2021/03/27

Beyond the Sprouts of Capitalism | MR Online

Beyond the Sprouts of Capitalism | MR Online

Comic on "The Opium Ban in China" from the weekly De Amsterdammer, December 2 1906

Beyond the Sprouts of Capitalism

Toward an Understanding of China’s Historical Political Economy and Its Relationship to Contemporary China

I

The contemporary political economy of the People’s Republic of China, the nature of the Chinese system, has been the subject of much discussion and debate in mainstream academic, media, and political circles, as well as on the left.1 Since the end of the 1970s, China has pursued policies of “reform and opening” (gaige kaifang, 改革開放) to develop its economy, a process that has resulted in the massive growth of production, China’s emergence as a major player in global trade, and the lifting of around 800 million people out of poverty, while at the same time generating serious problems of inequality, corruption, and environmental stress. At the heart of this project has been the decision by the Communist Party, originally under the guidance of Deng Xiaoping, then carrying on through successive changes of leadership, to use the mechanisms of the marketplace to develop the productive economy. How should this situation be characterized? Is it capitalism, state capitalism, market socialism?2

One can only make sense of contemporary China with a clear understanding of the country’s economic history.3 A historical materialist analysis of the nature of China’s political economic order over the course of history, especially the last thousand years, can illuminate critical aspects of the present. A serious engagement with the complexities of China’s historical economic systems must take into account knowledge about the Chinese past that was not available to Karl Marx, allowing us to go beyond the vagaries of the Asiatic mode of production and transcend the limitations of earlier theorizations of the “sprouts of capitalism” (ziben zhuyi de mengya, 資本注意的萌牙) by historians in China in the 1950s and ’60s.4 Applying categories and modes of analysis derived from Marx’s Capital and other writings to the understanding of China’s early modern history and exploring the relevance of that history to contemporary China are the main tasks of this essay.

From the period of the Tang-Song transition, roughly the ninth and tenth centuries, China developed a commercial capitalist economy that encompassed a largely urban manufacturing sector and also reshaped agricultural production in much of the empire. A ruling class evolved that was a hybrid of the long-established landowning elite and the early modern commercial stratum, which managed the economic affairs of the country through a blend of private agency and the operations of the imperial state. Through much of China’s imperial past, the state maintained a complex, not always consistent, role in economic affairs, seeking both to support the livelihood of the people, promote prosperity, constrain the pursuit of private profit, and regulate the functions of markets. This historical relationship has inflected the developmental itinerary of the country and is reflected in the deployment of the theory and practice of “socialism with Chinese characteristics” and the “socialist market economy.”

II

China’s recorded history goes back more than 3,200 years and can be usefully divided into four major periods: (1) antiquity, from the beginning to the end of the third century BCE; (2) the middle period, from the second century BCE to the tenth century CE; (3) the early modern period, from the tenth through the eighteenth centuries; and (4) modern China, from the end of the eighteenth century to the present.5 Throughout antiquity, China was ruled by an elite of warriors who controlled the land, collecting tribute from their subjects. Economic activity was largely locally self-sufficient, with a small layer of high-value elite trade centered on the royal court(s). Over time, a professional administrative elite developed, often referred to as the literati because of their mastery of the written records of history and their shared literary culture. These administrative officials were often rewarded with grants of land, and over time these became hereditary property, though the sovereign always retained ultimate ownership.6

The middle period began with the unification of the empire and the consolidation of the imperial system under the Han dynasty (202 BCE–220 CE). During this period, private ownership of land became a practical reality, while in theory the empire continued to belong to the ruler, now the emperor. Many officials in government service built up significant land holdings, while other great families emerged based on their local acquisition of agricultural assets. This was a complex, long-term process, with large landed estates forming by the later Han, which became the underpinning for the political influence of the landowning class. Over the centuries of the middle period, China developed an aristocratic elite, with quasi-official status and a strong transmission of wealth across generations. China went through periods of internal division after the collapse of the Han dynasty in 220, and then renewed imperial unification under the Sui and Tang dynasties (589–618 and 618–907, respectively). Recruitment for service in the imperial government, which was largely pursued through a process of recommendation by serving officials, allowed established families to place their sons in careers in official life and perpetuate the power of the elite. This aristocratic class effectively dominated the state, which served to promote and protect its interests.7

Alongside the estates of the great families there was a sector of agricultural production organized around small holders, managed through a system of land tenure maintained by the imperial state, which regularly redistributed land to male heads of village households who, in turn, were taxed in grain and cloth products. The system varied in its specifics in different parts of the empire but was a clear example of state oversight and management of economic activity. This oversight also extended to urban centers and markets. Imperial law restricted the number and location of markets and established strict controls over their operations. This blend of aristocratic estates, state-managed distribution of small holdings, and tightly regulated urban markets was not in any sense feudal in its economic or political organization and functioning.8

By the ninth century, changes began to emerge in China’s cities and countryside. The Tang dynasty had been deeply shaken by the An Lushan Rebellion in 755–63, and the long-established aristocracy began to decline. But even before this, the very success of the imperial system of economic management had given rise to contradictions within the economy. Its potential for growth and development exceeded the parameters of state oversight, and new forces began to push beyond the regulations of the government. The power of the dominant elite and the control of urban space by official overseers weakened. Markets began to spread outside areas that had been designated and monitored by the state and to become more integrated into residential areas. Private ownership of farmland expanded beyond the great estates and the land subject to government distribution. The imperial court maintained a role in the production and distribution of certain key commodities through government monopolies, a practice that had its roots centuries earlier in the Han dynasty. But the overall role of the state in economic affairs declined, just as the class basis of imperial rule was itself dramatically altered.

In the later ninth century, further rebellions destroyed much of the elite’s wealth and the institutional infrastructure that had legitimized and maintained its power and prestige. Rebellious peasants attacked the estates of the wealthy, killed many members of the elite, and burned the documents that validated their status and power. The fall of the Tang in 907 led to the chaos of the Five Dynasties and Sixteen Kingdoms, with small regional states contending for power through chronic warfare and further destruction, until the Zhao brothers established the Song dynasty in 960 and reunified the empire over the ensuing decade. The warfare of this age of transition cleared the way for the further transformation of China’s economic and political order. The old aristocracy was gone, but the ownership of land and the control of agricultural production was still the primary mode of wealth accumulation.9

As the Song dynasty (960–1279) consolidated its power, a new elite emerged, formally based on the attainment of merit through education, but practically grounded in the riches produced on their estates. These provided the resources to support the education of sons in the Confucian classical traditions that formed the basis of the imperial civil examination system, which became the main vector for entry into service in the bureaucratic administration of the empire. Not all landowning families produced examination graduates or government officials. The class of landed wealth was more extensive than the group of literati who staffed the imperial state, and relations between members of this class in their capacity as local elites or as representatives of imperial power could be complex. This larger class is often referred to as the gentry, and the overall landowning class may be designated, perhaps somewhat awkwardly, the literati/gentry.10

This reconfiguration of the landholding elite took place in tandem with the further development of a commercial economy in China. Markets proliferated, woven together by networks of long-distance trade spanning the empire and linking up with larger global systems. New forms of capital valorization and accumulation took shape within an increasingly monetized economy. Division of labor both within productive enterprises and on a regional geographic basis, as well as ongoing technological innovation, drove enhancements in productivity. New developments in banking and financial operations facilitated the mobilization and allocation of capital.11 This is the key to understanding the early modern period that began in the ninth and tenth centuries and continued, with dramatic advances and retreats, throughout the following eight hundred years, across several dynastic transitions, down to the beginning of the modern era at the turn of the nineteenth century. It is the emergence of China’s early modern capitalist commercial economy and its development over the following years that must be understood to enable a better comprehension of China’s recent pursuit of “socialism with Chinese characteristics.”

III

China’s “commercial revolution” in the Song dynasty has long been recognized, beginning with the work of Naitō Konan and the   Kyoto School of Marxist historians in Japan in the 1930s.12 But the intellectual constraints imposed by the orthodoxies of Soviet economic and historical thought, with the centrality of a stagist sequence of development that had to be applied to all societies around the world, meant that China could not be seen as having had a capitalist system before the arrival of European imperialism in the nineteenth century. China was either viewed as part of the Asiatic mode of production, which had remained essentially static and unchanging in a primitive form of feudalism over three millennia, or was assimilated into the succession of historical eras enshrined in Joseph Stalin’s 1938 Dialectical and Historical Materialism.13 Marx’s original formulation of the Asiatic mode of production was primarily concerned with India and was based on partial and often faulty information. His knowledge of China was severely limited by both the imperialist biases of most writers and the minimal access to Chinese-language sources available then. It is time to place China’s early modern political economy in a clearer perspective. Let us consider the organization and functioning of production and circulation in early modern China in Marxist terms.14

In volume one of Capital, Marx investigates and delineates several key features of capitalism as it had developed in Europe, most particularly in England. In his preface to the first edition, he makes clear that while he is relying primarily on the analysis of the dynamics of capital as it developed in the West, he sees the characteristics that he discerns in that context as applicable to a broader definition of capitalism as a system.15 Beginning with the commodity and commodity production—that is, production for exchange on the market—he goes on to discuss money as the universal commodity, the process of the valorization of capital (M-C-M′) based on the exploitation of labor power, the mechanisms of wage labor, the division of labor as the means of maximizing that exploitation, and the ongoing imperative of accumulation of capital. These are key defining elements of a capitalist mode of production.16

All of these are present in China from the Song dynasty on. Markets flourished and proliferated, woven together into networks of exchange that spanned the empire and linked up to larger regional and global systems. Commodity production, with sophisticated divisions of labor both across space and within enterprises, expanded dramatically. The growth of China’s capitalist system of manufacturing—which ranged from the elaborate putting-out system of the silk and cotton textile industries to the massive complex of ceramic kilns at Jingdezhen, the largest industrial center in the world before the nineteenth century—also reshaped the sphere of agricultural production.17 China had a sophisticated system of private property in land, and the buying and selling of real property was carried on and documented through the use of legally binding contracts enforceable through the imperial judicial system.18 Farming became increasingly commercialized, with production for national market distribution coming to form significant portions of production in provinces like Sichuan and Hunan. Tenant farming and agricultural day labor grew in importance. Wage and contract labor were central to the manufacturing sector in Jiangnan and elsewhere, from spinners and weavers to ceramics workers and carvers of woodblock printing boards. Strikes and other forms of labor unrest were recurrent in cities like Suzhou and Wuxi.19

China is a large and complex geographic space, with considerable variation and distinctive regional subunits, called macroregions, as theorized by G. William Skinner.20 Each of these is as large as a major European state. Early capitalism in China was by no means equally developed across the empire. Some regions, such as the northwest or the southwest, were much less commercially developed than others, such as the Jiangnan area of the Yangtze River delta, the southeast coast, the corridor along the Grand Canal, or the long valley of the Yangtze. China’s early capitalism was most highly evolved in Jiangnan, where networks of urban production and distribution facilitated sophisticated systems of capital accumulation and deployment. In European history, given the fragmentation of political authority into small and conflicting territorial spaces, the consideration of the economy of England as a discrete unit of analysis, as opposed to a larger European whole, has been the norm. Given China’s vast territorial extent and complex internal macroregional variation, the understanding of early Chinese capitalism as a distinctive formation within the overall expanse of imperial space seems like a more useful approach than attempting to fit the empire as a whole into a monolithic categorization.21

The point is not that China was just like Europe (or, more properly, the other way around, given the chronological sequence of developments), but that the fundamental attributes of capitalism, as explicated in Capital, were also present there, in their own historically and culturally specific forms. China’s early modern political economy, a distinctive form of early capitalism, emerged in the Song dynasty and persisted through periods of growth and contraction across the following Yuan and Ming eras and into the final Qing dynasty. Two aspects of this historical trajectory are of particular interest in understanding the distinctive course of development that characterized China’s early modernity in contrast to the later path of European experience. One is the span of time, which extended over some eight centuries; the other is the nature of class formation and interaction.

