Is the U.S. Capitol a Religious Building?

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  • Опубликовано: 20 сен 2024
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    Co-writers: Andrew Henry, Kimberly Winston, David McConeghy
    Sources:
    Peter Manseau interview: / 778400972762862
    Lauren Kerby interview: religiondispat...

Комментарии • 575

  • @seanpanick6555
    @seanpanick6555 3 года назад +121

    I realized that ACR existed before I had ever heard about the idea. I remember the moment. I was a Memorial Day service at a very nice and large cemetery. There was a large crowd seated facing speakers who were set up on a dais in front of a large, white marble building which helps several crypts. There was a band playing patriotic songs and people sang along. The whole ceremony opened with a prayer and at some point, one of the speakers said that we were there to remember those who had “been sacrificed on the altar of freedom.” At that moment, it suddenly all clicked.

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 3 года назад +6

      It's not just those who die in a war who are "sacrificed on the altar of freedom." We could add those who have to die so that Americans may continue to bear arms. More generally, human sacrifice has been a major part of the culture and religion of the Americas for thousands of years. Like the Incas and Aztecs, Americans also expect their allies to shed their blood and give their lives.

    • @agustinvenegas5238
      @agustinvenegas5238 2 года назад +7

      I've been in less religious church sermons than that event you're describing

  • @MrARock001
    @MrARock001 3 года назад +327

    I didn't realize just how literally America worshipped itself until this video.

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 3 года назад +38

      Americans have been deluding themselves for centuries. Europeans noted in the 18th century that the colonists shouting about their right to be free also slaughtered Indians and kept slaves.

    • @genghiskhan5701
      @genghiskhan5701 3 года назад +38

      @@faithlesshound5621
      Said the very same Europeans who were doing the exact same thing

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 3 года назад +21

      @@genghiskhan5701 Of course! The colonists in America and elsewhere were Europeans too, or their criminal and extremist cousins. But by then Europeans were doing their genocide overseas, since the crusades in Lithuania, Old Prussia and Spain were over. Slavery was obsolete in Western Europe, so English judges had to make up common law exceptions for the African slave trade.

    • @JohnDoe-xc5kn
      @JohnDoe-xc5kn 3 года назад +8

      @@Saint_nobody wat

    • @aos757
      @aos757 3 года назад +7

      As someone that’s not from the US, it’s something I’ve noticed a long time ago
      Very creepy also

  • @megameow321
    @megameow321 3 года назад +195

    Washington and Lincoln on our coins do look a lot like roman imperial coins.

    • @user1138-k5v
      @user1138-k5v 3 года назад +21

      maybe because we’re an empire?

    • @monsieurdorgat6864
      @monsieurdorgat6864 3 года назад +11

      @@user1138-k5v Well, we're approaching it. Empires have emperors. America has a problem with power becoming increasingly centralized to the executive branch, but it's not complete yet and there's still something we can do about it.
      Problem is that Republicans want to increase this centralization and Democrats want to use the centralization that the Repubs set up because congress isn't working due to the Filibuster.

    • @user-fy4qu8rp4z
      @user-fy4qu8rp4z 3 года назад +13

      @@monsieurdorgat6864 I think he's talking about US foreign policy

    • @mustafaamin9516
      @mustafaamin9516 3 года назад +3

      @@user1138-k5v I think it's less because of that, and more because of America's founding being inspired by the Roman Republic

    • @workerworker7961
      @workerworker7961 3 года назад +1

      @@mustafaamin9516 Yea that's right, the Founding Father's were huge fans of classical antiquity

  • @stateoftheart1984
    @stateoftheart1984 3 года назад +55

    This series is some of the most fascinating content on youtube. Thanks for what you do.

    • @ReligionForBreakfast
      @ReligionForBreakfast  3 года назад +24

      Thank you so much. I really appreciate the encouragement!

    • @RachaelMarieNewport
      @RachaelMarieNewport Год назад +1

      ​@@ReligionForBreakfast I was looking for part 5 of this series, took a while lol. Loved the first 4. ❤️

    • @saultorres8125
      @saultorres8125 Год назад

      last episode was the best presentation of why I don't pledge the flag. TY

  • @krinkrin5982
    @krinkrin5982 3 года назад +132

    This makes so much sense. When you look at the past decade of political upheaval, you see stuff that more closely resembles religious sects fighting each other.

    • @TheComedyButchers
      @TheComedyButchers 3 года назад +7

      Erik Hoffer wrote a book on it called “The True Believer” One of the examples he actually used was the Apostle Paul: originally a tenacious butcher turned into a literal Apostle. Religion is replaced by politics often because politics is often a religion. Think about how the Soviets and so many other governments elevates themselves above Gods: they want to become religions

    • @baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714
      @baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 2 года назад +2

      Indeed, their 'arguments' dont make sense they just keep shouting them at each other.

  • @azhadial7396
    @azhadial7396 3 года назад +187

    Mikhail Bakunin (a well-known anarcho-communist, although he did not use the label "communist") asserted in his writing (most notably God and the State) that states required a religion, an element of sacredness in order to legitimise their authority, their elitist institutions and their leaders, including secular states.
    I'm in no way a Bakuninist, but I find the parallel we can make between this idea of civil religion and Bakunin's ideas to be interesting. Maybe he had a point there.

    • @jadegrace1312
      @jadegrace1312 3 года назад +18

      If you use Durkheim's definition of religion, then you could definitely argue all states use religion to legitimize their existence. I would add, though, that this may be one area were Bakunin was heavily influenced by his anti-semitism, as he specifically opposed the concept of states because he thought that Jews controlled them.

    • @sagebias2251
      @sagebias2251 3 года назад +4

      He has it backwards. The American mythology evolved bottom up, not top down.

    • @bard5865
      @bard5865 3 года назад +12

      @@sagebias2251 Thats what they tell you

    • @Xx_BoogieBomber_xX
      @Xx_BoogieBomber_xX 3 года назад +2

      @@sagebias2251 prove it

    • @joecaner
      @joecaner 3 года назад +16

      ​@@sagebias2251 There is definitely bottom up mythologizing happening here, but that's not the exclusive direction. There is a lot of top down myth making. The educational curriculum, founding documents and the imagery of the state commissioned art and architecture are all statements from the top. Even the flag is treated as sacred object with laws prescribing display and ritual handling as a form of veneration. The practice of soldier worship after 911 is another example.
      I believe that it is safe to say that there is a dialogue happening here.

