John
Ruskin, the highly influential British writer, art critic, and social thinker
in the last half of the 19th century, died 120 years ago today (on
January 20, 1900) at the age of 81. His most important literary work
highlighted what has been called “the scandal of grace.”
Bumping
into Ruskin
When
I read the Summer 2019 issue of Plough Quarterly, I was impressed with the
article titled “Comrade Ruskin: How a Victorian visionary can save communism
from Marx” by Eugene McCarraher, a professor at Villanova University.
(McCarraher’s
800-page book The Enchantments of Mammon: How Capitalism Became the Religion
of Modernity was published last November, and he makes numerous
references to Ruskin.)
And
then late last year I was reading Gandhi’s An Autobiography: Or, The Story of
My Experiments with Truth (originally published in 1925~29). I was surprised
when I read of his reading Ruskin’s Unto This Last, calling it a book
that “was impossible to lay aside, once I had begun it.”
After
he read Ruskin’s book, Gandhi decided to change his own life according to
Ruskin’s teaching. Among other things, he established “a farm where everybody
would get the same salary, without distinction of function, race, or nationality.”
Indeed, Ruskin's influence reached across the
world. Tolstoy described him as “one of the most remarkable men not
only of England and of our generation, but of all countries and times" and
quoted extensively from him.
Also,
as the Plough article states, “Echoes of Ruskin’s thought reappeared in the 1960s
and 1970s” in the work of economists such as E.F. Schumacher.
Learning
from Ruskin
Ruskin
considered Unto This Last (1862) his most important work. The
title of that brief book, which can be read here on
Wikisource, comes from Matthew 20:14, toward the end of Jesus’ parable
about the laborers in the vineyard.
Jesus’
parable is called “the scandal of grace” by Warner D’Souza, a Catholic priest
in India who in 2017 posted (here) an article on
Rembrandt’s 1637 painting titled “Labourers in the Vineyard.”
One
contemporary scholar endeavoring to help people learn more about and from
Ruskin is Jim Spates, an emeritus professor at a small liberal arts college in
New York. He maintains a blog titled Why Ruskin? which is “dedicated to
making known Ruskin’s continuing importance to the troubled world in which we
live.”
Spates’s
169th
posting, “Unto this Last: The Power of a Parable” was made this
month on January 7. It is partly a retelling in contemporary language of Jesus’
parable recorded in Matthew 20. (Unfortunately, Spates used penny as the
paraphrase for denarius, which in Jesus’ day was the wage for a day’s
work by an ordinary laborer.)
Implementing
Ruskin’s Teachings?
While
recommended more perhaps by Gandhi (and Jesus!) than by Ruskin, there are some
contemporary economists and politicians who are proposing a “universal basic
income.” (Here
is the link to an explanatory article about that from June 2019).
This sort of economic
structure was proposed by MLK, Jr., who is being celebrated by a federal
holiday today. In his 1967 book Where Do We Go from Here? King wrote,
I am now convinced that the simplest approach will prove to be the most effective—the solution to poverty is to abolish it directly by a now widely discussed measure: the guaranteed income.
While
the idea of a universal basic, or guaranteed, income may seem offensive to
some, it is not only in keeping with the writing of John Ruskin and the example
of Gandhi but also consistent with Jesus’ parable about “the scandal of grace.”
In closing, let me
share these words from Ruskin’s Unto This Last:
There is no Wealth but Life. Life, including all its powers of love, of joy, and of admiration. That country is the richest which nourishes the greatest number of noble and happy human beings.