IV

Early modernity in China was not a linear process of development leading to a fully modern industrial economy. Early Chinese capitalism, despite going through periods of dynamic growth and transformation, remained essentially commercial capitalism at the level of manufacture, as described in chapter 14 of the first volume of Capital.22 This was a more sophisticated system of production than simple handicraft activities by individual households, but, other than in the special case of the kiln city of Jingdezhen, was not organized into large-scale industrial enterprises. Production was carried out through complicated networks of social relations, in workshops and households, while distribution was largely managed by networks of merchants spanning multiple provinces in interconnecting webs of commerce. Financial mechanisms of credit and banking facilitated long-distance trade.23 These structural features first arose in the Song dynasty and were elaborated and refined in the Ming and Qing dynasties. But the course of economic life, as of China’s history overall, was not one of smooth and tranquil progress. In the twelfth century, the Song lost control of the northern half of the empire to invaders from the northeast called the Jurchen, who established their own dynasty. In the thirteenth century, the rise of the Mongols plunged the remnant Southern Song into a decades-long war of resistance that ended in the collapse of the dynasty and the creation of the Mongol-ruled Yuan as its successor. These wars, and the often anticommercial policies of the Mongols during their century of rule, caused great destruction to China’s population and economy. The Mongols engaged in high-value international trade, but the domestic commercial economy declined during their time in power, though the most highly developed Jiangnan region seems to have fared better than other parts of the empire. When the Ming dynasty was founded in 1368, after central China had been further devastated by disease and the rebellions that overthrew the Yuan, the first emperor was actively hostile to merchant wealth and promoted a physiocratic vision of society based on small landholding and local self-sufficiency, although the empire-spanning network of roadways that he developed for imperial communications also facilitated the revival of long-distance trade.24

The fifteenth and sixteenth centuries saw a dramatic revival of China’s early capitalism, as production and trade across the empire flourished and the international demand for Chinese goods such as tea, porcelain, and silk and cotton textiles drew increasing amounts of silver, first from Japan and then from the mines of the Spanish New World empire via the Manila galleon trade, into China.25 Ongoing technological innovations drove improvements in productivity and quality that made Chinese manufactures ever more popular in global markets. But by the mid–seventeenth century, contradictions within Ming society and politics led to the collapse of the dynasty, and yet another invasion by a non-Chinese coalition led by the Manchus seized power and installed the Qing dynasty in 1644. In the eighteenth century, China recovered from the traumas of the dynastic transition, and a final era of early capitalist prosperity ensued.26

The Opium Ban in China” poster from De Amsterdammer, December 2, 1906 (via International Institute of Social History). Rough translation of bottom caption: John Bull: “Such a heathen…as a dragon slayer! … I will feel that in my wallet!” Dutch Virgin (to Marianne): “And that this guy should give us an example ….”

In 1793, the British king George III sent a diplomatic mission to China, led by Lord George Macartney, to seek new trade relations. Foreigners were allowed to trade with China in a regulated system at the port of Guangzhou, known to Westerners as Canton, in the far south of the empire. The British, imbued with the new ideology of free trade and on the cusp of the Industrial Revolution, wanted China to open more ports and allow a permanent diplomatic presence in Beijing. The Qianlong emperor declined these requests and reminded the British, in a letter to King George, that China had all it needed within its own borders and had no wish for the inferior products of the West. But while this remained the case, a combination of domestic and international factors was about to bring an end to China’s early modern capitalist age. Limits on the capacity of agriculture to sustain continuing population growth began to erode material standards of living. The rise of England’s modern industrial economy brought both inexpensive goods to compete with China’s domestic products and the military capacity to force the Qing government to open the empire to Western imperialism. A new era was beginning.

V

Early modern capitalism in China endured across many centuries, with periods of expansion and contraction, but with a persistent drive toward greater sophistication and productivity, and with the accumulation of wealth derived from the extraction of surplus value from labor power reviving after each era of destruction. This generated a wealthy stratum of merchants and investors, largely urban in residence, and distinct from the more traditional elite of landowning households that, through their domination of the Confucian civil service examination system, controlled the operations of the imperial government. Within the discursive field of Confucian thought there was a strong tradition of aversion to commercial wealth and disrespect for those who lived on the profits of trade. Merchants and their sons (and sometimes grandsons) were legally excluded from participation in the examination system, and thus effectively from political power. With the rise of early capitalism and the emergence of a wealthy commercial elite, these ideas began to be challenged and changed by some thinkers. While merchants never came to be fully entitled to an equal role in the examination system or to a political status matching that of the literati/gentry elite, a convergence of interests drove a slow process of cultural adjustment that created a hybrid class more complex than either a purely land- or commerce-based elite. This change in attitude, in political culture, was driven by the convergent material interests and actions of both agricultural and manufacturing producers.27

As China’s economy became more differentiated, with regional specialization in the production of certain commodities and the attendant growth of long-distance trade in both manufactured goods and foodstuffs, commercialized farming became increasingly profitable and landowning families sought new ways to invest their wealth. Merchants and investors in manufacturing activities also were generating wealth and seeking to further expand the valorization and accumulation of their capital. At the same time, many members of the commercial elite sought to position themselves socially as the equals of the literati/gentry in status and prestige by engaging in patronage of religious establishments, cultural pursuits such as the collecting of art or the assembling of libraries, or the building of elaborate mansions and gardens.28

The intersection of the interests and ambitions of landowning and commercial elites came about through the process of investment in economic activities. Members of the literati/gentry elite directed some of their wealth into the businesses of merchants and manufacturers, and shared in the profits of those enterprises. These economic strategies resulted in a convergence of interests rather than a relationship of antagonism. This is in some ways a stark contrast with the later history of class conflict between the rising bourgeoisie and the older feudal aristocracy in Europe, but it is not without parallel. Indeed, in an 1850 review of a book on the seventeenth-century English Revolution by the French politician François Guizot, Marx described a similar convergence of class interests:

This class of large landowners allied with the bourgeoisie…was not, as were the French feudal landowners of 1789, in conflict with the vital interests of the bourgeoisie, but rather in complete harmony with them. Their estates were indeed not feudal but bourgeois property. On the one hand, they provided the industrial bourgeoisie with the population necessary to operate the manufacturing system, and on the other hand, they were in a position to raise agricultural development to the level corresponding to that of industry and commerce. Hence their common interests with the bourgeoisie: hence their alliance.29

The convergence of interests between the landed literati/gentry and the largely urban commercial/manufacturing elite in China persisted, and perhaps deepened, across the span of early modern times. Both sides of this ruling-class collaboration of course remained dedicated to the extraction of surplus value from the labor of workers, whether on farms, in workshops, households, or the marketplace. This hybridity was also reflected in economic thought and government policy. The imperial state was not a strong advocate for commercial interests, but nonetheless often played a role in economic life that benefitted both manufacturing and exchange. The construction and maintenance of roads and canals facilitated the growth of long-distance trade. Government intervention in some critical commodity markets, especially grain, often served to stabilize prices and buffer the extremes of market fluctuations, thus protecting both the livelihoods of consumers and the ongoing operations of merchants.30 The interplay of elite interests and state policy varied over time but was always complex and could certainly be contentious. Fundamental to China’s Confucian political culture was the idea that the state’s primary purpose was to create and maintain conditions of stability and security that would allow the people to pursue their livelihoods in a moderately prosperous society. Debates as to how best to achieve this ideal could be sharp, and different policy orientations predominated at various times, but the active role of the state in economic life was always a part of the mix.

This process of intellectual and cultural change went beyond the purely economic realm. In the preface   to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, written in 1859, Marx notes that, in the social production of their existence, men enter into definite, necessary relations, which are independent of their will, namely, relations of production corresponding to a determinate stage of development of their material forces of production. The totality of these relations of production constitutes the economic structure of society, the real foundation on which there arises a legal and political superstructure and to which there correspond definite forms of social consciousness.31

In China, as early capitalism developed from the Song dynasty onward, new “forms of social consciousness” reflecting these new material realities also took shape. This became especially apparent by the Ming dynasty as a new merchant culture, drawing on particular elements within the broad discursive field of Confucian thought, articulated the hybridity of China’s elite society. The integration of elite elements based in manufacturing and trade with the long-established land-based literati/gentry yielded new ideas that revealed the mutual influence of new realities and older cultural beliefs and behaviors. Merchants engaged in practices of cultural patronage and aesthetic consumption in emulation of existing “gentlemanly” norms, endowing Buddhist religious institutions, building gardens, and assembling library collections. Confucian thought was influenced by market culture, as exemplified by the emergence of “ledgers of merit and demerit,” a form of moral accountancy in which individuals produced balance sheets for their conduct, or in the production of manuals of business practice that sought to navigate the complex relationship between the pursuit of profit and the maintenance of proper social relationships of community and stability. Imperial Confucianism remained the dominant ideology of the state, and within social elites, but it was adapted and adjusted to fit with the new material realities of commercial and manufacturing capitalism.32

The form of capitalism that emerged in China during the early modern period was marked by distinctive forms of power relations. Rather than evolving an antagonistic contradiction between an urban bourgeois class of merchants and manufacturers and a conservative feudal aristocracy of landowning great families, China developed a hybrid elite in that landed and commercial interests converged and functioned as the ruling class through the instrumentality of the imperial state. China’s historical itinerary did not lead to a bourgeois revolution taking power, but rather yielded a balance of elite forces and interests that remained hegemonic across repeated transitions in dynastic rule and that endeavored to shape the policies and practices of the imperial state in its own interests.

