The California Christian Socialist Who Thought Socialism Was Christianity in Overalls – Jacobin magazine
On Easter Sunday, 1911, San Franciscos Central Theater was packed with more than a thousand people gathered to listen to Berkeley mayor-elect J. Stitt Wilson give his weekly socialist sermon, this one on the theme of resurrection. They heard Wilson contrast the values of love and sacrifice espoused by Jesus with the mercilessness of capitalism, and applauded as he concluded with a call for people to give themselves new life by working together in the socialist movement to bring about a social resurrection, a civilization based on their common humanity.
For Wilson, socialism was applied Christianity, practical Christianity, or as he told a conference of Methodist ministers, Christianity in overalls. An economy organized as a cooperative commonwealth would support, rather than undermine, Jesuss message to love thy neighbor as thyself. He criticized the churches for treating people as children of God on Sunday but keeping silence when they were treated as commodities during the working week. He called for social as well as individual salvation.
Many Socialist Party activists were ministers or, like Wilson, former ministers. A few months after Wilsons election as mayor of Berkeley, Louis Duncan, a Unitarian minister, was elected mayor of Butte, Montana, and George Lunn, a Presbyterian minister, won office as mayor of Schenectady, New York. But Wilson was one of the first to move beyond a vaguely progressive social gospel and make The Bible Argument for Socialism, as he entitled one of his pamphlets.
Wilson was born in 1868 in a small town in midwestern Canada, where his father labored as the local shoemaker. Moving to the United States, he worked his way through seminary and Northwestern University, just outside of Chicago, as pastor to various Methodist churches. He was serving at a working-class church in Chicago when the depression of 18941897 hit his congregation. He quickly saw that the usual remedies promoted by the church thrift, sobriety, willingness to work hard, charity for the deserving poor were completely inadequate. He searched for broader remedies and for a theology that would buttress them.
At a time when most Protestant churches were hostile to strikes, and some ministers even called for strikers to be shot down in the streets, Wilson spoke out on behalf of striking workers. At a rally supporting garment workers, he asked: What if the clothing in this room could tell its history? What a story of tears, misery, starvation, low wages, long hours, and abject slavery we would hear.
Wilson admired the leadership that Eugene Debs provided railroad workers in the 1894 Pullman strike and, once Debs was released from prison, invited the labor organizer to speak at his church. The church hierarchy repeatedly admonished Wilson and finally threatened him with dismissal, which would have forced him to leave school just short of getting his degree. He quieted down long enough to graduate, then publicly resigned not only from his ministry but from the church. Half of his congregation left when he did.
With the full support of his wife, and despite now having three children to support, Wilson took a new and precarious path. He would put his life behind Christs message of sacrifice for love of humanity and evangelize for the cooperative commonwealth, hoping to build a movement through mass conversions. His Social Crusade held meetings on street corners, in rented halls, and in a few sympathetic churches. From 1897 to 1901, his talks were attended by tens of thousands of people throughout the Midwest, and he recruited several other ministers to join him. The problem was that once someone was converted to socialism and subscribed to the Social Crusader magazine, it was not clear what they should do next.
That particular problem was solved in 1901. While Wilson was touring the Western states, drawing large crowds in Colorado and California, his fellow social crusaders met in Indianapolis along with many other socialists and formed the Socialist Party of America.
Wilson and his family settled in Berkeley, California, and for the next several years he toured the Western states recruiting new members. He was, labor historian Grace Stimson writes, the outstanding organizer for the Socialist Party of California. His speech on the San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906, Capitalism: The Nations Perpetual Disaster, gives us a sample of his clear and forceful style:
We were appalled by the sudden death by earthquake of 500 to 1,000 people in our sister city. Are we appalled when . . . ten times as many men were unnecessarily killed in the steel and coal industries of the Pittsburg district last year? . . . We call a natural calamity a terrible disaster, but the poverty and want of 10 million people, caused by social injustice, we call even such names as prosperity and national well-being.
By 1906 there were enough socialist ministers in the United States to form the Christian Socialist Fellowship, whose magazine, the Christian Socialist, emblazoned on its masthead: The Golden Rule Against the Rule of Gold. The 1907 conference issue featured Wilsons article Individual and Social Salvation, but by the time it came out he had moved to Great Britain.
The Socialist Party was split between revolutionary socialists and evolutionary or constructive socialists. The revolutionaries criticized Wilson for being unscientific and failing to sufficiently focus on the proletariat as the main agent of social revolution. Once they gained control in California, Wilson was no longer welcomed as a party representative.