  • @descalzitao6779
    @descalzitao6779 3 года назад +120

    As a non-American viewer, I would love to see a serie of videos on American Civil Religion, as it is a part of American culture that always felt really alien to me

    • @willywonka3050
      @willywonka3050 3 года назад +5

      There are already several videos on this channel on that very topic. I highly recommend those.

    • @CameronK665
      @CameronK665 3 года назад +11

      He already has! ruclips.net/video/x49n90lWi0s/видео.html

    • @rockingthemike
      @rockingthemike 3 года назад +1

      @@CameronK665 thank you, mate! :)

    • @jakeaurod
      @jakeaurod 3 года назад +8

      It feels alien to many Americans too. Aside from the citizens and residents who are specifically excluded by some would-be ministers of an American civil religion, regional differences in history and culture influence how one views the concepts of sacred and sacrilege.

    • @kcvids816
      @kcvids816 3 года назад +1

      10:53

  • @vers9034
    @vers9034 3 года назад +11

    In France it's possible to baptize your children in the townhall.
    It's a "civil baptism" that was originally intended to replace church baptisms (right after the French REvolution, which was also directed against the catholic church).
    Nowadays many towns still practice these "civil baptisms", but not all.

  • @theamazingfuzzlord
    @theamazingfuzzlord 3 года назад +29

    This was so fascinating. Thank you

  • @mage1over137
    @mage1over137 3 года назад +42

    Like bro , this is the saceredest place.

    • @Salsmachev
      @Salsmachev 3 года назад +14

      It's so sacred I'm gonna stand here doing the bare minimum and basically let you defile this thing I supposedly think is sacred!

    • @Salsmachev
      @Salsmachev 3 года назад +8

      @Sanctus Paulus Mostly my point was that, when I think of defending sacred spaces/objects, I think of people risking their lives to defend what they believe in. Saying "This is the most sacred" in a tone not even worthy of scolding a child is a performative contradiction in my books.
      But since you bring it up, sure, let's talk about actions. Let's talk about the fact that the capitol police did almost nothing in the face of a literal storming of the capitol. Let's talk about the fact that cops are happy to choke and shoot people to death for jaywalking, but won't fight to protect "the most sacred place" from fascists. I think this says volumes about whether cops support liberal democracy or fascism. He may have nominally opposed them, but his (lack of) action shows tacit support for the fascists.

    • @randomperson2078
      @randomperson2078 3 года назад +1

      @@Salsmachev
      I’m trying to remember - wasn’t it dozens of civilians who were beaten by these rioters? 17 police officers still are unable to work due to their injuries. We have the infamous video of Daniel Hodges being assaulted there, and also the videos of the police driving them out. If that makes the police on the “side of the rioters” for driving them out, then I would guess the vast majority of the American people are on that side if they supported kicking them out of the Capitol.
      A police officer literally died for the Capitol - was he a fascist, too? The bloodied fascist face of Hodges is somewhat bizarre, too, then.

    • @Salsmachev
      @Salsmachev 3 года назад +2

      @@randomperson2078 The capitol was invaded and the police killed one person? Again, how many people have been killed or severely assaulted for minor infractions, or even nothing at all? The comparison is shocking. I'm pretty sure if I got together my communist, anarchist, syndicalist, Black nationalist, etc. buddies and we went to storm the capitol we would not be treated so well.

    • @randomperson2078
      @randomperson2078 3 года назад +1

      @@Salsmachev
      Wait, are you complaining that more people didn’t die? Or that only about a hundred police officers were injured and just a couple of them died?

  • @politicalmemes1296
    @politicalmemes1296 3 года назад +74

    reminds me of the state patriotic religion in Bioshock infinite

    • @ReligionForBreakfast
      @ReligionForBreakfast  3 года назад +71

      You’re the second person to mention that. I should really check out Bioshock.

    • @dane_with_swag
      @dane_with_swag 3 года назад +13

      @@ReligionForBreakfast would highly recommend it. That series (especially the third one) is a goldmine of philosophy and religious thoughts

    • @dryproblem7988
      @dryproblem7988 3 года назад +17

      @@ReligionForBreakfast GamingForBreakfast channel when?

    • @TaylordSpirit
      @TaylordSpirit 3 года назад +3

      The whole Bioshock line of games is awesome. Loved them all!

    • @bobcharlie2337
      @bobcharlie2337 3 года назад +2

      @@ReligionForBreakfast how about a Let's Play. of Bioshock. It would be really interesting to compare real world religious philosophy with in game RG. From your POV.

  • @JAlanne
    @JAlanne 3 года назад +78

    Very interesting, I wonder a lot about other civil religions. This seems like a very interesting way to look at the world

    • @VincenzoRutiglianoDiaz
      @VincenzoRutiglianoDiaz 3 года назад +11

      Every Latin American country does the same as the USA. Colombia and Venezuela worship Simon Bolivar. Argentina and Perú worship José de San Martín... etc

    • @jcavs9847
      @jcavs9847 3 года назад +9

      @@VincenzoRutiglianoDiaz In brazil its different. There's one "leader" that I would say is very liked, emperor dom Pedro II. But even then, it's not like people care much about him and what he represents (empire, royalty and to some degree the catholic church) is pretty much opposite to the secular republic we've been trying to create (with bumps along the way) since 1889. In fact, the first president is pretty much regarded as having been bad overall. I feel like we don't have a "civic religion" in brazil but I coulb be wrong

    • @vers9034
      @vers9034 3 года назад +3

      In France, Marianne replaced the virgin Mary.

    • @heterian97
      @heterian97 3 года назад +3

      Here in Ecuador (South America) we have 2 main poloitical personages that come to mind, and each is venerated by their respective political aligned parties. Eloy Alfaro by the liberals, who was practically ¨martyred¨ by the conservatives in a very romantic way, he was shot, stabbed with machetes and then his corpse was tied to a horse and dragged around the Palace of Carondelet (The Ecuadorian equivalent of the White House). And then Gabriel Garcia Moreno, also ¨Martyred¨ but by the liberals, he was shot right outside of Carondelet and also stabbed, his dying words being ¨God never dies¨, making reference to his trumped effort to turn Catholicism and Christian values into a cornerstone of Ecuadorian culture and government, some Catholic conservatives even refer to him as St. Gabriel Garcia Moreno.

    • @impeachthestate
      @impeachthestate 3 года назад +1

      Check out the book the most dangerous superstition by larken rose.

  • @andreagillo768
    @andreagillo768 3 года назад +99

    Never knew about the “Apotheosis of Washington” fresco in DC, thats not something they teach in school, (and never been) but I have seen the Duomo in the Vatican, weird how theres ‘separation of church and state’ written in the official documents, but the architecture and behavior is very contrary, almost making a religion for the state. Thank you for making this!