The government was tasked at a minimum with providing the security and stability needed to allow people to pursue their livelihoods, though the state could also play a more proactive role in economic life from time to time. Imperial dynasties built and maintained important infrastructure that facilitated long-distance trade, such as the Grand Canal and other water transport systems, or the imperial post roads that spanned the empire. Government monopolies in certain critical commodities were used to buffer some of the extremes of market supply and demand and curtail excessive profit seeking by private capital. Interventions in the all-important grain markets were deployed to sustain consumers in times of bad harvests and shortages. The imperial state was hardly a mercantilist actor, but it did contribute to the development and flourishing of China’s commercial capitalism.

VI

This understanding of China’s past can help illuminate some aspects of the country’s contemporary economic and political formations. China today is a society emerging from a long period of humiliation and oppression at the hands of Western imperialism, and from the turmoil and devastation of decades of revolutionary conflict and the Japanese invasion and occupation from 1937 to 1945. China’s early modern order proved unable to transcend its own limitations and was incapable of meeting the challenges of foreign intrusion and domination. By the late eighteenth century, the Qing empire had begun to face serious economic challenges, with population growth pushing against the limits of agricultural production within the established systems of land tenure and productive technologies. While the Qianlong emperor could still reject Britain’s overtures for free trade in 1793 based on China’s superior economic position, contradictions within the existing mode of production were intensifying.

The Industrial Revolution unleashed both immense productive capacities and powerful new military capabilities that, combined with the ideology of free trade promoted by the competitive imperatives of capitalist production and the ideas of Adam Smith and other political economists, transformed first the British and then other Europeans’ relations with the rest of the world in a wave of colonialist expansionism that fundamentally reconfigured the global economic and political order. China was subordinated to Western imperialism. Its long-vibrant commercial capitalism, already under pressure from internal difficulties, rapidly succumbed to foreign competition. European industrial capitalism reconfigured global relationships, creating a planetary division of labor within which China, though never made a colony of an individual Western power, assumed a subordinate role as a source of raw materials and as a market for European manufactured products. New Chinese capitalist elements began to appear in the late nineteenth century, but they struggled against the dominance of foreign businesses and finance. Western capital and the national governments that served it developed and maintained their power based on a monopoly of industrial productive technologies. The colonial system, which included China’s semicolonial position, preserved this monopoly until the Soviet Union began to develop its own industrial capacity in the 1920s.

In the countryside, the landed elite maintained much of its power and cultural preeminence, but, even there, wealth dwindled and prolonged instability eroded social cohesion. The imperial system staggered to its final collapse in the early twentieth century, and nearly four decades of political conflict and foreign invasion followed, destroying countless lives and further impoverishing the country. In the absence of a coherent national government, the extraction of surplus from agricultural production by local elites intensified and was exacerbated by warlord taxation and the corrupt practices of the nationalist regime. The Japanese invasion of 1937 and the war of resistance that lasted until 1945 brought further hardship and destruction to both urban and rural China.

Only with the victory of the revolution led by the Communist Party and the Red Army could the construction of a new modern China get underway. Land reform between 1948 and 1952 swept away the last vestiges of the old gentry landowning class in the countryside and created the conditions for building a new agriculture based on collective ownership and planned development.33 The industrial economy was nationalized in stages in the early 1950s, then began to grow through the deployment of capital from surpluses in both agriculture and manufacturing according to a series of five-year plans developed from the mid–1950s onward.

Experiments with varying forms of industrial management sought new ways to contribute to the development of a modern socialist economy.34 Aid and technical assistance from the Soviet Union and the Eastern European socialist states was crucial in the first decade of the People’s Republic. China was able begin developing a modern industrial sector distinct from the Western monopoly.

The path of socialist construction was contentious and deep divisions over how best to advance led to decades of struggle and conflict within the party and in society. The years from 1949 to 1979 saw successes and failures, advances and retreats. Dramatic improvements were made in public health, with average life expectancy rising significantly while infant mortality fell. National infrastructure in transportation and communication was massively expanded, as were reservoirs and other hydraulic resources, and overall economic growth averaged over 3 percent per year. Basic social services were provided and education was extended to most of the country’s young people.35

Nonetheless, by 1979 China remained a poor country as population growth negated some of the increases in production and a focus on heavy industry and infrastructure kept household consumption at basic levels. In a series of decisions at the end of the 1970s and the beginning of the ’80s, the Communist Party decided to embark on a path of “reform and opening to the outside” (改革開放) aimed at rapidly developing the economy and reorienting production both to meeting the needs of domestic consumers and to creating an export sector that would generate further growth through profits and the accumulation of foreign exchange. At the heart of this process was the decision to use the mechanisms of the market to develop the productive economy. In other words, a certain amount of private capital would be allowed to function within the economy, in tandem with or parallel to the continuing operations of state-owned enterprises and other forms of socialist industry and agriculture. Foreign capital would be welcomed in joint ventures, initially limited to special economic zones but eventually spreading to the country at large.

This was not a blank check written to a new capitalist class. The decision to embrace the use of markets as a driver of development was premised on the ongoing key role of the Communist Party in China’s political and economic system. The party would continue to be the guiding force shaping policy and practice, and would oversee the country’s progress toward a level of prosperity where the needs of all people could be met and where a more equitable social order could be engendered. This is the vision that is characterized as socialism with Chinese characteristics, (Zhongguo tese shehui zhuyi, 中國特色社會主義).36

Though not without shortcomings and contradictions, China’s economy entered into an era of remarkable expansion as a result of these policies and practices. The Chinese economy’s growth rates often exceeded 10 percent over the next three decades and, in the pre-COVID years, were still growing by more than 6 percent annually. Productive capacity expanded rapidly and modern technologies were acquired, in part through joint venture partnerships with foreign capital. China also began to invest heavily in research and development to be able to pursue technological innovation with reduced reliance on foreign inputs. Hundreds of millions of people were lifted out of poverty, material standards of living rose dramatically, and China emerged on the world stage as an increasingly important player in global economic life.

China’s economy today is a hybrid of state and other collectively owned enterprises, ranging from huge national entities to county or township level factories or workshops (about 45 percent of asset ownership), and a private sector that includes both domestic businesses and international joint ventures (about 35 percent of asset ownership). Another 20 percent of businesses fall into an intermediate zone, with a blend of public and private ownership.37 State-owned enterprises, at both the central and local levels, form the core of the productive economy and infrastructure, predominate in banking and finance, and are the single largest source of government revenue, but the private sector has also assumed major proportions, with a number of world class corporations playing leading roles and an ever-growing number of billionaires. The private sector currently accounts for a little over half of all employment in industry, though more than 40 percent of China’s people still live and work in the agricultural sector, where land is owned by the state and leased to households. Production in both the industrial and agricultural sectors, by both public and private enterprises, is geared to a system of domestic and international markets. Much of China’s growth has come through its exports to the global economy, but domestic consumption is being increasingly expanded.

The rationale for the reform policies can be understood in part within the theoretical parameters of Marxist and Leninist experience. In the Communist Manifesto and many other writings, Marx and Frederick Engels were very clear on the power of capitalist markets to drive innovation and development. V. I. Lenin turned to market mechanisms under the New Economic Policies in the dark years after the Civil War in Russia to jumpstart the growth of the new Soviet economy. The creative power of markets always threatens to become a reckless monstrosity, like the demons conjured by the sorcerer’s apprentice. This is why the careful oversight of the party is critical to China’s future.38

In a discussion of the development of reform policies in November 2013, Xi Jinping set out the party’s position: “In 1992 the Party’s 14th National Congress stipulated that China’s economic reform aimed at establishing a socialist market economy, allowing the market to play a basic role in allocating resources under state macro control.” He noted that “there are still many problems. The market lacks order, and many people seek economic benefits through unjustified means.” He also emphasized that “we must unswervingly consolidate and develop the public economy, persist in the leading role of public ownership, give full play to the leading role of the state-owned economy, and incessantly increase its vitality, leveraging power and impact.”39 Over recent years, the party and the government have pursued an aggressive campaign against corruption, expanded regulatory oversight of industry and finance in both the public and private sectors, and promoted ideals of social responsibility and socialist values. These policies and practices suggest the complexity and dynamism of the relationship between the party, the state, and private economic actors.

Under the policies of reform, China now has capitalists, but it does not have a capitalist class that can control the state and shape it to its own interests. The practical effects of the leading role of the party can be seen in the ways in which the most dangerous aspects of capitalist economics are being buffered and constrained today. China continues to devote major resources to eliminating poverty, a key benchmark of which was achieved in November 2020 when the last few counties, in Guizhou province, that had lagged behind the internationally recognized definition of absolute poverty were finally designated as having emerged from that status. China must further improve the livelihoods of its people, but it is making steady progress in that direction. The serious environmental problems, which peaked in the first decade of the twenty-first century, are being addressed, and China’s commitment to be carbon neutral by 2060 is a clear statement of the priority of ongoing engagement with the ecology of the country.40 China is also developing a culture of what are sometimes called “patriotic entrepreneurs”— capitalists who understand that, in socialism with Chinese characteristics, they have a place within a unique social system, a hybrid of markets and planning, a blend of public and private ownership, and that they have a responsibility to contribute to the development not only of their own enterprises, but to the enhancement of the people’s livelihoods.41 The operations of the United Front Department of the party have been expanded in recent years as another means of managing the relationship between the party and other social and political elements.42 The party and the state thus are pursuing practical policies and actions to direct social resources to further development, and a program of cultural politics to ensure that the operations of private capital are integrated within the overall goals of socialist development.

The political and legal infrastructure of the People’s Republic, in particular the public ownership of land and the system of household registration, ensures that, just as there is no bourgeoisie, there is also no true proletariat. Workers in China are not compelled to sell their labor power in the marketplace because they have no property. The system of socialist ownership means that everyone in China has economic resources for their maintenance. Individuals are registered in their native places and have access to land as a place to live and to at least minimal social services such as education and health care. The importance of this was clearly demonstrated during the financial crisis of 2008 and beyond, when, with the downturn in demand for goods produced in and exported from China, some twenty million workers were laid off from factories in places like Shenzhen and Shanghai. These workers were not simply cast out and left to their own devices, but instead could return to their home villages, where they remained entitled to the support of the socialist system. As China adjusted to the new demand structure of the global economy, and as productive activity revived in the following years, workers could return to their former employment or seek new opportunities without having been reduced to poverty and immiseration. The provision of dibao (低保), the basic level of support in rural China, is not enough to maintain a truly comfortable way of life, which is why so many young people from the countryside have sought better economic opportunities in factory or construction work in the cities, but it did serve to bridge the period of unemployment caused by the global crisis.

