New & Enlarged Handbook of Christian Theology. Donald W. Musser
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Although one might trace the origins of civil religious thinking back to Plato (The Republic) and the practices of citizens of the Greek city-states, and although the basis for conceiving of modern civil religion has mostly French influence, the links to what most Americans now embody as civil religious tenets and practices probably come through England and the seventeenth-century Puritans. As much as the Puritans were guided by evangelical religion, they also shared a common civil purpose of building “God’s new Israel” in America.
John Winthrop, the first governor of Massachusetts Bay, the main Puritan colony, was representative of civil religious thinking among the early Puritans. With America as the “Promised Land” and with the prospect of building a “City on a Hill,” the Puritans sought to apply the principal tenets of the Hebrew scriptures to the new society of Massachusetts Bay. Winthrop quoted frequently from Moses’ farewell address in Deuteronomy 30 in support of his understanding of the divine covenant that God was making with the chosen people in establishing the kingdom of God in the new world. God was providing them a second opportunity to bring the Reformation to its political fulfillment.
Because they saw themselves as God’s people with a special calling, the Puritans sought to expand their spiritual responsibilities beyond church life. If all of life including one’s work is a sacred trust, then Sacvan Bercovitch is also correct in his assessment in The Puritan Origins of the American Self (1975) that Puritan themes, tensions, and literary strategies had a persisting influence on “the American self as the embodiment of a prophetic universal design.”
That the more narrow Puritan vision of America as God’s covenanted “Promised Land” was not realized as they had wished was obvious 150 years later when the writers of the Declaration of Independence sought to express a less sectarian and more diffused version of the Puritan ideal. Their vision also was permeated with rational, Enlightenment notions of the place of God, so that civil religious rhetoric took a Deistic turn that still holds today. Thomas Jefferson and James Madison in particular articulated the revised, syncretistic civil religion.
The result of the Revolutionary War also validated the civil religious assumptions of many. With George Washington as a Moses figure who separated the young nation from the Egypt of Europe and established it securely as a “Promised Land,” future presidents would incorporate civil religious rhetoric into their pronouncements, especially their Inaugural Addresses, so that they functioned as the high priests of this religion that effectively combined popularly understood theology, history, and political theory. Clearly, by the time of the Civil War, the outline of a civil religion was in place and included five components identified by Richard Pierard and Robert Linder (Civil Religion and the Presidency, 1988): (1) the “chosen nation” theme devised by the Puritans; (2) a civil millennialism that secularized ideas resulting from the First Great Awakening; (3) a broad national religious consensus that merged evangelical Protestantism with democratic ideals; (4) the rational Deistic influence, especially in matters political and intellectual; and (5) the self-authenticating history of the American experience.
Civil religious rhetoric and understanding ebbed and flowed in the decades after the Civil War, becoming particularly visible in times of national conflict and duress. In the modern era, its themes reemerged in the 1940s and 1950s in the setting of World War II and the resulting cold war against godless international communism. One oft-quoted (and misquoted) statement came from President-elect Dwight Eisenhower in an address to the Freedoms Foundation prior to Christmas, 1952. Eisenhower said, “Our form of government has no sense unless it is founded in a deeply felt religious faith, and I don’t care what it is.” Eisenhower’s invocation of a deeply felt religion of apparently little substance inadvertently captured what for many is the intrinsically elusive nature of the idea of civil religion when contrasted with more orthodox religious expressions.
About the same time, anthropologist W. Lloyd Warner was in the midst of research for his famous “Yankee City” series of ethnographic studies. One of these included an examination of an “American sacred ceremony,” that of Memorial Day observance. Warner’s brilliant description, making use of a Durkheimian interpretation of the functional significance of such ceremonies, still stands as a successful early effort at a systematic analysis of how civil religion works. In American Life: Dream and Reality (1953), he concluded,
The Memorial Day rite is a cult . . . not just of the dead as such, since by symbolically elaborating sacrifice of human life for the country through, or identifying it with, the Christian church’s sacred sacrifice of their god, the deaths of such men also become powerful sacred symbols which organize, direct, and constantly revive the collective ideals of the community and the nation.
With the advantage of hindsight, one can now understand Eisenhower and Warner as providing the basis of popular and academic reflection for what culminated in Robert Bellah’s provocative essay “Civil Religion in America” (Daedalus) in 1967. Although Bellah puzzled in a footnote, “why something so obvious should have escaped serious analytical attention,” Martin Marty would later demonstrate in A Nation of Behavers (1976) that, in fact, between the late-1940s and the mid-1960s, numerous scholarly attempts had appeared. Some, such as Will Herberg’s explanation of the religion of “the American way of life” in Protestant, Catholic, Jew (1955) and J. Paul Williams’s encouragement of democracy as religion in What Americans Believe and How They Worship (1952), even received serious scrutiny among scholars. Bellah’s essay provided the focal point around which all subsequent discussion of civil religion would be conducted.
First, Bellah’s choice of the term “civil religion” seems to have captured the fancy of academics. Civil religion has never been discussed widely by “persons in the street,” but as a label, it has communicated a reality to intellectuals that earlier terms such as “American Shinto” or “religion in general” did not. Although the “reality” of civil religion was not new, Bellah was correct in insisting that as a social construction, it “existed from the moment the winter 1967 issue of Daedalus was printed.”
Second, civil religion captured the attention of intellectuals from a broad spectrum of academic life. Initially, sociologists and anthropologists and then historians, rhetoricians, theologians, and political theorists responded to the term and its underlying reality from discipline-specific perspectives in a way that earlier terms had not elicited. Perhaps intellectual historians were most perplexed, for they knew “something” like civil religion had been a topic of discussion for longer than Bellah conceded.
Third, Bellah himself remained a part of the discussion for nearly fifteen years (see Varieties of Civil Religion, 1980), and his own rhetoric contributed to debate