    • @webbess1
      @webbess1 3 года назад

      He's already done a video on the American civic religion.

    • @bigscarysteve
      @bigscarysteve 3 года назад +11

      Actually, "separation of church and state" is not written in the official documents. "No establishment of religion" is what's in the official documents. They're not the same thing. And just because you weren't taught about the Apotheosis of Washington, don't assume that's something that was never taught in school.

    • @evan-moore22
      @evan-moore22 3 года назад +3

      I learned about it in school. Same with the statue of Washington as Zeus.

    • @fifthcolumn388
      @fifthcolumn388 3 года назад +8

      @@bigscarysteve exactly, and this means that there can be no “Church of America” or any official sect of religion in the US recognized under law. Laws can be inspired by religion in a broad sense, even explicitly inspired by religion, as long as it doesn’t respect or attack any specific religious organizations or ‘establishments’. The founders were fearing the US would develop a Church of America as the British had developed a Church of England, and in Britain this caused serious civil strife as that church persecuted other sects. As a result, they made that impossible.

    • @Reubentheimitator6572
      @Reubentheimitator6572 3 года назад

      @@fifthcolumn388 Thanks for making this comment!

  • @justincheng5241
    @justincheng5241 3 года назад +17

    I am interested in a comparative video between American civil religion and the imperial cult of ancient Rome, particularly the claim I once heard was that the ancient Romans did not "really believe that" their emperors were literally divine, but that it was simply a form of civic patriotism and duty.

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 3 года назад +3

      Roman Catholics recognise three levels of worship. "Dulia" or veneration is given to the saints. "Hyperdulia" is given to the Virgin Mary. "Latreia" is reserved for the three gods of the Trinity.
      Modern Americans have a low level veneration for the live rich and powerful, and something greater for the dead rich and and powerful, including titans of crime. Presidents are regarded with the awe they used to expect American Indians to show for the "Great White Father." Dead presidents are practically canonised.
      The US generally does not have the road-side shrines or temples seen in some other countries, but it has a superfluity of flags, which serve a similar purpose. The "hand on heart" thing invented during WWII looks awfully like Catholics crossing themselves.

  • @ReligionForBreakfast
    @ReligionForBreakfast  3 года назад +25

    Support RFB on Patreon!: www.patreon.com/religionforbreakfast

  • @nebulan
    @nebulan 3 года назад +23

    Sounds a bit like being elected gives you the divine right of kings

    • @santiagogryphon3009
      @santiagogryphon3009 3 года назад +3

      The authority granted by the will of the people made in the image of the divine.

    • @apassagebeyond108
      @apassagebeyond108 3 года назад +5

      They think so.

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 3 года назад +3

      These things overlap. Coronations sometimes have an element of the people acclaiming the king, as if their will or at least consent was required, and not just their submission.
      The Catholic church is a very top-down institution, with appointments being made by someone at a higher level, but they retain a pretence that bishops are elected, but that's only after the canons are sent a licence to elect one particular priest. Some kings used to take over that power, by agreement with the Holy See.
      The Church of England is like that: the Prime Minister sends the Queen a list of three candidates, she uses a bodkin to prick a hole beside the top name, and that name is sent to the canons of the cathedral to elect as their bishop.
      There remains a feeling that the divine will requires an election. Maybe this has transferred from an earlier practice of drawing lots, allowing the decision to be made by "chance."
      Even dictators like Lukashenko and Saddam Hussein felt the need for the ritual of elections where they got 99% of the votes.

  • @stevenv6463
    @stevenv6463 3 года назад +45

    And the barbarians desecrated the highest place, the holy of holies so one brave American said "This is, like, THE sacredest place."

    • @Quetsalcoatvl
      @Quetsalcoatvl 3 года назад +9

      ~ The Gospel of James of Virginia 13:18

    • @fuzzlenutberry
      @fuzzlenutberry 3 года назад +1

      Same thing happened to Rome when they got too full of themselves, history always repeats itself.

    • @cgt3704
      @cgt3704 3 года назад +1

      The stars are lining, people. Say goodbye to US while you still can.

    • @huntercomerra2870
      @huntercomerra2870 2 года назад

      @@cgt3704 you’re so quick to wish for doom , but slow to learning how to spell.
      * aligning *

  • @goclbert
    @goclbert 3 года назад +18

    Yesss. I commented on your last video about American Civil Religion hoping for you to cover this.
    9:10 The comparison to Jesus at the Temple is golden

  • @pennyforyourthots
    @pennyforyourthots 3 года назад +104

    I would argue that, even if not quite a 1:1 match to the definition of religion, American Civil piety has very much influenced our own American brand of religion, more specifically Protestant Christianity.
    I would argue that many of the values of American exceptionalism, the way we've tied neoliberal capitalism to many of the moral beliefs in America, be very individualistic and personal relationships that many Protestant Christians hold with God, etc are all influenced by the pseudo-religious American Civil piety. While in general, American might not see these places as literally sacred, some Americanized brands of Christianity might oh, they might view American exceptionalism through the lens of a god-ordained spread of American values, etc.
    Even if America doesn't really have a civil religion, I would argue that its civil religion is very much influenced by Christianity, which is in turn influenced by that Christianity. It's kind of this feedback loop of ever-increasing religiosity between the two, and the concepts of America, whatever that may be defined as during the time, and religion get tied ever closer. I would argue that the great Awakenings in the United States are largely responsible for this, and the modern variant of this came with the evangelicals of the 80s, which I think especially heavily pushed the two into an intrinsically tied Concept in the minds of many American religious people.
    Edit: also, a few people in the comments have reminded me of this, but another symptom of American Civil religion is the amount of religion based conspiracy theories guys from America. Many parallels to the Roman Empire and their treatment of Christians (you see this basically every Christmas with the "war on Christmas" rhetoric), many doomsday prophecies where people take historical and current events and parallel them to Doomsday prophecies from various religions, people comparing politicians to the Antichrist, or literally claiming that they are, etc.
    At least to some, the United States is an aspect of their religious belief.

    • @RhizometricReality
      @RhizometricReality 3 года назад +6

      Fall again Rome

    • @SeriousCupOfTea
      @SeriousCupOfTea 3 года назад +5

      As a non-American my impression of America's version of secularism in public sounds awfully like a differently-interpreted form of Calvinist Protestantism.