Workers have also been able to use the mechanisms of socialist legality to pursue their economic interests within China’s rapidly developing economy. The All-China Federation of Trade Unions has represented workers across the country, and workers and citizens in general have exercised their rights to protest, petition, and litigate through the courts to address issues from wages and working conditions to corruption and abuse of power by officials to the dangers of environmental pollution. Beyond the operations of the union federation, Chinese workers have been militant in pursuing their interests through protests and wildcat strikes. Workers and other citizens take the law and their rights seriously and regularly engage in direct action to pursue their interests. This can be portrayed as a sign of alienation, but may perhaps more properly be seen as indicating their understanding and application of their civil powers.43 China’s socialist government and the Communist Party thus serve both to restrain the potential excesses and abuses of new capitalist elements and to maintain the central role of the working class within economic and social life.

This is not to say that workers who leave their native villages to seek employment in factories or on constructions sites are not acting out of economic motivations, nor that their labor power does not generate surplus value that is, at this stage in the developmental process, appropriated by private capital or even state-owned enterprises and other kinds of collectively owned enterprises. This is part of the bargain, part of the experiment on which the Communist Party embarked to develop China’s productive economy and accumulate wealth that leads first to a socialism of a “moderately prosperous society” (小康社會) and eventually to the level of material abundance that is the threshold and foundation of a communist future. There are risks and challenges along this path. The growth that has been achieved has not come without costs. The use of market mechanisms implied the acceptance of certain contradictions that are inherent in their operations. Inequality in the country has increased sharply, as, to paraphrase Deng Xiaoping, some people got rich first. Environmental stresses became a serious problem, with pollution of the air, water, and soil damaging people’s health and undermining the quality of life. Corruption became a critical legal and political issue. The Communist Party has made great efforts to address these contradictions, but also remains committed to the path of reform. The process of experimentation and innovation that has unfolded in the course of the reform era is sometimes called “crossing the river by feeling the rocks” (mozhe shitou guohe, 摸著石頭過河) and perhaps constitutes a course of “two steps forward, one step back” as history advances.

In her book The Transformation of Chinese Socialism, Lin Chun writes that “it is no easy task to ‘join the market in order to beat it’ via relinking, borrowing, and embracing.” She goes on to ask:

Might “private” capital be simultaneously “social” in a socialized market to serve public interests? Could such a market survive and eventually overcome the capitalist world market, and on what historical and institutional basis? Imposing these questions, we can recognize the truism that even a socialist society cannot avoid being “structurally dependent on capital.”… On the other hand, however, the preserved demarcation between capital and capitalism indicates the feasibility of preventing the logic of profit from colonizing the political, social, and cultural spheres—that is, if the right agency and institutions can be put in place.44

The historical outcome of China’s experiment with building a socialist market economy, “socialism with Chinese characteristics,” remains an open question. China’s remarkable success at coping with the COVID-19 pandemic and mobilizing social resources to address public health as a human right, in contrast to the catastrophic failures of capitalist, profit-seeking health care systems in the United States and the West, suggests that, while much work remains to be done, the country may indeed be on a path to socialist modernity. Looking at the history of the People’s Republic since 1949 provides one view of the complexities of China’s pursuit of a modern industrial, socialist system.

VII

Another way to consider the current reform era and the nature of China’s twenty-first-century political economy is in the longer perspective of China’s early modern capitalist history. The “Chinese characteristics” of China’s socialism can be understood in part as a structural and cultural redeployment of features we have seen in the Song-Qing era. The complex dialectic of the state seeking to both encourage and constrain the dynamism of capitalist markets that was pursued by imperial bureaucrats, to varying degrees at different times, resonates with the hybridity of public and private economic agents in China today. The shaping of a culturally specific political and economic consciousness through the interplay of market dynamics and select themes and currents within the broad field of Confucian thought and values, subordinating the single-minded pursuit of short-term profit to a longer perspective of socially responsible accumulation, perhaps foreshadowed today’s evocation of the ideal of “patriotic entrepreneurs.”

This does not mean that the People’s Republic is simply a new version of the old empire, old wine in new bottles, but rather that both the interplay of market forces and government policy in later imperial China and the present system of market socialism, or socialism with Chinese characteristics, constitute distinct modes of production that can be best understood in a historical materialist analysis that recognizes both their relationship to broader global processes of economic history and their developmental linkages to deep currents of continuity in Chinese material and cultural life. The key difference is of course the class nature of the state, which in imperial times was the instrument of class rule by the hybrid landed-commercial ruling elite, but is today, with the leading role of the Communist Party, the management committee for the building of a new social order, at least aspirationally, and to a significant extent, practically, based on the interests and wishes of the working class. This remains a work in progress, as history continues to move.

Appreciating the specificities of China’s history and its present path within the overall framework of a historical materialist perspective allows us to move beyond trying to assimilate all forms of capitalism, all paths toward socialism, all versions of early modernity, to a single universal template. It is the mode of analysis that must be universal, and the data must drive the conclusions. The analytical perspective derived from Capital and Marx’s other writings does not mean we need to seek and find the exact same totality in every place to be able to apply a precise definition of capitalism, and to fit the experience of different peoples in different places into a monolithic narrative flow. A nuanced application of Marx’s methods to the particularities of place and time will yield results of greater practical utility in both the understanding of the past and an engagement with contemporary developments.

Notes:

  1.  See, for example, Yan Xuetong, Leadership and the Rise of Great Powers (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2019); Zhang Weiwei, The China Wave: Rise of a Civilizational State (Hackensack, NJ: World Century Publishing, 2012); Yukon Huang, Cracking the China Conundrum: Why Conventional Economic Wisdom is Wrong (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017); Wang Hui, China’s Twentieth Century (London: Verso, 2016); Charles Horner, Rising China and Its Postmodern Fate (Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 2009).
  2.  The argument that China has capitulated to a capitalist system has been made many times since the beginning of the reform era. See, inter alia, William Hinton, The Great Reversal: The Privatization of China, 1978–1989 (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1990); Eli Friedman, “Why China Is Capitalist: Toward an Anti-Nationalist Anti-Imperialism,” Spectre, July 15, 2020.
  3.  A basic overview is provided in Richard von Glahn, The Economic History of China: From Antiquity to the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016).
  4.  For a good account in English of Chinese writing about the Asiatic mode of production through the 1980s, see Timothy Brook, The Asiatic Mode of Production in China (Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 1989). Chinese scholarship on economic history and the question of the “sprouts of capitalism” includes, inter alia, 傅衣凌。明清時代商人及商業資本。北京:中華書局,2007;李伯重。多視角看江南經濟史(1250–1850),北京:三聯書局,2003;萬明,主編。晚明社會變遷:問題與研究。北京:商業印書館, 2005.
  5.  Much writing on Chinese history continues to be organized on the basis of imperial dynasties. Broader categories are useful for understanding long-term trends and developments, yet there is not a consensus on the appropriate terminology. Most scholars accept the term antiquity, but some continue to refer to the middle period as medieval, while the term early modern is adopted by a growing number of scholars, but with varying period definitions. Some continue to prefer the term late imperial for this period. For a critical discussion of periodization and a characterization of the last thousand years of Chinese history, see Richard von Glahn, “Imagining Premodern China,” in The Song-Yuan-Ming Transition in Chinese History, ed. Paul Jakov Smith and Richard von Glahn (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asia Center, 2003), 35–70.
  6.  Hsu Cho-Yun, Ancient China in Transition: An Analysis of Social Mobility, 722–222 BC (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1965).
  7.  Zhang Chuanxi, “Growth of the Feudal Economy,” in The History of Chinese Civilization: Qin, Han, Wei, Jin, and the Northern and Southern Dynasties (221 BCE–581 CE), ed. Yuan Xingpei, Yan Wenming, Zhang Chuanxi, and Lou Yulie (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012), 139–95. The use of the term feudal in this chapter title reflects the continuing influence of Soviet-era orthodoxies.
  8.  Joseph P. McDermott and Shiba Yoshinbu, “Economic Change in China, 960–1279,” in The Cambridge History of China, vol. 5, part 2, Sung China, 960–1279, ed. John W. Chaffee and Denis Twitchett (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015), 321–436.
  9.  Nicolas Tackett, The Destruction of the Medieval Chinese Aristocracy (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Asia Center, 2014).
  10.  The use of the term gentry is problematic, given its derivation from European social history, but is conventionally established in Anglophone Chinese history and is retained here in tandem with literati to delineate the dual nature of the landowning elite as both local and imperial.
  11.  Shiba Yoshinobu, Commerce and Society in Sung China (Ann Arbor: Center for Chinese Studies, 1992); William Guanglin Liu, The Chinese Market Economy, 1000–1500 (Albany: SUNY Press, 2015); McDermott and Shiba, “Economic Change in China, 960–1279.”
  12.  Joshua A. Fogel, Politics and Sinology: The Case of Naitō Konan (1866–1934) (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1984).
  13.  Joseph Stalin, “Dialectical and Historical Materialism” and Other Writings (Graphyco, 2020).
  14.  Earlier efforts to situate China in relation to the European development of capitalism are summarized in Timothy Brook and Gregory Blue, eds., China and Historical Capitalism: Genealogies of Sinological Knowledge (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999). See also David Faure, China and Capitalism: A History of Business Enterprises in Modern China (Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2006). For an exploration of the history of capitalism on a global basis, using non-Marxist definitions including private property rights, contracts enforceable by third parties, markets with responsive prices, and supportive governments, see Larry Neal and Jefferey G. Williamson, The Cambridge History of Capitalism, vol. 1, The Rise of Capitalism: From Ancient Origins to 1848 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014).
  15.  Recent scholarship has highlighted the ways in which Marx also articulated, in Capital, the Grundrisse, and elsewhere, a recognition that the course of European economic history and development was not the only or inevitable path for all societies around the world. Kevin B. Anderson, Marx at the Margins: On Nationalism, Ethnicity, and Non-Western Societies (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016); Marcello Musto, The Last Years of Karl Marx, An Intellectual Biography (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2020).
  16.  Karl Marx, Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, vol. 1 (London: Penguin Books, 1990).
  17.  On the industrial complex at Jingdezhen, see Anne Gerritsen, The City of Blue and White: Chinese Porcelain and the Early Modern World (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020).
  18.  Valerie Hansen, Negotiating Daily Life in Traditional China: How Ordinary People Used Contracts, 600–1400 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995); Madeleine Zelin, Jonathan K. Ocko, and Robert Gardella, eds., Contract and Property in Early Modern China (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2004).
  19.  Michael Marmé, Suzhou: Where the Goods of All Provinces Converge (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2005).
  20.  G. William Skinner, ed., The City in Late Imperial China (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1965).
  21.  For an incisive discussion of the question of comparability, see Kenneth Pomeranz, The Great Divergence: China, Europe, and the Making of the Modern World Economy (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001).
  22.  Marx, Capital, vol. 1, 455–91.
  23.  These features of commercial capitalism in China are comparable to those in Europe, as outlined in Jairus Banaji, A Brief History of Commercial Capitalism (Chicago: Haymarket, 2020).
  24.  Timothy Brook, “Communications and Commerce,” in The Cambridge History of China, vol. 8, The Ming Dynasty, 1368–1644, part 2 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), 579–707.
  25.  Arturo Giraldez, The Age of Trade: The Manila Galleons and the Dawn of the Global Economy (Boulder: Rowman and Littlefield, 2015).
  26.  Jie Zhao, Brush, Seal, and Abacus: Troubled Vitality in Late Ming China’s Economic Heartland, 1500–1644 (Hong Kong: Chinese University of Hong Kong Press, 2018); Timothy Brook, The Confusions of Pleasure: Commerce and Culture in Ming China (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999).
  27.  Margherita Zanasi, Economic Thought in Modern China: Market and Consumption, c. 1500–1937 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020).
  28.  Timothy Brook, Praying for Power: Buddhism and the Formation of Gentry Society in Late Ming China (Cambridge, MA: Harvard-Yen-Ching Institute, 1996).
  29.  Karl Marx, Surveys from Exile (London: Verso, 2010), 254.
  30.  William T. Rowe, Saving the World: Chen Hongmou and Elite Consciousness in Eighteenth Century China (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2002).
  31.  Karl Marx, preface and introduction to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy (Beijing: Foreign Languages Press, 1976), 3.
  32.  Cynthia Joanne Brokaw, Ledgers of Merit and Demerit: Social Change and Moral Order in Late Imperial China (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2016); Richard Lufrano, Honorable Merchants: Commerce and Self-Cultivation in Late Imperial China (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1997).
  33.  William Hinton, Fanshen: A Documentary of Revolution in a Chinese Village (New York: Vintage, 1966).
  34.  Franz Schurmann, Ideology and Organization in Communist China (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1966).
  35.  Jean Chesneaux, China: The People’s Republic, 1949–1976 (New York: Pantheon, 1979).
  36.  The phrase “socialism with Chinese characteristics” has itself gone through a process of transformation. It was originally developed in the 1950s in the context of Mao Zedong’s efforts to promote his vision of economic development as distinct from the Soviet experience. Deng Xiaoping redeployed the term in the 1980s and it has continued to be adapted to China’s ongoing policy developments. Under Xi Jinping, it has been expanded to become “socialism with Chinese characteristics for a new era.”
  37.  Nicholas Borst, “State-Owned Enterprises and Investing in China,” Seafarer, November 2019.
  38.  Domenico Losurdo, “Has China Turned to Capitalism? Reflections on the Transition from Capitalism to Socialism,” International Critical Thought 7, no. 1 (2017): 15–31.
  39.  Xi Jinping, The Governance of China, I (Beijing: Foreign Languages Press, 2014), 83–86.
  40.  Barbara Finamore, Will China Save the Planet? (Cambridge: Polity, 2018).
  41.  “Chinese Entrepreneurs Urged to Show Patriotism,” Apple Daily, December 14, 2020.
  42.  Takashi Suzuki, “China’s United Front Work in the Xi Jinping Era: Institutional Developments and Activities,” Journal of Contemporary East Asian Studies 8, no. 1 (2019): 83–98.
  43.  Ching Kwan Lee, Against the Law: Labor Protests in China’s Rustbelt and Sunbelt (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2007).
  44.  Lin Chun, The Transformation of Chinese Socialism (Durham: Duke University Press, 2006), 251–52.