Wilson had, over the previous several years, made friends in the Independent Labour Party (ILP), a socialist organization that allied with major unions to form the British Labour Party. Christian socialism was a major current within Labour, and his friends were eager to launch a British version of the social crusade. In 1907, he and his family moved near Bradford, a small industrial city in Englands North, where ILP city councilors had won public ownership of utilities and free social and medical services what became known as municipal socialism.
In Bradford and surrounding towns, Wilson led an organizing campaign for the ILP, canvassing working-class neighborhoods, holding evening meetings in local halls and schools, and holding large Sunday meetings with himself and other well-known socialist clergy as the speakers. He also toured in Scotland and Wales, speaking to audiences that often numbered in the thousands on The Kingdom of God and Socialism, Moses: The Greatest of Labour Leaders, and The Impending Social Revolution.
A reporter for the Halifax Labour News explained Wilsons appeal to British workers:
He claimed for them the Bible as their property, with its great store of hope and record of the worlds struggle for humanity towards a higher life. He linked up their present effort with those of Moses, of Isaiah, of Amos, of Christ. . . . He had borne to them the Message from the heart of God to his people.
In 1909 control of the California Socialist Party changed hands, and Wilson and his family moved back to Berkeley. The new party leadership was heavily involved in a campaign to unionize Los Angeles, fighting a Merchants and Manufacturers Association that was equally determined to keep Los Angeles nonunion and use lower wages as a competitive advantage over heavily unionized San Francisco.
Job Harriman, leader of the Socialist Party in Los Angeles; Fred Wheeler, head of the Los Angeles Central Labor Council; and other like-minded Socialists hoped Wilson could help make the Socialist Party in California the party of labor and replicate the success of the British Labour Party. This meant building stronger ties with the state labor federations, which were dominated by unions in San Francisco and winning enough political power in Los Angeles to prevent the use of police to break up strikes and union organizing efforts. (Unfortunately, it also meant going along with the labor unions racist opposition to Asian immigration.)
In 1910, Wilson received 12 percent of the vote for governor, the best showing the Socialist Party would ever enjoy in a statewide race. The next year he successfully ran for mayor of Berkeley, gaining the support of enough progressive Republicans to win a majority against an incumbent Democrat. With his support, two other Socialists were elected to the School Board and one to the City Council.
Over the following two years Wilson worked himself to exhaustion. He promoted local tax measures that allowed the city to improve its sewer system, pave its streets, build parks, and begin to take public ownership of utilities. He helped fend off a recall aimed at the Socialists on the School Board and City Council. He campaigned throughout the San Francisco Bay Area for a state constitutional amendment giving women the right to vote, which passed, and in support of Socialist candidates in other cities, most of whom came up short.
He visited Los Angeles to support Harrimans campaign for mayor in 1911, which was narrowly defeated. He helped organize a statewide initiative campaign to allow local governments to implement land value taxation (also unsuccessful). And he ran for Congress, receiving 40 percent of the vote.
Wilson felt he had demonstrated that the Socialist Party was capable of becoming a major party. He believed that newly enfranchised women would support Socialist candidates because, as potential mothers, they embodied the ethic of care essential to the cooperative commonwealth. A coalition of labor and women would, he hoped, transform California politics. Instead of running for reelection as mayor in 1913, he returned to statewide speaking on the Socialist Partys behalf. Membership in the Socialist Party tripled from 1909 to March 1914.
But the wave of enthusiasm did not last.
Women voters didnt flock to the Socialist banner, and the labor leadership abandoned their flirtation with the Socialists when Governor Hiram Johnson helped pass a number of modest prolabor reforms, including workers compensation and an eight-hour day for women. With the failure of the Los Angeles union drive, labor had only regional political power and could not hope to sustain a statewide workers party. In 1914 the California Socialists went into rapid decline, and by the end of 1915, they reported fewer members than in 1909.
A burned-out Wilson left the Socialist Party, convinced that party-building had failed and the abolition of capitalism cannot be achieved without a great and overwhelming Spiritual Awakening. A new approach was needed. But he had no idea what that might be.
In 1917, Wilson again ran for mayor of Berkeley, this time as an independent, and forced the conservative incumbent, a wealthy businessman, into a runoff. The day before the first round of the election, the United States entered World War I. Over the next three weeks until the runoff, Wilson was redbaited by the leader of a Berkeley-based citizen secret service organization sponsored by US Army intelligence. He lost the election by just 124 votes.