    • @WreckageHunter
      @WreckageHunter 3 года назад +3

      You, sir, had an abnourmous point.
      No surprise neopentecostal churches worldwide are exporting american civil piety and do spread a sense of millenarist subserviance to the US. Evangelicalism truly became the cultural sucessor of cold war's american imperialism, since it stems from US' civil piety

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 3 года назад +3

      I have noticed that a lot of right wing politicians (around the world, but especially in the US) seem to have raised their economic doctrines to the level of tenets of religion: almost as if Adam Smith had written a gospel. It's also notable that bankers lecture the laity on "moral hazard." Economists should wear their collars backwards.
      On the internet, I note that a lot of Americans of a religious bent regard the US constitution with the same reverence as they do the Old and New Testaments. Do they think King James brought all three down from the mountain? Some write as if it applies to the rest of the world, like "sovereign citizens" imagine the Uniform Commercial Code does.

    • @mindseyemelodies
      @mindseyemelodies 3 года назад +2

      @@RhizometricReality Lets not forget Mormonism, an actual American religion, with actual holy ground in the U.S.

  • @EUSA1776
    @EUSA1776 3 года назад +42

    “The state? What is that? Well then, open your ears to me, for now I shall speak to you about the death of peoples. ‘State’ is the name of the coldest of all cold monsters. Coldly it tells lies too; and this lie crawls out of its mouth: “I, the State, am the People.”
    That is a lie! Creators were they who created peoples, and hung a faith and a love over them: thus they served life. Destroyers are they who lay snares for many, and call it the State.”
    - Frederich Nietzsche
    (from Thus Spoke Zarathustra)

  • @NMemone
    @NMemone Год назад +3

    I cannot get over that "Apotheosis of Washington" fresco! That is without question the epitome of religiously inspired classical American political art and I can't believe I've never seen it before! And of course, as a ☦️, now I really really want to see a Byzantine version 😄

  • @hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156
    @hugodesrosiers-plaisance3156 3 года назад +5

    Superb material. Things like that need to be discussed academically.

  • @LangThoughts
    @LangThoughts 3 года назад +26

    Taking Bellah's ideas in mind, would he analyze MLK's I Have a Dream speech's references to G-d and the Bible not just as MLK's Christian clergyhood seeping through, but as MLK acting as a so-to-speak "Priest" of American Civil Religion on behalf of African-Americans?

    • @pennyforyourthots
      @pennyforyourthots 3 года назад +7

      Perhaps. I would argue that the American Civil religions view of "god-ordained Rights of man" not being extended to African Americans of the time could be interpreted as MLK being a priest of sorts who is espousing the doctrine of said civil religion.
      Regardless of American Civil religion being accurately defined as such, I would argue that American Civil religion has had a very heavy influence on American brands of Christianity, and the reverse is well, American Christianity heavily influencing American Civil religion. The two I would argue are tied together in some places, which makes it very hard to distinguish the two at times.

    • @LangThoughts
      @LangThoughts 3 года назад +7

      @@pennyforyourthots Actually, given that there is a monument dedicated to him in Washington, DC, and the fact that besides Washington and Lincoln (Presidents' Day), MLK is the only American historical figure to have a holiday, he may be a "prophet" of AC.

    • @BIONICLECLAYPOKEMON
      @BIONICLECLAYPOKEMON 3 года назад +5

      @@paradisecityX0 ... Haha, no.

    • @jakeaurod
      @jakeaurod 3 года назад +1

      The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. literally was a Minister/Pastor.

    • @LangThoughts
      @LangThoughts 3 года назад +4

      @@jakeaurod I literally said that in addition to being a Baptist Minister, MLK, according to Bellah, was also a "prophet" of ACR.

  • @sethapex9670
    @sethapex9670 3 года назад +9

    People generally cannot easily separate temporal power from spiritual power in their minds, particularly when the temporal power tries to justify itself by reference to divinely mandated rights, therefore when you try to separate church and state, you simply end up deifying the state and it's varying apparatus.

    • @Adam-nc6qg
      @Adam-nc6qg Год назад +1

      Nicely put, you can't completely take religious preconceptions from human mind no matter how much you try.

    • @sethapex9670
      @sethapex9670 Год назад +1

      @@Adam-nc6qg man has a God shaped-hole in his heart that, if he doesn't know God, he will attempt and fail to fill it with anything.

  • @BobHutton
    @BobHutton 3 года назад +7

    Here in Melbourne (Oz), if anyone talks about "hallowed ground", the first thing that comes to mind is a sporting arena, namely the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG).

    • @jymbo1969
      @jymbo1969 3 года назад +1

      Well, for us Melbournians at any rate, the G is sacred.

    • @hentaihero2201
      @hentaihero2201 3 года назад +1

      lol. People really do treat sports like a religion.

  • @potatomahonman5008
    @potatomahonman5008 3 года назад +2

    It’s actually no surprise that a distinctly American religion like Mormonism would come into existence, when you consider this

  • @RikkiJVelez
    @RikkiJVelez 3 года назад +19

    The idea of civil religion is kinda cringe. I always get weirded out when people refer to government buildings as “sacred/hallow ground” or the founding fathers as prophets or saints. Like I get being patriotic and taking pride in your country but taking it to religious extremes is downright cultish. It’s bad enough when it happens in actual religions like Christianity or Islam but at that makes sense when it talking divine forces beyond human comprehension. But when talking about a bunch of fallible men who died 200+ years ago and some man made buildings as if they’re divine is just weird af. It’s like in fascist dictatorships where the leader is worshipped like a god. So gross.

    • @alankent
      @alankent 3 года назад +1

      Amen!

    • @islandplace7235
      @islandplace7235 3 года назад +5

      Nothing can survive without reverence. All governments would fall if this type of thing wasn't around.

    • @RikkiJVelez
      @RikkiJVelez 3 года назад +4

      @@islandplace7235 Yikes. Tell me you support cultish brainwashing without telling me you support cultish brainwashing.

    • @instanttregret
      @instanttregret 3 года назад +1

      I feel like its indicative of human nature to fall into religious-like sociopolitical systems

    • @RikkiJVelez
      @RikkiJVelez 3 года назад +3

      @@instanttregret That is both sad and not surprising.