2021/03/26

Kang-nam Oh 골프와 수도(修道)

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Kang-nam Oh updated his status.
1tSponsfhoruedm  · 
골프와 수도(修道)
오강남(캐나다 리자이나대학교 종교학 명예교수)
골프에 대한 이야기로 마지막입니다.  1) 골프와 종교, 2) 골프와 인생, 이제 3) 골프와 수도입니다. 오늘은 첫날 약속한대로 골프가 도닦는 일과 관계될 수 있다는 이야기를 하려합니다. 
골프의 정신적 측면에서 가장 중요한 것은 공을 향해 서서 치려고 할 때, 정신을 통일하고 집중하는 점입니다. 영어로 “one-pointedness of mind”라 합니다. 이것은 바로 모든 종교에서 그렇게도 중요시하는 영혼의 훈련, 도 닦는 일입니다.  하나의 요가입니다.  정신을 집중하고 공을 치는 순간은 모든 것을 다 잊어버리는 몰아의 순간입니다.  이 순간이야말로, ‘참자아’,  ‘본마음’으로 되돌아가는 순간입니다. 껍데기로서의 나, ‘나’라고 하는 자의식이 죽고, 내면의 ‘나’, 진정한 의미의 속사람이 살아나서 움직이게 되는 순간입니다.
공을 치려는 순간, 이번에는 한 번 멋지게 쳐 봐야겠다든가, 상대방이 깜짝 놀랄 정도로 솜씨를 보여 주어야겠다든가, 이번만은 기어코 버디 아니면 파를 해야겠다든가, 이런 저런 욕심에서 나오는 ‘잡생각’을 가지면 공이 제대로 맞지 않는다는 것은 누구나 경험하는 일입니다.  특히 putting을 할 때 잡생각을 가지면 성공할 수 없습니다.  영어로 “If you think, you cannot sink.”라 합니다.  저도 형님 두 분과 함께 골프를 치면 평소 제 실력보다 못한 점수가 나오는 것이 보통입니다.  형님들에게 후발주자로서의 본때를 보여주고자 하는 마음이 무의식 중에 작용했기 때문일 것입니다. 아무튼 공을 향해 서는 순간에는 일체의 헛된 욕심, 망상,  쓸데 없는 기대, 자랑하려는 마음 등 우리의 일상적인 의식에서 나오는 잡념을 비우고, 마음을 깨끗하고 고요하게 해야 된다는 것입니다. 이것이야말로 마음을 청결하게 하는 연습, 자기를 비우는 연습, 자기에게 죽는 연습, 자기를 부정하는 연습, 도(道)와 하나가 되는 연습입니다.
동양의 스포츠에는 검술과 검도, 궁술과 궁도, 봉술과 봉도 등 ‘술(術)’과 ‘도(道)’를 구별합니다.  술은  요령과 지략과 테크닉(技)으로 하는 것이고, 도(道)는 이런 지적이고 계산적인 것을 초월해서  도(道)와 하나가 된 경지에서 나오는 자율적이고 신비스런 어떤 힘에 따라 하는 것을 추구하는 것입니다.
중국 고전 󰡔장자(莊子)󰡕에 옛날 중국 문혜(文惠) 왕의 요리사가 칼로 소의 각을 뜨는 이야기가 나옵니다.이 요리사는 얼마나 절묘한 솜씨로 칼을 쓰는지 칼에서 바람소리가 나는 듯 하고 손발, 어깨, 허리, 모두가 척척 맞게 움직이는 것이 마치 노랫가락에 맞추어 춤추듯 장단이 딱딱 맞아 떨어졌습니다.
왕이 “거 참 훌륭하도다. 그대의 기술이 흠잡을 데가 없도다.”라고 칭찬하자 그 요리사는 칼을 옆에다 놓으며 “제가 목표하고 따르는 것은 모든 기술을 초월하는 도(道)입니다.  제가 처음 소를 잡으려고 할 때는 눈앞에 소 한 마리가 온통 그대로 보였습니다.  3 년이 지나니 소가 더 이상 통째로 보이지 않게 되었습니다. 그러나 지금은 소를 잡을 때 눈으로 보는 것이 아니라 신(神)으로 합니다. 감각이나 지각을 중지시키고 신이 원하는 대로 따라 움직일 뿐입니다.”라고 하면서  자기의 소 잡는 비법을 쭉 이야기합니다. 왕은 “훌륭하도다. 오늘 내가 요리사의 말을 듣고 양생을 배웠도다.”가고 감탄했습니다. (󰡔장자󰡕, 제3장).
여기 “눈으로 보는 것이 아니라 신(神)으로 한다”든가 “감각이나 지각을 중지시키고 신(神)이 원하는 대로 따른다”라고 했는데, 이 ‘신(神)’이라는 것이 무엇일까요?  신(神)이라면 서양 종교에서 말하는 초월적인 존재라고 하기보다는 우리 내면의 마음, 정신, 성령, 그 비슷한 것일 텐데, 요즘 심리학에서 말하는 무의식, 혹은 뇌의 우반구에서 나오는 힘이랄까, 내 속에 있는 제 3의 기능이랄까 하는 것이 아닐까요?  어쨋든 나의 일상적 의식과는 구별되는 무엇입니다. 우리가 일상 쓰는 말에도 무엇이든지 기가 막히게 잘하면, ‘신통하게 한다’거나 ‘신바람 나게 한다’고 하는 것이 여기서 연유된 것이 아닌가 합니다.  아무튼 이렇게 자기를 잊어버리고 ‘신(神)’이 나서 하는 경지가 ‘도(道)’를 따라서 하는 경지, 도통(道通)했다는 경지인입니다. 
얼마 전에 미국에서 오하이오에서 안씨라고 하는 태권도 사범 한 분을 만났습니다. 십 수년 간 태권도를 했지만 몇 년 전에야 비로소 태권도의 신비를 터득한 것 같다고 했습니다.  하나도 힘들이는 일 없이 자기도 모를 어떤 힘에 따라 그저 춤추듯 유연하고 자연스럽게 움직일 뿐이지만 상대방의 공격을 빈틈없이 막을 수 있고 상대방의 허점도 훤히 보이는 경험을 한다고 했습니다. 말하자면 태권술에서 참 의미의 태권도의 경지로 들어온 셈입니다.
골프의 기본 요건은 과도한 힘이나 완력을 쓴다고 잘 되는 것이 아니라는 것입니다.  힘을 많이 줬다고 공이 멀리 나가는 것은 절대로 아닙니다. 오히려 그 반대입니다.  자기 힘의 70% 정도만 쓰라는 것입니다.  편안한 자세에서 전체적으로 리듬과 타밍이 맞고 유연하게, 다시 말해서 자연과 합일되는 무아의 경지에서 쳐야 한다는 것입니다.  머피(Merphy)는 이런 경지를 내면적인 힘으로 치는 것, ‘참된 중력(true gravity)’을 체득하고 거기에 맞춰서 치는 것이라 했습니다.  이것은 공과 골프채와 치는 사람의 몸과 정신이 모두 혼연 일체가 되어 아주 자연스럽게 골프를 치는 것입니다. 헤리겔(Herrigel)은 활쏘기에 있어서 활과 활 쏘는 사람과 화살과 과녁이 하나가 된 경지에서 쏘는 것은 내가 쏘는 것이 아니라 ‘그것’이 쏘는 것이라 했습니다. 골프나 활쏘기뿐만 아니라  피아노를 치든지, 바이올린을 켜든지, 이렇게 자기를 비우고 잊어버리고, 무아가 된 상태에서 나의 참 근원, 진정한 나와 하나됨으로 내가 아닌 내가 움직이는 신비스런 경지를 터득하는 것을 목적으로 하는 것은 모두 그대로 도(道)를 닦는 것입니다. 수도(修道)입니다. 경건한 예배(禮拜)입니다.
R 형, 푸른 초원에 ‘신(神)’을 뵈러 나간다면 벼락맞을 소리일까요? 영국의 그 유명한 서머힐(Summerhill)의 창설자 ‘니일’(A. S. Neil)는, 새 시대의 새 종교는 “일요일 아침을 수영하는데 보내는 것이 교회에서, 마치 하느님이 찬송가 소리를 들어야만 흐믓해 하시기나 하는 것처럼, 찬송가를 부르면서 보내는 것보다 더 거룩하게 지키는 것이라는 사실을 깨닫게 된 것이다.”라고 했습니다. 새로운 종교는 “하느님을 하늘에서나 사방을 벽으로 둘러싸고 있는 건물에서만 찾을 것이 아니라 초원 위에서도 찾게 될 것이다”라는 것입니다. 
R 형, 건방진 소리같이 들릴지 모르겠습니다만, 일요일 새벽에 골프 치러 나갈 때  저는 ‘신(神)’을 찾으러, 마음 닦으러, 마음 비우러, 도닦으러 가는 심정으로, 종교의식에 참여하러 가는 기분으로 그렇게 나갑니다.  
종교라는 것이 무엇이겠습니까?  자기를 비우고 그 자리에 도(道)가 들어와서 자기를 움직여 가도록 하는 경지를 터득하는 것, 굳었던 마음을 아름답고 부드러운 마음으로, 흐렸던 마음을 맑고 향기 나는 마음으로 바꾸어 주는 것, 이것이 중요한 대목 아니겠습니까?  아무튼 이런 것을 골프장에서 배우고 연습할 수 있다는 마음에서 오늘도 골프채를 흔들어 봅니다.
R 형, 언제 한 번 같이 나가 봅시다.   
(뱀다리: 제 골프 실력이 신통하지 못합니다.  나이가 들면서 비거리가 줄어들었습니다.  LA 골프 티칭 프로는 이런 글을 쓴 사람이 아직 싱글 핸디캡 정도의 실력을 발휘하지 못한다니 말이 안 된다고 하더군요.^^)

