by NADEEM F. PARACHA

The 18th century French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau argued that religion is necessary for a stable state. His writings greatly inspired the makings of the French Revolution which, ironically, was largely anti-religion. But Rousseau mostly spoke about a ‘civil religion’, and not a traditional, revealed faith. Civil religion functions like a belief system by ‘sacralising’ ideas that are secular.
Rousseau was writing during a period when pre-modern Christianity was receding. It had begun to be viewed by most European thinkers as exploitative, myopic and a hindrance to the advancement of ‘new knowledge’ derived from empiricism and rationalism.
This critique was not only coming from staunch secularists alone, but also from Christian reformists. Yet, even the most secular thinkers agreed that faith was important to keep societies from spiralling into spiritual anxiety and chaos. Rousseau’s idea of civil religion, therefore, became increasingly influential across the 19th and 20th centuries. Concepts like the nation and the state began being given a sacred status and rituals.
These rituals borrowed symbolic elements from traditional religions but reframed and reinterpreted them. For example, sacralisation in this regard often constitutes national holidays, flag-raising ceremonies, pledges of allegiance, remembrance days and memorial services for historical events or figures etc. These are ritualised in a way to evoke emotions as rituals of traditional faiths do.
Secular ideas, when imbued with sacred meaning, turn politics into a ‘moral mission’ and reshape democracy’s character in the process
Civic religion eventually gave birth to the ‘sacralisation of politics.’ Politics is inherently amoral. It is largely invested in the interest of the self or the nation, and is often unconstrained by moral judgement when pursuing these interests. But the gradual sacralisation of the body politic sacralised the amorality of politics as well.
According to the researcher Bilge Yabanc, many political parties have transformed politics into a religious-like mission by infusing secular entities — such as the nation, the state and the leader — with sacred meaning. Some of the first major consequences of this process were rather drastic. They produced political forces that wanted to be the only ones in the picture.
Early examples in this regard include the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks), the National Fascist Party in Italy, the Nazi Party in Germany, the Movimiento Nacional in Spain and, later, Mao Zedong’s Communist Party of China.
According to the British historian Paul Jackson, these created new symbols and rituals to evoke belief in a higher cause (related to the state). This was to be navigated by a ‘visionary’ leader shaped by a ‘cult of personality.’ In 1952, the German-American political scientist Waldemar Gurian wrote that the totalitarian movements which rose after World War I “were fundamentally religious movements, based on a new conception of faith.” Political scientists began to refer to this conception as “political religion” (not to be confused with religious politics).
Jackson wrote that a utopian vision is at the core of a political religion. It is treated as a messianic mission, binding leaders and followers together in a shared project. It develops new rituals that make a charismatic individual the personification of the mission. He/she also personifies a wider mythology that allows societies to engage in activities that express their collective belief in the sacred cause espoused by the new ‘faith’. But sacralisation of politics doesn’t always produce totalitarian outcomes. It is very much present in democracies as well.
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