  • @jajlertil
    @jajlertil 3 года назад +6

    High quality content! Looking forward to more videos about religious behaviour in the modern world

  • @QuiteWellAdjusted
    @QuiteWellAdjusted 2 года назад +2

    As an American I def feel that there are people who worship the idea of America here, but I also think there's always sacredness baked into every kind of government. In a way, there has to be some thing or set of things that are untouchable. Some Constitution or foundation or institution or individual person who represents the long-term authority and legality of the system

  • @wubcarp3319
    @wubcarp3319 3 года назад +4

    I'd be particularly interested in a video on Science/Academia and religion; specifically how academic figures have replaced religious ones in the realms of healing (doctors replacing priests and holy-men) and prophecy (meteorologists predicting the weather; think-tanks evaluating and drafting policy; climatologists predicting world-ending events only to be ignored by those in power).
    I feel like of I saw this in an ancient society, the narrative is draw out is that at some point (probably around the time of the enlightenment), the state religion split in two, with what today we call the church taking up spiritual, ritual and communal power, whilst academic interoffice institutions took up temporal, physical, and civic power.

  • @danielkaster2648
    @danielkaster2648 3 года назад +5

    The lady talking about "the evil of Congress" is technically not wrong

  • @StudeSteve62
    @StudeSteve62 3 года назад +4

    Interesting timing. Today is Canada Day, and I just arrived home from visiting a small Indigenous festival in a city park, in the context of the recent discoveries of mass burials at residential school sites. Ground can be hallowed for many very wrong reasons...

    • @firstlast5454
      @firstlast5454 3 года назад +1

      @Catsquatch over 1,500 children

    • @TalgarSunPraiser
      @TalgarSunPraiser 3 года назад

      @@firstlast5454 no bodies found, just speculation.

    • @firstlast5454
      @firstlast5454 3 года назад +1

      @@TalgarSunPraiser Oh boy. Yes they are. Please do a quick Google search. My initial number may be a high estimate, but the confirmed found bodies are in the hundreds

  • @republiccooper
    @republiccooper 3 года назад +10

    Could you do an episode on Freemasonry? I wonder of from an academic perspective, it would qualify as a religion.

    • @haydencapps
      @haydencapps 3 года назад +3

      Its absolutely a religion..that is exactly the civil religion he is falsely calling the american civil religion. George washington laying the founding stone was done as a freemason ceremony, dressed in the freemason ceremonial garb which was done for centuries before

    • @republiccooper
      @republiccooper 3 года назад

      @@haydencapps Why do Freemasons insist Freemasonry is not a religion? What arguments are there to say it is not a religion?

    • @haydencapps
      @haydencapps 3 года назад +3

      @@republiccooper this is done because freemasonry is a secret religion that functions on deception and the keeping of secret knowledge that gives them power over the common people. This "secret knowledge" is basically whatever you learn from abandonning all pretense of morals, creating a "will-to-power" world that you exist in above the rest which live in a world controlled by morals and laws. This is also done because most freemasons would not be a part of or support the group if they saw it as its own religion, especially the many that belong to other religions. You learn more about the truth of the group as you ascend the degrees masonry and if you hold to your morals and religion as you go through the various rituals to enter the next degree, then you will be made to believe that you had advanced, but will not be let in any further on the secret purposes of the group. You can learn all of this from top freemasons own public writings such as Albert Pike, considered the top freemason to have ever lived. There are many videos explaining what is involved on youtube. One that i like is on the channel Based Spaceman and if you go back a numbrr of months, hw has posted a few documenatries qbout freemasonry reposted under names like the widow's sun, if you want to learn more quickly.

    • @republiccooper
      @republiccooper 3 года назад

      @@haydencapps thanks!

  • @bpouelas
    @bpouelas 3 года назад +1

    Been waiting for this video! Wrote my undergrad capstone on this last semester! Using the ‘sacred’ and the ‘profane’ as justifications and rationalizations on behalf of the protestors and lawmakers.

  • @guthrie_the_wizard
    @guthrie_the_wizard 3 года назад +5

    Super interesting analysis.
    My daily plug: We direly need to teach rational skepticism in all high schools as a required course. And financial literacy also.

    • @moodist1er
      @moodist1er 2 года назад

      Financial literacy. Lol there's no such thing. If they started teaching something like that then the facade of our economic system would collapse because it's as corrupt as feudalism. The corporate model taught in schools is feudalism.

  • @Lord-Stanhope
    @Lord-Stanhope 3 года назад +9

    It's getting to a point where either everything is sacred or nothing is and at this junction I would rather err on the side of nothing being sacred. Their are certain things just don't deserve to be Sacred, and Government is the prime example.

    • @ethandarcy5940
      @ethandarcy5940 3 года назад +3

      Aw, relax. If you are a good American raised on Star Wars, rock / hip hop, LoTR, rebellion is even more sacred.

    • @Lord-Stanhope
      @Lord-Stanhope 3 года назад +1

      @@ethandarcy5940 100%

  • @BlakeBarrett
    @BlakeBarrett 3 года назад +9

    My wife and I were just discussing this when we saw this video.
    We came to the conclusion that the US is a DEEPLY religious nation, but that the "God" we worship is Mammon; that makes all of the "In God we trust" rhetoric make sense.
    It also explains why "Building Back" the US economy has been the highest priority to lawmakers, during a time when hundreds of thousands of human lives have been lost.

    • @Reubentheimitator6572
      @Reubentheimitator6572 3 года назад +3

      Opinion: If 'Building Back' the U.S. economy has been the highest priority to lawmakers, then those lawmakers have failed to fulfill that priority.

    • @bdchatfi
      @bdchatfi 3 года назад +1

      Our motto is "In God We Trust" It never says which god. In my opinion there is no such thing as secularism. There are only different religious beliefs, actions, rituals, and aimes.