Moving on from this disappointment, Wilson thought that wartime patriotism might provide the basis for the national moral renewal he sought. Seizing on President Woodrow Wilsons claims that the United States was fighting to make the world safe for democracy, Stitt Wilson retooled his equation of Christianity and socialism into an argument that Christianity meant democracy, including democracy in industry, denouncing Kaiserism abroad and workplace tyranny at home.
His hopes for wartime and postwar democracy proved naive, however, as Debs and other former Socialist Party comrades were imprisoned for their opposition to the war and a deeper reactionary turn post-armistice reversed the gains that labor unions had briefly made. World War I exacted a deep personal toll, too: Wilsons son died in pilot training shortly before the end of the war.
Hoping to inspire a new generation of social-justice activists, Wilson went to work for the collegiate division of the YMCA, a stronghold of the social gospel in the conservative 1920s. He spoke on Christian Democracy at colleges around the United States, arguing for industrial democracy and adding material such as a lecture contending that evolution showed cooperation rather than competition allowed species to thrive.
Wilson twice returned to Great Britain and, in 1929, had the pleasure of participating in the campaign that produced a Labour government (although one dependent on support from the Liberal Party). Returning to a United States stricken by the Great Depression, Wilson proposed that the nation should bring the values of Jesus to the economy through national economic planning and spoke in many churches where the ministers and congregations were now more receptive to alternatives to capitalism. Urged on by the Young Socialists at the University of California, Berkeley, he rejoined the Socialist Party and was elected to chair the state central committee.
Part of his work was helping organize a Socialist-sponsored union among farmworkers, and there he met the American version of fascism. Rural county sheriffs worked hand in hand with agribusiness and deputized vigilantes to break up union meetings and picket lines. Wilson began speaking out about the threat of fascism in the United States, believing that the Socialist Party did not take the threat seriously enough. The national party made grandiloquent threats that they would crush the reckless forces of reaction, something far beyond the resources of a group that had attracted only twenty thousand members nationwide after several years of the Great Depression.
In 1934, Wilson again resigned from the Socialist Party and registered as a Democrat to support Upton Sinclairs leftist EPIC (End Poverty in California) campaign. He campaigned for Franklin Roosevelt in 1936, holding that Americans faced a choice between Roosevelt and fascism. Health issues limited his activities in subsequent years, but his last talk before his death in 1942 was to a local humanist group, calling for victory against fascism, and a social reconstruction based on the ethics of Jesus.
J. Stitt Wilson never claimed to know the best path forward to the cooperative society, saying that socialists were groping in the dark and needed to be open to receive whatever light is available. Throughout his life he adopted different strategies and tactics to advance the socialist movement, alternating between evangelism (making the Christian case for socialism) and practical politics (building organizations and competing in elections), while doing his best to follow the teachings of Jesus.
Wilson was part of a widespread working-class tradition of social Christianity that revered Jesus the Carpenter and rejected official church versions of Christianity that excused treating working people as commodities. The Socialist Party of America was inclusive in its ideological approach, and Debs was a master at bringing together the many strands of insurgent workers culture. He often invoked in the same speech the ideal of democratic citizenship, the Declaration of Independence, Karl Marx, and Christ on the Cross. Debss successor as party leader, Norman Thomas, was a Presbyterian minister.
The Christian socialist tradition stretched into the latter half of the twentieth century, most notably through the figure of Martin Luther King Jr. While studying for the ministry as a young man, King brought together the black religious tradition of Christianity as the promise of liberation and the Christian socialist theology of the younger Reinhold Niebuhr and Walter Rauschenbusch, who admired Wilsons work. Although he kept the term out of his public writings and speeches, King came to espouse a Christian democratic socialism that insisted on social and economic transformation.
Wilson had the same commitments. Faced with the suffering caused by capitalisms extremes of wealth and poverty, he devoted his life to ministering on behalf of a society that would embody Jesuss message of love and sacrifice for one another a socialist society of caring, cooperation, and democracy.
