Item Details

American Civic Tradition after 9/11: Protestant, Catholic, Jewish and African-American Resources for Healthier National Faith and Community

Issue: Vol 7 No. 3 (2004)

Journal: Implicit Religion

Subject Areas: Religious Studies

DOI: 10.1558/imre.v7i3.228

Abstract:

Re-opening discussion of ‘American civil religion’ insights would have been

much easier in the ashen glow of 9/11 than it is three years later. But the Bush

administration’s war in Iraq and domestic Patriot Act, however invidious their

version of patriotism, do not warrant academics’ or progressives’ repetition of

possibly their biggest mistake of the 1960s and 70s. Their growing disdain for

anything resembling national affirmation, along with their short-sighted discarding

of Robert Bellah’s insights into an ‘American civil’ form of implicit

religion, could well be argued to have eventually cost themselves, their country,

its explicit religious institutions, and even the world, all too dearly.

Renewed consideration of Bellah’s early ideas, expanded by old and new

popular and academic perspectives, suggests Americans’ need for nurturing a

mature civic faith that is surprisingly ‘traditional’ and cutting-edge critical.

The nature, need, and good possibilities of such civic faith are shown
first by

rescuing the discussion from its mis-naming and premature burial, and then by

re-animating it with Catholic perspectives from Andrew Greeley and G. K.

Chesterton, with worldly wisdom from James Baldwin, with theological

insights from postmodern Jewish thinkers, and with enduring discernment from

H. Richard Niebuhr.

Author: Stephen M. Johnson

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