    • @OspreyKnight
      @OspreyKnight 3 года назад

      Well, saving the economy is going to prevent starvation, economic instability, crime, and in general save life.
      Those who have been rich their entire life, like nearly all Americans, have never encountered the deadliness of poverty and do not fear it sufficiently. I went to Afghanistan in 2014 and for 13 years I had been hearing about all the good things we were doing for their society and equality. Reality is that they were worried about feeding themselves that day, they had bigger problems than making sure their daughter went to school. The majority of the "fighters" were people being paid to plant bombs, because it was worth it to risk getting bombed into oblivion by the most technologically advanced and lethal military in the world because they were literally dead without the money.
      Afghanistan is one of the most extreme examples so I'll bring it closer to home.
      Two weeks ago I was the first one to stop at a car crash. A man had fallen asleep on I-70 40 miles from the nearest town in some of the most remote places in Utah. He had crashed directly into the back of a semi that had slowed down while going up hill. He was pinned by his steering wheel and we had to wait an hour for an extraction team. I have some medical training and a nurse came on the scene later. As we were talking to him and trying to comfort him he started showing signs of a collapsed lung, a fatal condition that can easily be remedied with a decompression needle. We were so glad when the sheriff arrived, 30 minutes after the crash. We told him we needed a decompression needle, something I as a soldier had been trained in basic training and regularly recertified in because it's stupid simple to use. The sheriff informed me that the county had taken the needles out of their trauma kits because they couldn't afford to be recertified.
      No biggie, next was a highway patrol... they had taken the needles out of his kit too..... and then the ambulance.... had also had their needles taken out, and so had the firefighters.
      A collapsed lung is a very painful way to die, and it can take an hour or so. They had asked us to clear out to allow life flight to land, so I don't know if the life flight had a needle. But I know if they didn't that man likely suffocated before reaching the hospital.
      -Find the clavicle, count 3 ribs down, put the 14 gauge needle on top of the fourth rib and slide needle in over the top of that rib following the curve of the rib into the chest cavity. Avoid striking the nerve under the ribs. You may or may not hear air release, however the patient should feel relief immediately. -
      This simple training the state simply didn't have the budget for. Literally 12 people knew how to do it, but everyone that should have had the needle had them taken away because the state couldn't afford to keep them certified. My 1st aid kit now includes decompression needles because I never want to be in that situation again, especially if it's my life on the line; because I can no longer trust the budget office of the government to give EMS and law enforcement the tools essential to preserving life.
      You paying your taxes saves lives. You voting for people who spend money wisely saves lives. Money saves lives.
      -----------------
      Do I think we utterly failed as a country during the pandemic? Yes, but it wasn't the people who were worried about having jobs and businesses. It's the politicians who couldn't give clear decisive, and moderate action, then made the problem worse with polarized finger-pointing. This is what caused us as a nation to fail. Slamming the breaks on the economy, blowing out trillions of dollars, will likely cause more death and suffering in the coming decades than had we done nothing at all.
      I'm not calling for us to have done nothing, that was also a very bad option, but instead I use Taiwan and an exemplar of what we should have done. Despite being one of the first countries effected due to their close, if not rocky, relationship with the People Republic of China. Their cases remained extraordinarily low up until they began opening up their borders. Prior to May 12 of this year their cases were in the low thousands, with a dozen deaths..
      Taiwan's current Total cases 14,005 Recovered 1,133 Deaths 549. Taiwan's population is 23.5 million
      Utah on the other hand Total Cases 416K Deaths 2,378. Utah's population 3.2 million And frankly we aren't as population dense as Taiwan, just stupid and don't like being told to wear masks. Especially when it irrationally became a Left "DO WHAT WE SAY OR WE"LL ALL DIE" and a Right "LIBS ARE TAKING AWAY MUH FREEDOMS AGAIN" debate.
      precise

  • @notheretoargue2885
    @notheretoargue2885 3 года назад +8

    I've never clicked so fast in my life (also Hi ReligionForBreakfast :))

  • @jacobmartens3810
    @jacobmartens3810 3 года назад +2

    As a person who lives in Japan, it is frankly laughable to, in the same breath compare Shinto and American Civil Religion and then say that calling American rituals religion would stretch the definition too far. Americans worship their country to a far greater degree than the average Japanese person buys into Shinto.
    Even when I studied State Shinto in university, the thing it reminded me most of was .... American Civil Religion.

    • @ReligionForBreakfast
      @ReligionForBreakfast  3 года назад +3

      I stand by that. Shinto has priesthoods, mythology, countless kami and shrines. In what meaningful way does ACR mirror those? I’d say Shinto falls under the category “religion” far more easily than ACR. But yes, I agree State Shinto and ACR have similarities.

    • @jacobmartens3810
      @jacobmartens3810 3 года назад +1

      @@ReligionForBreakfast Nobody is saying that Shinto isn't a religion. I'm saying that you picked a very similar religion to compare American Civil Religion too and then go on to say that American Civil Religion isn't a religion.
      America has mythology, and many of the rituals of American Civil Religion are heavily syncretized with Christianity. Unless one actually buys into the idea of "ceremonial deism" it's pretty hard to argue that putting refferences to god into the pledge and on the money aren't religious.

    • @slome815
      @slome815 3 года назад +1

      @@ReligionForBreakfast
      From the way americans speak about their constitution, flag and founding fathers, as well as the pledge of allegiance in american schools, I do have the impression that most americans really have a more religious believe in "american civil religion" then most modern shinoist have in their own religion.
      From what I've seen they believe in it like modern pagans believe in their gods, Kami and pagan gods are cool and all, but most people who practice those religions don't really believe in them. Shinto festivals or more for tradition and fun then any real belief in it nowadays. More like folklore festivals then religion.

  • @Rydonittelo
    @Rydonittelo 3 года назад +1

    I find your videos really informative. They are the perfect balance between being religious and being secular. I'm a Christian myself from Scotland and always enjoy your work 👍🏻

  • @riley02192012
    @riley02192012 2 года назад

    I like that you don't shy away from controversial or hot button topics. It makes me proud to support you on Patron.

  • @blueridding
    @blueridding 3 года назад +2

    This was SO good. It is the most eye opening look at the capitol riot I’ve seen so far

  • @RobinBanks419
    @RobinBanks419 3 года назад +1

    The most incredibly interesting thing about this channel and this series is that, you can get into the headspace pretty easily that "religion is a thing that happens to other people." When really it's so much more a part of the world than we or at least I could imagine

  • @morgangallowglass8668
    @morgangallowglass8668 3 года назад +7

    So much for our govt. NOT establishing a religion. Govt. AS religion is about as bad an idea as one can come up with.

  • @woodmanvictory
    @woodmanvictory 3 года назад +3

    Great video, you in an intelligent way to discuss Jan 6 without it feeling blindly partisan.

  • @avryptickle
    @avryptickle 3 года назад +1

    This is a really great episode. I mean, they’re always good, but this is exceptional.

  • @Green-tf8uw
    @Green-tf8uw 3 года назад +5

    Americanism overexposure. I'm going to lay down for a bit

  • @thispodcastisnotimportant6667
    @thispodcastisnotimportant6667 3 года назад +3

    I disagree. American Democracy is just as much a religion as Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, or any other religion. Its a religion. These buildings are basically places of worship especially at this point.

    • @mathewfinch
      @mathewfinch 3 года назад

      @Macon Love yeah, it's much better that 49 people should be able to violate the rights of 51 people.

  • @MisterItchy
    @MisterItchy 3 года назад +3

    I think we would be well-served to add a definition for the word 'sacred' if we are going to use it like that.

