists between the practical political power of the Jew
and his political rights is the contradiction between politics and the power
of money in general. Although theoretically the former is superior to the latter,
in actual fact politics has become the serf of financial power.
Judaism has held its own alongside Christianity, not only as religious criticism
of Christianity, not only as the embodiment of doubt in the religious derivation
of Christianity, but equally because the practical Jewish spirit, Judaism, has
maintained itself and even attained its highest development in Christian society.
The Jew, who exists as a distinct member of civil society, is only a particular
manifestation of the Judaism of civil society.
Judaism continues to exist not in spite of history, but owing to history.
The Jew is perpetually created by civil society from its own entrails.
What, in itself, was the basis of the Jewish religion? Practical need, egoism.
The monotheism of the Jew, therefore, is in reality the polytheism of the many
needs, a polytheism which makes even the lavatory an object of divine law. Practical
need, egoism, is the principle of civil society, and as such appears in pure
form as soon as civil society has fully given birth to the political state.
The god of practical need and self-interest is money.
Money is the jealous god of Israel, in face of which no other god may exist.
Money degrades all the gods of man – and turns them into commodities.
Money is the universal self-established value of all things. It has, therefore,
robbed the whole world – both the world of men and nature – of its
specific value. Money is the estranged essence of man’s work and man’s
existence, and this alien essence dominates him, and he worships it.
The god of the Jews has become secularized and has become the god of the world.
The bill of exchange is the real god of the Jew. His god is only an illusory
bill of exchange.
The view of nature attained under the domination of private property and money
is a real contempt for, and practical debasement of, nature; in the Jewish religion,
nature exists, it is true, but it exists only in imagination.
It is in this sense that [in a 1524 pamphlet] Thomas Münzer declares it
intolerable
“that all creatures have been turned into property, the fishes in the
water, the birds in the air, the plants on the earth; the creatures, too, must
become free.”
Contempt for theory, art, history, and for man as an end in himself, which is
contained in an abstract form in the Jewish religion, is the real, conscious
standpoint, the virtue of the man of money. The species-relation itself, the
relation between man and woman, etc., becomes an object of trade! The woman
is bought and sold.
The chimerical nationality of the Jew is the nationality of the merchant, of
the man of money in general.
The groundless law of the Jew is only a religious caricature of groundless morality
and right in general, of the purely formal rites with which the world of self-interest
surrounds itself.
Here, too, man’s supreme relation is the legal one, his relation to laws
that are valid for him not because they are laws of his own will and nature,
but because they are the dominant laws and because departure from them is avenged.
Jewish Jesuitism, the same practical Jesuitism which Bauer discovers in the
Talmud, is the relation of the world of self-interest to the laws governing
that world, the chief art of which consists in the cunning circumvention of
these laws.
Indeed, the movement of this world within its framework of laws is bound to
be a continual suspension of law.
Judaism could not develop further as a religion, could not develop further theoretically,
because the world outlook of practical need is essentially limited and is completed
in a few strokes.
By its very nature, the religion of practical need could find its consummation
not in theory, but only in practice, precisely because its truth is practice.
Judaism could not create a new world; it could only draw the new creations and
conditions of the world into the sphere of its activity, because practical need,
the rationale of which is self-interest, is passive and does not expand at will,
but finds itself enlarged as a result of the continuous development of social
conditions.
Judaism reaches its highest point with the perfection of civil society, but
it is only in the Christian world that civil society attains perfection. Only
under the dominance of Christianity, which makes all national, natural, moral,
and theoretical conditions extrinsic to man, could civil society separate itself
completely from the life of the state, sever all the species-ties of man, put
egoism and selfish need in the place of these species-ties, and dissolve the
human world into a world of atomistic individuals who are inimically opposed
to one another.
Christianity sprang from Judaism. It has merged again in Judaism.
From the outset, the Christian was the theorizing Jew, the Jew is, therefore,
the practical Christian, and the practical Christian has become a Jew again.
Christianity had only in semblance overcome real Judaism. It was too noble-minded,
too spiritualistic to eliminate the crudity of practical need in any other way
than by elevation to the skies.
Christianity is the sublime thought of Judaism, Judaism is the common practical
application of Christianity, but this application could only become general
after Christianity as a developed religion had completed theoretically the estrangement
of man from himself and from nature.
Only then could Judaism achieve universal dominance and make alienated man and
alienated nature into alienable, vendible objects subjected to the slavery of
egoistic need and to trading.
Selling [verausserung] is the practical aspect of alienation [Entausserung].
Just as man, as long as he is in the grip of religion, is able to objectify
his essential nature only by turning it into something alien, something fantastic,
so under the domination of egoistic need he can be active practically, and produce
objects in practice, only by putting his products, and his activity, under the
domination of an alien being, and bestowing the significance of an alien entity
– money – on them.
In its perfected practice, Christian egoism of heavenly bliss is necessarily
transformed into the corporal egoism of the Jew, heavenly need is turned into
world need, subjectivism into self-interest. We explain the tenacity of the
Jew not by his religion, but, on the contrary, by the human basis of his religion
– practical need, egoism.
Since in civil society the real nature of the Jew has been universally realized
and secularized, civil society could not convince the Jew of the unreality of
his religious nature, which is indeed only the ideal aspect of practical need.
Consequently, not only in the Pentateuch and the Talmud, but in present-day
society we find the nature of the modern Jew, and not as an abstract nature
but as one that is in the highest degree empirical, not merely as a narrowness
of the Jew, but as the Jewish narrowness of society.
Once society has succeeded in abolishing the empirical essence of Judaism –
huckstering and its preconditions – the Jew will have become impossible,
because his consciousness no longer has an object, because the subjective basis
of Judaism, practical need, has been humanized, nd because the conflict between
man’s individual-sensuous existence and his species-existence has been
abolished.
The social emancipation of the Jew is the emancipation of society from Judaism.