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Civil Religion
The first government to have an identifiable civil religion was the Roman
Empire, whose first Emperor Augustus officially attempted to revive the dutiful
practice of Classical paganism. Greek and Roman religion were essentially local
in character; the Roman Empire attempted to unite its disparate territories by
inculcating an ideal of Roman piety, and by a syncretistic identifying of the
gods of conquered territories with the Greek and Roman pantheon. In this
campaign, Augustus erected monuments such as the Ara Pacis, the Altar of Peace,
showing the Emperor and his family worshiping the gods. He also encouraged the
publication of works such as Virgil's Æneid, which depicted "pious Æneas", the
legendary ancestor of Rome, as a role model for Roman religiosity. Roman
historians such as Livy told tales of early Romans as morally improving stories
of military prowess and civic virtue. The Roman civil religion later became
centered on the person of the Emperor through the imperial cult, the worship of
the genius of the Emperor.
The phrase "civil religion" was first discussed extensively by Jean-Jacques
Rousseau in The Social Contract. Rousseau defined "civil religion" as a group of
religious beliefs he believed to be universal, and which he believed governments
had a right to uphold and maintain: belief in a deity, belief in an afterlife in
which virtue is rewarded and vice punished; and belief in religious tolerance.
Beyond that, Rousseau affirmed that individuals' religious opinions should be
beyond the reach of governments.
In the 1960s and 1970s, scholars such as Robert N. Bellah and Martin E. Marty
studied civil religion as a cultural phenomenon, attempting to identify the
actual tenets of civil religion in the United States of America, or to study
civil religion as a phenomenon of cultural anthropology. Within this U.S.
context, Marty wrote that Americans approved of "religion in general" without
being particularly concerned about the content of that faith, and attempted to
distinguish "priestly" and "prophetic" roles within the practice of American
civil religion, which he preferred to call the public theology.[citation needed]
In "Civil Religion in America," a 1967 essay, Bellah wrote that civil religion
in its priestly sense is "an institutionalized collection of sacred beliefs
about the American nation." Bellah describes the prophetic role of civil
religion as challenging "national self-worship" and calling for "the
subordination of the nation to ethical principles that transcend it in terms of
which it should be judged."[citation needed] Bellah identified the American
Revolution, the Civil War, and the Civil Rights Movement as three decisive
historical events that impacted the content and imagery of civil religion in the
United States.