  • @cbpsd
    @cbpsd 3 года назад +3

    We the people behave strange and sometimes delusional

  • @Ricca_Day
    @Ricca_Day 3 года назад +1

    Idk about the Stateism and worship thereof.. but I do know that when I was in Washington with my eldest son, on his 6th grade field trip in 1999.. prior to the events that have led to our current political debacles, while we were inside the halls of Congress.. it actually felt sacred.
    Sadly, the hypocrisy of the political establishment has stripped the dignity from my heart and left me longing for folks whose true intentions and interests are.. " For the People ", rather than their own 'legacies' and individual investments.
    Perhaps it was never more than this.. but I'd like to believe it began with sincere souls.. albeit imperfect individuals.
    If politics weren't such a fierce foe.. folks might actually find that our futures must be shared, to not end up despaired.

    • @Ricca_Day
      @Ricca_Day 3 года назад

      Abel Marin
      Thanks 🙏 angel.
      But it's ok. It was written as in hopes that the Grace that hears us all, is really the only Audience to reach, so that Providence recalls our own Faithfulness from time to time.
      Blessings 🤗

  • @faithlesshound5621
    @faithlesshound5621 3 года назад +1

    Don't forget monuments like Mount Rushmore (and its antithesis at Stone Mountain) which take hubris to the level of Ozymandias.

  • @rogermetzger7335
    @rogermetzger7335 3 года назад +1

    As with many other questions, the answer depends on how certain words are defined or understood. Here’s my preferred definition of “religion”: Religion is the sum of those beliefs, practices and prohibitions that pertain to a person’s concept of the highest powers of the universe.
    Some people have postulated that three are three “estates” in most societies and that priests or/and other clergy (the first estate) predated the concept of royalty (the second estate). That leaves everybody else to comprise the third estate.
    The U.S. capitol building was constructed as a monument to the third estate - i.e. the idea that we the people (who are neither clergy nor royalty) need neither clergy nor royalty to tell us what to believe or what to do.
    The idea that created the great American experiment has, in the opinion of some, been nearly eclipsed by a philosophy I can illustrate by reference to something that happened some years ago (and in another state than where my wife and I now live).
    Upon hearing about a particular bill being introduced in the house of representatives of the state legislature, I put on a suit and went to the capitol building in the hope of finding the person who ostensibly represented our district. When I attempted to engage her on the subject of whether the proposed legislation was needed or desirable, her response was “How are the people going to know what is right and wrong if we don’t tell them?”
    My best guess is that the aforementioned legislator saw herself only as a priest - not as the high priest - of this new religion but, to the extent that legislative fiat has replaced special revelation from a supernatural God or gods, capitol buildings in general and the U.S. capitol building in particular have become religious buildings.
    I receive “newsletters” from legislators. All of them brag about what they have done and what they are trying to do. With very few exceptions, everything they brag about is inimical to the ideal that created the United States. What we need is a groundswell of articulation of the idea that we don’t need priests or monarchs to tell us what to believe and what to do - not even if those priests profess to promote a “secular” religion.
    For sure I don’t want taxpayers’ money to be employed for the purpose of promoting religious beliefs (not even mine)! For sure I don’t want religious practices or religious prohibitions to be required or enforced by ANY branch of civil government! But when I try to discuss these needs with my friends, almost all of them would rather extol one political ideology or another than to try to engage in actual problem-solving. (Yes, I have friends in both of the major political parties of the day.) May God help us!

    • @ANDROLOMA
      @ANDROLOMA 3 года назад

      God is a concept by which we measure our pain.
      -John Lennon

  • @jmiller1918
    @jmiller1918 3 года назад +1

    The confusion between US Gov and "religion" is understandable since politicians have been appropriating religious language for many years to dignify- and perhaps obfuscate- their activities.
    Also- prayers are commonly heard before sports events. Does that make the game that follows a religious pageant?

  • @AngorRandford
    @AngorRandford 3 года назад

    Thoroughly covered for this episode, clear and concise. Thank you!!

  • @vitor262
    @vitor262 3 года назад

    Omg I love your videos. This is such a good way to look at the American State and culture. It blows my mind

  • @vers9034
    @vers9034 3 года назад +5

    @ReligionForBreakfast
    I'd like to go deeper, and see a discussion of whether a secular republic is truly possible.
    I truly don't really know what to think of that.
    Does the exercise of government and the endorsement of a constitution and bill of rights necessarily preempt some normative space that might otherwise be captured by religion?
    OR can a republic endorse its own values yet remain neutral relative to all and any religion (or at least any "non-extreme" religion, whatever that means)?

    • @sonicluffypucca96
      @sonicluffypucca96 3 года назад

      If you've read any of the Federalist papers or the essays of the Founding Fathers, then you would know they explicitly invoked "God" and "morality" to be cornerstones in how America was to be governed. However the context is not so much about the biblical conception of God but rather idea of God as conveyed in 18th century Deism

    • @sonicluffypucca96
      @sonicluffypucca96 3 года назад

      Here's a question to be good for thought: If secularism is supposed to be the "lack of ideological or religious" belief, at what point does that secularism start becoming a pseudo ideology/religion of sorts as well? Do we need common values in order to be a self governing republic or do we act in the "let's leave each other alone" type faith and live to see the rise of and ideology that is completely alien from anything that preceded it?

    • @vers9034
      @vers9034 3 года назад

      @@sonicluffypucca96 I do believe that any state and any government requires a set of common values. It seems pretty obvious.
      But in some explicitly secular countries (there aren't that many of those), some claim that then contrary values (usually resulting from immigration) are being discriminated against.
      In a non-secular country, you could say something like "tough luck".
      Also are those contrary values really religuous values - highly debatable, but that's not really the point here.
      In a country that proclaims to be neutral in regards to religion, is this truly possible on a fundamental level?
      No if you say that all values are somehow "religious" in nature.
      Yes probably if values are not necessarily religious in nature.
      I think the question merits deeper investigation.

  • @infinitumneo840
    @infinitumneo840 3 года назад +1

    This is a great topic, and there's a lot of free masonic history to support the temple concept. In fact, capital hill is full of ancient symbolism dating back to ancient Egypt.

  • @jessewilley531
    @jessewilley531 3 года назад +6

    Mount Rushmore MIGHT not have been the best choice of words there... since the mountain is in and of itself a desecration of an actual holy site to some religions.
    Really, the only good thing you can say about Mount Rushmore is that the bison burgers in the cafeteria are pretty good.