원불교 논산교당 10대 고세천 교무 부임:놀뫼신문 #http://www.nmnews.co.kr

원불교 논산교당 10대 고세천 교무 부임:놀뫼신문 #http://www.nmnews.co.kr


원불교 논산교당 10대 고세천 교무 부임


기사입력 2017/01/25 [00:35] 놀뫼신문












▲ © 놀뫼신문





원불교 논산교당 10대 교무로 고세천(高世千) 교무가 지난 1월 16일 부임하였다.



논산교당은 1975년 11월 원불교 총부에서 정책적으로 교당을 설립하여 초대 이경심 교무가 부임해온 이래 4대 오선관 교무가 1998년 지금의 교당 건물을 신축하여 오늘에 이르고 있다.



교화 교육 자선(복지)을 3대 사업으로 추진하는 원불교는 국내외 500여개의 교당(敎堂)과 원광대학교를 비롯한 대학교, 고등학교, 중학교, 유치원(어린이집) 등 150여개의 교육기관, 사회복지법인 대전 삼동회를 비롯한 200여개의 사회복지시설을 운영하고 있다.



올해로 창립 102년을 맞이하는 원불교는 원음방송국을 운영하고 군부대에 군종장교를 파견하며 노무현, 김대중, 김영삼 대통령 국장(國葬) 종교의식을 주관하는 등 국내 4대종교의 하나로 성장하고 있다.

퀘이커 300년- 7. 모임공동체(2) > 번역물 | 바보새함석헌

퀘이커 300년- 7. 모임공동체(2) > 번역물 | 바보새함석헌


퀘이커 | 퀘이커 300년- 7. 모임공동체(2)
작성자 바보새 16-01-07 11:02 조회365회 댓글0건

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7. 모임공동체(2)



간소함

퀘이커 행동 규준의 네째인 간소함(simplicity)은 무엇보다도 먼저 그 예배모임에 나타나 있습니다. 그것은 내부 수장이나 건축에 아무 장식이 없는 환경 속에서 주님이 나타나시기를 기다리는 단순한 식의 것입니다. 18세기에는 간소함이 강조되었습니다. 그 시대의 모임집은 간소할 뿐 아니라 쓸모 있고 아름답고 균형잡힌 것이었습니다. 19세기에 와서는 이런 좋은 기준이 없어졌으나 최근의 건축은 다시 기능적인 간소함으로 돌아가려는 경향을 보여주고 있습니다. 간소함에 대한 관심이 생생하게 살아 있을 때에 그 표현이 고상하였으나 그것이 주로 전통적인 것이 되어버렸을 때 퀘이커의 모임집은 퀘이커 가정의 가구와 마찬가지로 그 모양과 양식이 퇴락돼버렸습니다.

친우들은 품질이 좋은데 반대한 것은 아니었습니다. 그들의 반대는 ‘옷, 말, 행동’의 지나친 것에 대한 것이었습니다.
일반으로 친우들은 육체를 괴롭힘을 덕으로 생각하는 금욕주의자는 아니었습니다. 그들은 쾌락이 도를 지나쳐서 더 중대한 일에 방해가 될 때 그것을 아니라고 했을 뿐입니다. 다음에 인용하는 클라크슨(Clarkson)의 『퀘이커주의의 모습』(Portrait- ure of Quakerism)의 한 귀절이 그 태도를 설명해줍니다.

음악을 만일 친우회가 장려한다면 그것은 장성한 사람들이 지금 종교 예배에서 맛보는 위로의 시간을 빼앗아버리는 것으로 생각이 됩니다. 물러감(退修)을 퀘이커들은 크리스천의 임무로 생각했습니다. 그러므로 그 회의 회원들은 예배장소에서만 아니라 가정에서나 또는 제 방에서, 그리고 날마다 하는 직업의 틈틈에서도 조용한 심정으로, 마음을 써서 하는 분주한 생각을 떠나서 일생의 의무를 다하기 위한 방향과 힘을 얻기 위해 때때로 침묵 가운데 기다려야 한다고 생각했습니다. 그러기 때문에 퀘이커들은 한가한 시간을 즐기기 위하여 악기가 만일 허락되면 이러한 참된 물러남의 시간을 빼앗아버려서 크리스천으로서의 그들의 흥미와 성격에 많이 해를 끼친다고 생각했습니다.

그것은 예술 일반에 대해서도 그러했습니다. 간소함은 옷과 말과 태도와 건축과 가구의 쓸데없는 장식이 일체 없는 것을 의미했습니다. 질로나 소용으로나 좋은 것을 쓸데없다고 주장하는 것은 아니었습니다. 간소함에는 또 경제적 이유도 있었습니다. 월리엄 팬은 “세상의 쓸데없는 장식만을 가지고도 모든 헐벗은 사람을 다 입힐 수 있습니다” 라고 말했습니다. 존 울만은 말하였습니다.

하나님은 능력과 지혜와 선이 완전하시기 때문에, 사람이 이 세상에서 살아가기 위하여 제각기 제 분대로 필요한 노동을 하려면 상당한 시간을 써야만 하게끔 만드셨습니다. 그러기 때문에 우리가 하나님의 뜻에 반대하여서 사치를 행하고 부자가 되려고 애를 쓰면 어느 정도 압박을 하고 자만심과 경쟁심을 가지게 되며 당과 싸움을 일으켜서 나라를 위태롭게 하는 데 이르게 됩니다.

사치와 남아돌아감은 사람들의 노동량의 증가를 필요케 합니다. 그러므로 그 노동을 강요하기 위하여 압박이 필요하게 되고 압박에서 자만과 싸움이 일어납니다. 존 울만은, 사치품을 삼으로써 가난한 사람에게 직업을 주어서 돕는 일이 된다는 현대 논법을 결코 찬성하지 않았을 것입니다. 그는 사치는 허영과 압박의 근원이요, 결국은 전쟁의 원인이 된다고 확신했습니다. 인간이 만일 겸손하게 그 욕망을 참으로 필요한 것에만 국한시킨다면 지나친 노동과 압박과 분쟁은 없을 것이고, 생활의 필수품은 누구에게나 넉넉히 돌아갈 것입니다.
존 울만은 그의『인간의 참된 조화에 대한 이야기』속에서 그의 신앙과 간소함의 밀접한 관계를 다음과 같이 말합니다.

내가 혹시 교만심을 일으킨다고 생각되는 어떤 일에 내 힘을 쓸 때는 내 영혼을 거룩한 사귐 속에서 아버지와 그 아들 예수 그리스도와 연결시켜준다고 생각해왔던 그 줄이 약해짐을 나는 느낍니다.