The rest is here:
The California Christian Socialist Who Thought Socialism Was Christianity in Overalls - Jacobin magazine
- Opinion - My family lived through socialism. Most Democrats are frighteningly wrong about it. - Yahoo - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Everyone is talking about sewer socialism again. You can blame (or credit) Zohran Mamdani - Deseret News - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Greg Gutfeld: Why is socialism still a thing? - Fox News - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Democratic Socialism in the District of Columbia - heartland.org - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- Democrats are the party of socialism now - Washington Examiner - June 19th, 2026 [June 19th, 2026]
- How socialism built the reddest states in the West - High Country News - June 14th, 2026 [June 14th, 2026]
- Welcome to swag socialism: New Yorkers waited hours in line for Mamdani's affordable World Cup jerseys - Business Insider - June 14th, 2026 [June 14th, 2026]
- How the Rise of Socialism is fueling Chevron's California Exodus - Fox News - June 14th, 2026 [June 14th, 2026]
- There Is A New Flavor Of Socialism Amongst Young People - News Radio 1200 WOAI - June 14th, 2026 [June 14th, 2026]
- Maurice Brown thinks Syracuse is ready for democratic socialism - City & State New York - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Nothing says socialism like a $27 Tax the Rich T-shirt from AOC! - New York Post - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Are We On The Cusp Of Moving From Capitalism To Socialism? - China Academy - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Gen Z fuels surge in democratic socialism in the US - Yahoo - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Preface to the book: The Ukraine War and the Fight for Socialism: The Case of Bogdan Syrotiuk - World Socialist Web Site - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- Nothing Says Socialism Like AOC's 'Tax-the-Rich' Shirt - RealClearMarkets - June 12th, 2026 [June 12th, 2026]
- The spectre of gen Z socialism is haunting the world according to the Economist | Normon Solomon - The Guardian - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- John Ivison: The disturbingly powerful allure of Avi Lewiss gen Z socialism - National Post - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- Antisemitism is the socialism of fools (Opinion) - Boulder Daily Camera - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- Gen-Z socialism, from Zohran to Zack and beyond - The Economist - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- Lao leader: China is the leading banner for socialism and the Global South - Friends of Socialist China - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- The Rise of Socialism: Business owners turn on ultra-progressive California town - Fox News - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- Magnifica Humanitas and Anglican Christian Socialism: We Have Been Here Before - The Living Church - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- Democratic Socialism Is Infiltrating the Heartland - heartland.org - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- What is the economic system that will save Libya, market capitalism or state socialism? - Oz Arab Media - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- Gen-Z socialism rises on cost-of-living anger and AI anxiety - BizNews - June 10th, 2026 [June 10th, 2026]
- Hannah Einbinder on Genre Swapping, Socialism and the Importance of Collaboration - polyesterzine.com - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Socialism isnt a system that works: Hugo Gurdon - Washington Examiner - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Two railways, two systems: HS2 and the case for socialism - Friends of Socialist China - May 29th, 2026 [May 29th, 2026]
- Socialism Is Slow to Mature: The Twenty-First Newsletter (2026) - Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research - May 25th, 2026 [May 25th, 2026]
- Where is the empathy for victims of socialism and communism? - The Spectator Australia - May 25th, 2026 [May 25th, 2026]
- Beware The Alternatives To Capitalism And Socialism OpEd - Eurasia Review - May 25th, 2026 [May 25th, 2026]
- Vote to save America from socialism - The Wilson Times - May 25th, 2026 [May 25th, 2026]
- Siege Socialism: Trumps War On Cuba And The Return Of The Monroe Doctrine OpEd - Eurasia Review - May 25th, 2026 [May 25th, 2026]
- The Rise of Socialism and Javier Milei's Success - AM 870 The ANSWER - May 25th, 2026 [May 25th, 2026]
- Two railways, two systems: HS2 and the case for socialism - Morning Star | The Peoples Daily - May 25th, 2026 [May 25th, 2026]
- How Trumps Silicon Valley socialism netted the US $40bn - The Telegraph - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- We Need to Explain to Students Why Free Markets Trump Socialism - Long Island Life & Politics - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- The backslide of Chicago-style socialism - The Last Ward | Austin Berg - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- The Future Socialism Is Possible and Necessary: The Twentieth Newsletter (2026) - Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- Socialism is being left behind in Europe - The Economist - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- Analysis of Three Communist Ideological Trends: Eurocommunism, Jajumo, and Latin American Socialism - Ratopati - May 17th, 2026 [May 17th, 2026]