퀘이커의 옷에서는 스튜어드 왕조시대의 특색이었던 모든 장식이 다 없어졌습니다. 검소한 청교도들도 마찬가지의 증거를 보여주었습니다. 퀘이커들은 후에도 초기의 의복 양식을 그대로 계속했습니다. 결국은 그것이 표준이 되어 필요하지도 않은데 새것을 사도록 만드는 유행을 따르는 것은 세속의 길에 대한 쓸데없는 양보라는 이론에 도달하게 되었습니다. 퀘이커의 이론에는, 자기 자랑이 됐다는 점을 내놓고는, 화려한 빛을 쓰지 말라는 말은 없습니다. 마가레트 폭스는 18세기초에 엷은 갈색만이 쓰이게 되는 것을 보고 반대했습니다.
평소에 제복을 입는 것은 세상에 대하여 그 사람의 선 자리가 어디인 것을 손쉽게 잘 보여주는 것입니다. 그래서 어떤 퀘이커들은 그것이 자기네를 가서는 아니되는 곳에 가지 않도록 잘 지켜준다고 했습니다. 한 번 퀘이커 옷을 입으면 거기 맞게 살지 않으면 안다고 느꼈습니다. 후에는 현대의 옷이 대체로 간소하고 기능적이기 때문에 퀘이커 옷을 입는 것은 하나의 빈 형식뿐이라고 생각하는 사람이 많게 되었습니다.

말을 간소하게 하는 것도 철저한 친우의 두드러진 특색이었습니다. 수식적인 지나친 말은 말에서도 글에서도 쓰지 않았습니다. 이 때문에 퀘이커는 무뚝뚝하다는 평을 들었습니다. 모임에서나 어디서나 말을 할 때에 웅변조를 금했습니다. 퀘이커 책에는 명문을 쓰려고 한 흔적이 보이지 않습니다. 언제나 삼가서 자제하는 태도로 깊은 종교적 체험을 말했습니다. 월리엄 펜은 친우의 열두 가지 특색을 드는 가운데 그 여덟째로 “그들은 언제나 말을 적게 하여서 그 실지 모범으로 침묵을 권하고 있습니다” 했습니다.
간소함, 즉 쓸데없는 것을 제해버린다는 가르침은 생활의 모든 면에 적용할 수 있습니다. 결혼식, 장례식에 검소의 정신이 지켜지게 하기 위하여 위원회가 임명됩니다. 백년 이상을 무덤의 비석은 쓸데없는 것이라고 했습니다.

표적으로 그것을 쓰게 된 후에도 그것은 조그맣고 보잘 것 없는 것으로만 썼습니다. 세간 살림 같은 것을 간소하게 하자는 초기 퀘이커의 생각을 현대에는 미적인 이유 때문에 최신 유행이 그것을 따르고 있습니다. 친우들이 예술에 반대한 것은 단순히 그것이 쓸데없다는 점에서뿐만 아니라, 또 그것은 다만 생활의 표현일 뿐인데, 생활 자체 노릇을 하는 경향이 있기 때문이었습니다. 가령 예를 들면 연극을 하는 배우는 그가 실지로 느끼지 않은 감정을 느낀 듯이 나타내고 소설가는 실지로 생긴 일이 없는 사실들을 있는 듯이 드러내기 때문입니다. 음악은 실지 행동의 출구를 얻을 수 없는 감정을 일으키기 때문에 오히려 해가 될는지도 모릅니다. 마찬가지 이유로 성 어거스틴은 노래를 부르는 것을 가리켜 “이것은 육의 만족이므로 영혼이 거기 사로잡히어 맥빠져버려서는 아니되는 것”이라고 했습니다. 미술은 사실의 참이 아니요 그릇된 상을 길러냄으로써 그것을 따르는 사람을 하나의 상상적이요, 비진실적인 세계에 살게 만드는 것이라고 생각했습니다. 근대의 영화는 보는 자를 꿈나라에 살게 만드는 힘을 가진 예술의 한 예라고 할 수 있습니다.

초기의 퀘이커들은 상상의 세계의 성질에 대하여는 확실히 잘못 생각 했습니다. 예술은 그 자신의 실재성을 가지고 보통의 행동이나 말로써는 가닿을 수 없는 어떤 의미를 전해주는 그 자신의 언어를 가지고 있습니다. 오랫동안 어떤 종류의 미를 감상하기를 피해왔기 때문에 친우회는 심미적으로는 어느 정도 떨어진 상태지만, 근대의 친우들은 예술에다 적당한 지위를 주기를 서슴지 않습니다.
친우들은 쓸데없는 물건을 금했기 때문에 퀘이커 장사꾼들은 그런 물건을 팔 수 없었고, 그 때문에 그들의 사업은 여려 가지 제한되는 것이 많았습니다. 재단사, 모자장수, 책장수, 장의사, 인쇄업자, 은방, 무역상들은 이 주장에 영향을 받았습니다. 퀘이커 재단사 존 홀(John Hall, 1637~1719)은 “주님과의 평화를 잃기보다는 차라리 모든 소유를 잃기를” 바랐습니다.
그러나 사업 그 자체가 거기 너무 취해버리면 시간의 허비가 되고 지나친 것이 될 수 있습니다. 거기 너무 정신을 뺏겨버리면 종교적인 의무를 다할 수 없어지는 것을 친우들은 깨달았습니다. 종교가 그의 제일의 관심사라면 그는 사업을 줄였습니다. 그것은 순회전도자의 경우에 가장 많이 그러했습니다. 거의 모든 퀘이커의 일기가 다 사업이 너무 커져서 종교에 써야 하는 시간까지도 거기 써야 하게 될 때에는 사업을 줄여버린 실례를 가지고 있습니다. 일기 속에서 몇 개의 실례만 들면 사업을 제한하는 그 이유를 알 수 있습니다. 다니엘 휠러는 그의 직업인 씨앗장사가 너무 번창하여 친우로서의 생활에 방해가 되는 것을 깨달았습니다.

나는 몇 번이고 마음을 안정시켜주는 하나님의 능력 가까이, 그 안에, 그 힘에 있으려고 힘썼기 때문에 내 무엇을 희생하지 않으면 안되는 필요가 조만간 일어날 것을 믿게 되었습니다……. 그러기 때문에 나는 지금 하고 있는 장사를 완전히 내던지고 가족과 한가지로 조그마한 사업으로 물러가는 것이 현재의 평화를 위하여서도 또 미래의 행복을 위하여서도 가장 좋다고 진심으로 믿게 됐습니다.

월리엄 에반즈(William Evans, 1787〜1867)는 큰 포목상을 같이 하자고 의논이 왔을 때 그것을 거절했습니다.

나의 현재 사업은 내가 잘 아는 조그만 것이기 때문에 쉽게 경영해갈 수 있습니다. 자본도 별로 필요치 않고 내 힘으로 할 수 없는 일에 끌려들어가는 일도 없습니다. 그러기 때문에 아무 걱정이 없고, 별 방해받음이 없이 모임의 약속에 참석할 수 있고, 또 언제나 모임에 가지 않으면 안되겠다고 생각할 때에는 자유로 갈 수가 있습니다. 내가 만일 하라는 대로 직업 전환을 하면 나는 친우모임도 잃어버릴 것이고, 내 속의 종교적인 활동도 잃어버릴 것으로 보입니다……. 나는, 땅은 주의 것이요 일천 언덕의 소도 그의 것이라는 것을 생각하면서 내 앞길과 사업을 비록 작기는 하지만 새로운 평화와 만족을 가지고 내다보았습니다.

토머스 실리토(Thomas Shillitoe, 1756~1836)는 말했습니다.

내가 좋은 직업을 내버리고 집을 떠나 더 자유롭게 나의 종교적인 의무를 다 할 수 있도록 준비하여야 하는 시간이 빨리 빨리 다가오고 있다는 생각이 때때로 내 마음속에 일어났습니다. 나의 거룩하신 주님이 새삼스럽게 내 귀에 외치신 말씀은 이것이었습니다. “네 모든 물건을 네 집에 모아넣으라, 나는 너의 남은 날들이 필요하다.”

토머스 실리토는 길러내야 하는 자녀가 다섯 있었습니다. 그러나 그는 그들을 “우리를 풍성하게 돌봐주신 그 전능하신 능력”에 맡겼습니다. 그러면서도 그는 “잘 되어가는 사업을 버려야 한다는 것은, 때로는 내 영혼에 대해 지독한 시련이었습니다” 했습니다.
마르다 루드(Martha Routh)는 그 학교가 건물에 비해서 커졌을 때에 더 큰집을 어떻게 찾아냈던가를 이렇게 기록했습니다.

방에서 방으로 나가는 동안에 나는 문득 우리가 지금 가지고 있는 집이 수용 할 수 있는 수보다 더 많은 학생을 받을 필요는 없다는, 희미한 그러면서도 분명한 생각의 암시를 받았습니다. 그리하여 나는 그 생각을 완전히 버리고 맘의 평안을 얻었습니다.

어떤 때는, 퀘이커 학자들은 종교에 더 많은 시간을 쓰기 위하여 그 공부를 줄일 필요가 있다고 생각했습니다. 저 유명한 과학자 월리엄 알렌은 그의 일기 속에 이렇게 썼습니다.

오늘 아침은 유쾌했다. 나의 자연과학에 대한 강한 매력에 대하여 이렇게 생각이 밝아지는 듯했다. 즉 그것이 너무 강하여서 지배적이 되는 때면 거기 너무 빠지지 말고 거기에 바치는 시간을 줄이고 쉬는 것이 나의 의무라고.

아이어랠드의 의사요, 중요한 의학책의 저자인 존 러티(John Rutty)는 이렇게 기도했습니다.

주여! 먹고, 마시고, 자고, 담배 피우고, 공부하기 위해 사는 살림에서 나를 건져주시옵소서.

말을 간소하게 한다는 것은, 지나친 말을 아니한다는 뜻만이 아닙니다. 그것은 또 순수와 진실을 의미합니다. 퀘이커들은 주저하는 나머지 이따금은 너무 사실 그대로를 말하려다가 웃음거리가 되는 수가 있습니다. 지나친 말을 하지 않으려고 말을 꺼리게 되었습니다. “우리가 아는 대로는” “그렇게 틔지 않습니다” 하는 문구들이 질문서의 대답하는 가운데 씌어 있습니다. 친우는 “나는 반대입니다” 하지는 않고, 대개는 “나는 아무래도 동의할 수는 없습니다” 합니다. 참을 말하는 것의 부산물의 하나는 장사에서 정찰제를 시작한 것입니다. 17세기에는 장사꾼이 받을 값보다 많이 부르고, 손님은 줄 값보다 적게 부르는 것이 일반 습관이었습니다. 그래서 흥정을 한 결과 서로 맞는 값에 이르는 것이었습니다. 퀘이커들은 처음부터 꼭 받을 값을 불렀습니다. 그 결과 퀘이커는 사업이 번창했습니다. 퀘이커 상점에는 물건을 사기 위해 어린아이를 보내도 좋았습니다.
창조를 이해하고 그 아름다움과 진실과 순수함을 아는 통찰력을 얻으려는 노력은 퀘이커들을 과학적 탐구로, 그리고 식물학과 새의 연구로 이끌었습니다. 어떤 사람은 전문적인 과학자나 되기도 했습니다. 과학은 예술보다도 진실에 가까운 것으로 생각되었습니다. 가지가지의 오락을 내버린 대신 과학은 즐거움을 주었습니다. 지나친 교육도 다른 사치품과 마찬가지로 온전히 제외되어버렸습니다. 퀘이커의 도덕가 조나단 다이몬드(Jonathan Dymond)는 1825년에 이렇게 썼습니다.