- Opinion: The rise of socialism in America - Gainesville Times - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- Dont give up on NYC, Ken Griffin expose the idiocy of Mamdanis socialism - New York Post - May 13th, 2026 [May 13th, 2026]
- The Trump regime, oligarchy, and the fight for socialism - World Socialist Web Site - May 7th, 2026 [May 7th, 2026]
- Failure According to Whom? Rewriting the Metrics of Socialism - Orinoco Tribune - May 7th, 2026 [May 7th, 2026]
- "490 thousand pensioners live a more difficult life than under socialism", Berisha: We will cut the Gordian knot - Vox News Albania - May 7th, 2026 [May 7th, 2026]
- An Orgy of Socialism! John Fetterman Tells Jesse Watters Everything Thats Wrong With The Democratic Party - Yahoo - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Rep. Gimnez issues warning on rise of socialism - Fox News - May 5th, 2026 [May 5th, 2026]
- Join the May Day Online Rally! For socialism! Against war, genocide and fascism! - World Socialist Web Site - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- So, What the Hell Is Communism and Socialism, Really? - LA Progressive - May 1st, 2026 [May 1st, 2026]
- Only socialism can save Minnesotas Boundary Waters - Liberation News - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- Sergey Brin joins the fight against socialism better late than never - New York Post - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- Xi Jinping says that China and Laos should take a strategic perspective on the future and destiny of socialism - Friends of Socialist China - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- The Tea, Spilled by Morning Joe: This is the socialism you said you were voting against - MS NOW - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- Justice Department Indicts Southern Poverty Law Center And Fascist Congressman Aims to Ban Advocates of Socialism, Communism, or Islamic... - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- The struggle for national liberation and socialism are indivisible - Morning Star | The Peoples Daily - April 29th, 2026 [April 29th, 2026]
- Hasan Piker Interview on Livestreaming, Socialism, and the Future of Politics - i-D.co - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- Opinion: The real threat isn't socialism. It's authoritarianism - Gainesville Times - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- What do Artemis II and socialism have in common? | Jackson Star and Herald - Ripley and Ravenswood - WV News - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- Cal Thomas | What do Artemis II and socialism have in common? - The Cumberland Times-News - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- The herd of elephants in the room - International Socialism - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- Cal Thomas | What do Artemis II and socialism have in common? - The Tribune-Democrat - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- The last years of Karl Marx: global perspectives and revolutionary potentials - International Socialism - April 12th, 2026 [April 12th, 2026]
- Is socialism or capitalism better for WNC? I beg to differ - Mountain Xpress - April 7th, 2026 [April 7th, 2026]
- Introducing the PRC.: Building socialism with South African characteristics - news.cgtn.com - April 7th, 2026 [April 7th, 2026]
- Capitalism Is Literally Killing UsWe Need Socialism! - socialistalternative.org - April 5th, 2026 [April 5th, 2026]
- Party for Socialism and Liberation's Twin Cities chapter readies pre-made signs for 'No Kings' protest - Yahoo - April 3rd, 2026 [April 3rd, 2026]
- At CPAC, Gov. Greg Abbott warns of encroachment of socialism in Texas large blue cities - Dallas News - April 3rd, 2026 [April 3rd, 2026]
- Labour draws up equality law revamp that will impose socialism on Britain - The Telegraph - April 3rd, 2026 [April 3rd, 2026]
- Video: Strong interest in Where Is America Going? Fascism or Socialism at the Leipzig Book Fair - World Socialist Web Site - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Vietnams New Generation and the Demise of Socialism - Independent Institute - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Sharia Socialism in NYC, or Just Smarter Governance? (Half the Answer #74, with Ryan Cooper) - Liberal Currents - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Socialism in the reactionary Southwest: Lessons from James Greens Grass-Roots Socialism - World Socialist Web Site - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Quote of the day by late conservative activist Charlie Kirk: Socialism cannot survive when people are fre - The Economic Times - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Socialism retains the mayorship of Paris: "The capital will be the heart of resistance" - El Mundo America - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Socialism and the Left Triumph Over the Far Right in France: Paris, Marseille, and Lyon Maintain Control - elciudadano.com - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Help get socialism on the ballot paper in May - Socialist Party - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Robyn reveals her opinions on sex, dopamine and socialism in this behind the scenes video - Vogue Scandinavia - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Opinion | Dems cant ignore democratic socialism if they want to win young voters - Star Tribune - March 9th, 2026 [March 9th, 2026]
- The Rise of Socialism: Will Zohran Mamdani define or defy law and order in the Big Apple? - Fox News - March 9th, 2026 [March 9th, 2026]