문학보다는 과학이 낫습니다. 말의 지식보다 사물의 지식이 낫습니다.

종교에서와 마찬가지로, 교육에서도 글자나 형식에 거리끼는 것은 반대했습니다. 하나님의 창조로서의 자연에 대한 지식은 인간의 사업에 대한 지식보다도 사람을 하나님께 더 가까이 이끄는 것으로 생각했습니다. 다이몬드의 말을 다시 인용해봅니다.

호라티우스가 무엇을 썼는지 아는 것이나, 그리스 시집을 비평할 수 있는 것은 하나님이 무슨 법칙을 가지고 자연의 활동을 다스리시며, 또 무슨 방법으로 그러한 활동들을 생명의 목적에 소용되도록 하려는지를 아는 것보다는 중요한 것이 되지 못합니다.

퀘이커가 과학에 흥미를 가지는 것은 진실과 사실에 한층 더 가까이 가자는 노력의 직접 결과에서 오는 것이지만, 그러한 흥미 때문에 퀘이커 과학자의 수는 참 많았습니다. 루드 프라이(A. Ruth Fry)는『퀘이커의 길』(Quaker Ways) 속에서 말하기를 1851년으로부터 1900년 사이에 영국의 퀘이커는 영국 학사회(Royal society)의 회원으로 당선되는 율이 다른 사람들보다 46배가 많았다고 했습니다.

법정에서 선서를 거부하는 것보다도 더 심한 박해를 퀘이커에게 가져 오는 것은 없었습니다. 수많은 친우들이 이 증거를 지키노라고 여러 해를 더러운 감옥 속에서 지냈고, 그 안에서 죽은 사람도 있었습니다. 퀘이커가 맹세하기를 거절한 것은 적어도 두 가지 이유에서였습니다. 첫째, 맹세를 하는 것은 “도무지 맹세하지 말라”(「마태복음」5:34) 한 그리스도의 계명과, 둘째, “내 형제들이여,무슨 일이 있더라도 맹세하지 마시오”(야고보서 5:12) 한 야고보의 말에 반대되기 때문입니다. 그것은 또 참에 대한 두 개의 표준을 세우는 것이 되기 때문입니다. 하나는 법정 안에서 하나는 그 밖에서. 그러면 그것은 맹세가 없는 곳에서는 거짓을 말해도 된다는 의미가 됩니다. 퀘이커들이 재판에 끌려와 그들을 유죄로 결정하는 증거가 잘못되었거나 불충분한 때에도 그들은 충성을 맹세하라는 요구를 들으면 거절했고, 그 때문에 그들은 투옥을 당했습니다. 맹세하기를 거절했기 때문에 친우들은 또한 관세법을 지킬 수 있는 권리, 부채의 지불, 소송하는 권리, 법정에서 증인이 될 수 있는 권리, 재산에 대한 자격을 주장할 수 있는 권리, 관리가 될 수 있는 권리를 잃어버렸습니다. 월리엄 펜의 경구 “사람들은 참을 말하기 위해 말하지만 그리스도는 그들이 맹세하지 않기 위해 참을 말하기를 바라실 것입니다” 라는 말은 퀘이커의 입장을 남김없이 말한 것입니다. 펜은 과거 100년 동안에 각 통치자들이 일정한 형식의 종교를 지지하기 위하여 맹세를 요구했고, 다음에 또 다른 통치자가 일어나서 또 다른 형식의 종교를 지지하라고 맹세를 요구하면, 수많은 승려들이 전에 한 맹세를 거침없이 버렸을 때에 어떻게 쓸데없는 맹세들이 세워졌던가 하는 점을 지적했습니다.

드디어 오랜 투쟁 끝에 1696년 승인을 허락하는 법령이 의회를 통과했습니다. 그러나 소수의 친우들이 그 새 형식 안에는 ‘엄숙히’(solemnly)이라는 종교상의 문구가 들어 있기 때문에 그것을 쓸 수 없다는 의견이었습니다. 런던 연회는 모든 사람을 만족시킬 수 있는 어구에 합의를 얻기 위하여 25년간 싸웠습니다. 이것은 다수파가 소수파를 만족시키기 위하여 지독히 참아온 하나의 좋은 예입니다. 결국 1722년에 이르러 한 안에 합의를 보아 그것이 법률로 제정되었습니다. 펜실베이니아주에서는 펜의 헌법이 승인을 얻었습니다. 그러나 모든 친우를 만족시키는 승인의 안을 허하는 식민지회의의 특별법이 국왕에 의하여 참 의원에서 비준된 것은 겨우 1725 년에 가서야 됐습니다.
퀘이커의 판사로서 선서를 요구했던 사람은 초기에는 모임에서 제명이 됐습니다.

조셉 돈튼(Joseph Thornton)은 자기가 맹세를 요구했던 것을 크게 잘못으로 알았기 때문에 이 앞으로는 그럴 필요가 있는 자리에는 취직하지 않기로 결심했으며, 이제는 맹세를 하는 것은 친우회의 규칙에도, 자기 마음의 깨달음에도 허락되지 않는 것임을 알았다고 선언했습니다. (미들타운 월회, 1762)

혁명전쟁 후 왕을 버리고 새 정부에 충성한다는 맹세 혹은 승인을 요구하는 법령이 제정되었습니다. 수많은 친우들이 이 맹세를 거부했기 때문에 박해를 받았고, 그 결과로 법률의 강행은 얼마 못 가서 폐지됐습니다. 승인은 허가되었지만 연회는 “우리들은 어떤 정부를 세우고 넘어뜨리는 기구 노릇을 할 수는 없다”고 설명했습니다.
미국에서는 모임 공동체가 적절하게 제정된 행동기준에 따라 일을 하며 식민지시대에 있어서 그 발전의 최고도에 이르렀습니다. 그것은 그때에는 서로 경쟁되는 흥미의 가짓수도 적었고, 또 모임의 주위에 사는 사람들도 대부분이 퀘이커였기 때문이었습니다. 이 시대의 의사록에는 간소함의 증거를 지키기 위하여 주의했던 여러 가지 기사를 볼 수 있습니다. 그 대표적인 예를 몇 개 듭니다,

우리 부인회는 엘리저베드 베넬이 의복과 말을 간소하게 하는데서 많이 떠나서 음악과 무용의 장소에 자주 출입하는 것을 불만으로 여기게 됐습니다. 존 밀하우스와 리버 페리스가 부인 친우회에 참가하여 그녀에 대하여 처리하고, 다음 모임에 그녀의 동향에 대하여 보고하기로 했습니다. (월밍론, 1778)

N.H.는 자기가 트럼프놀이를 한 것이 잘못이라는 편지를 보내왔으므로, 모 임은 그 편지를 받고 그에게 그 편지를 트럼프를 했던 그 장소에서 벤자민 프레드와 월리엄 할리데이 앞에서 읽으라고 했으며, 그의 교제하는 태도와 진리에 대한 성실성이 친우들을 좀더 만족하게 할 때까지 그는 사무모임에 오기를 중지하라고 했습니다. (뉴가든, 1725)

교만심을 눌러야 한다는 관심이 이 모임을 덮었습니다. 그것이 부인들이 철사 든 치마를 입는 데 얼마쯤 나타나 있습니다. 그래서 그것이 많은 친우들에게 걱정거리가 되었습니다. 모든 사람의 의견이 우리 중에 아무도 그런 것을 사용해서는 안된다는 것과 우리들의 목회자나 중견 되는 친우들이 회원들을 조사하여서 잘못이 있는 사람이 있는 경우에는 말을 해줄 것과 그러한 철사 든 치마나 그밖에 적당치 못한 옷을 입는 사람을 제명할 것을 만장일치로 가결했습니다. (콩코드, 1739)

1695년과 1723년에 두 번 필라델피아 연회는 회원들에 대하여 점성술자, 요술쟁이, 그밖에 무슨 마술을 한다는 사람들과 교제하지 말라는 경고를 내렸습니다. 그런 사람들을 믿었던 사람은 모두 잘못을 고백하라고 하였습니다. 조셉 월터는 이런 고백을 했습니다. “내 말에 대하여 알려고 어떤 사람에게 갔습니다. 나는 분명히 말하지만 그가 어떤 나쁜 요술을 쓰기를 바라는 생각은 없었습니다.”(콩코드, 1738)
매우 이른 초창기부터 퀘이커 모임은 술을 너무 과도히 쓰거나, 혹은 그것을 만들고 파는 회원에 대하여는 매우 신속하게 처리했습니다. 다음의 질문서는 1755년부터 쓰였습니다.

친우들은 알콜분이 많은 주류를 너무 많이 사용하지 않도록, 술집과 오락장에 자주 드나들지 않도록, 생일 결혼식 장례식에서 진정으로 중용과 절제를 지키도록 힘쓰고 있습니까?

질문서는 점점 더 엄한 편으로 기울어갔습니다. ‘알콜분이 많은 주류’는 ‘모든 주류’로 변경됐습니다. 질문서에 ‘모든 주류’라는 말을 집어넣은 것은 1874년 필라델피아에서 모임의 정면에 앉은 늙은이들에 대해 일어난 젊은이들의 반항으로써 이루어졌습니다. 조수아 베일리는 이 이야기를 하면서 “그것은 마치 하원이 상원에 대해 반항하는 것과 같았습니다. 그리고 하원이 이겼습니다”라고 했습니다. 마침내 20 세기가 시작될 무렵에 와서야 그 질문은 절대 금주를 채용했습니다.
간소함에 대한 옛날의 가르침은 현재에는 한가와 휴양의 시간을 방해하는 지나친 활동을 줄이는 데 적용해야 할 것입니다. 시간 절약을 위하여 만든 여러 가지 방법은, 역설적이게도 일반 생활을 분주하고 복잡한 것으로 만들어버렸습니다. 어떤 보이지 않는 지휘자의 지휘봉이 생활의 속도를 점점 높여가는 듯합니다. 해결은 모든 위대한 종교의 성자와 선각자들이 지적해준 것같이, 우리의 재주를 높이는데 있기보다는 우리 욕망을 낮추는 데, 말을 바꾸어 하면 간소함에 있습니다.