  • @musicalintentions
    @musicalintentions 3 года назад

    Fascinating subject. Thank you for sharing this with us.

  • @bobcharlie2337
    @bobcharlie2337 3 года назад +1

    I practice my American religion at the voting polls. Once a yr. locally, and once every two yrs state and federal. I encourage every person who is eligible to vote to do it too. :) And for funzies I heckle the snot out of the politicians that I vote against. It's a tradition.

  • @joed1950
    @joed1950 3 года назад

    My mother did not vote for Kennedy. You see, he was Catholic and the Pope would be able to tell Kennedy how to run the country. Religion does play a huge part in the country.
    That's a huge part of why the country is so the way it is.

  • @ShenanigansGeek
    @ShenanigansGeek 3 года назад +3

    I am a Christian, and a fairly politically conservative one, and I really appreciate your content. You do a really good job of being objective, even when I disagree personally. You do a good job providing educational and intriguing content. While I think the idea of the capital, flag, or any governmental symbol being sacred is goofy, I appreciate your analysis of people on both sides who really believe this. It really is fascinating to watch both sides view our nation as something sacred. Reminds me of Rome. Anyways, thank you for continuing to put out awesome content!

    • @ReligionForBreakfast
      @ReligionForBreakfast  3 года назад +2

      Thank you so much for your thoughtful comment. I appreciate it!

  • @alanhilder1883
    @alanhilder1883 3 года назад

    The video being ruled " Not suitable for ads " mean they will still run ads, will still charge for those ads but will not pay anything to the creator of the video.

  • @miguelfernandodelmoral2641
    @miguelfernandodelmoral2641 3 года назад +1

    You should make one on how wokeism is a secular religious movement

  • @AaronSherman
    @AaronSherman 3 года назад

    An off-topic question that I hope you'll tackle at some point: Berger's interpretation of the "sacred" is something that I struggle to get my head fully around, yet it's fundamental to a modern understanding of religion. If you could go into this, I think it would help bridge the gap between the colloquial and academic understanding of religion...

    • @ReligionForBreakfast
      @ReligionForBreakfast  3 года назад +2

      Thanks for the suggestion Aaron. I really think a video on Berger is necessary too. I'll see what i can do.

  • @sms17762000
    @sms17762000 3 года назад +3

    If the capital is a religious building that is a direct repudiation of the first amendment.

    • @hackman669
      @hackman669 3 года назад

      No religious, historic!!!

  • @islandplace7235
    @islandplace7235 3 года назад +3

    Hellenism? Ancient and modern? Would be a very interesting video

  • @SFGJP
    @SFGJP 3 года назад

    Excellent, thought provoking topic. Thanks for the video!

  • @holyfreak8
    @holyfreak8 3 года назад

    The romans had this but as an actual religion, the goddess "Concordia" for example was revered as a symbol of the peace between patricians and plebes. The Tribunes of the Plebe were declared "sacred" in a religiuos ceremony as a mean for legal and physical inmunity. These are just a few examples, many emperors were declared gods by the senate after the died as a mean of public recognition.

  • @raysandrarexxia941
    @raysandrarexxia941 3 года назад +1

    People celebrate this country religiously

  • @MoralGovernment
    @MoralGovernment 2 года назад

    And when Democrats do things like kneeling while wearing African scarves in the capital building, talk about not liking the flag, kneeling during the national anthem, and speak badly about Americanism and the founding father, Republicans take it as heresy and sacrilege.

  • @I_am_Irisarc
    @I_am_Irisarc 3 года назад +3

    I love the UncleSam/Sistine Chapel God graphic 🤣

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 3 года назад

      I saw a similar ceiling painting in a grand villa by Lake Como which once belonged to the Bonaparte family. It showed Napoleon ascending into heaven on a cloud to meet the angels. It may have been a contemporary of the apotheosis of George Washington.
      No doubt we will see something similar for Donald Trump, if his golden statue is any indicator.

  • @GameTimeWhy
    @GameTimeWhy 3 года назад +3

    "The myth of election fraud" rip comment section.

    • @GameTimeWhy
      @GameTimeWhy 3 года назад

      @ it's a little toxic. Not the worst but certainly ruffled some feathers.

    • @RaulEndymionOfHyperion
      @RaulEndymionOfHyperion 3 года назад

      It's surprisingly tame. Nice to see people engaging with the analysis rather than some possibly controversial wording.

    • @GameTimeWhy
      @GameTimeWhy 3 года назад

      @@RaulEndymionOfHyperion yeah there are a few toxic threads but really not that bad overall.

  • @anthonyjames4319
    @anthonyjames4319 3 года назад

    You should do a video on the growing movement of Christians questioning Paul’s apostleship.

  • @UisceBeantha
    @UisceBeantha 3 года назад

    The House Chamber is technically a sumerian temple since the portrait of Utu (supposed to be Hammurabi) hangs on the wall. Maybe with enough goat's blood we can fix what's broken...

  • @Brett323
    @Brett323 3 года назад

    This is a really good video. Great job!

  • @ubuntuposix
    @ubuntuposix 3 года назад +7

    Yes, Americans believe in USA as God.

    • @hackman669
      @hackman669 3 года назад +1

      Listen to the media and you will see most of us do not trust the FEDs.

    • @whathell6t
      @whathell6t 3 года назад

      @@hackman669
      Dude! Can you read English?
      He wasn’t talking about the federal government.
      He was talking about American revering the USA as God.

    • @hackman669
      @hackman669 3 года назад +1

      @@whathell6t Most of US liken the US Gov to a can of worms. Only people worshiping the government are politically insane extremists. Like the tRump supporters who think he is the second coming!!! People who should be committed if you know what I mean.

    • @ubuntuposix
      @ubuntuposix 3 года назад +1

      @@hackman669 The mind of a right winger is influenced by his instinct for pyramidal society. Thus, a right-winger wants competition (like if natural selection was God's first and only commandment), and instinctively worships an alpha male.
      Either in real life, worshiping Trump (or Putin in Russia), or a heavenly alpha male (either God the Father, or the Son - Jesus. nobody worships the holy spirit because its the least material, and right-wingers are material people - they want concrete physical things - which is why Jesus is perceived as the "main" God.
      Personally when I was little and was reading the bible, Jesus seemed like a tool sent by God, a sort of prophet.
      Anyways, notice there's no heavenly mother, since our instinct to bow/kneel/crawl on the ground/give offerings comes from our animal instinct to submit to a powerful alpha male. While the opposite - standing tall and as large as possible is the universal signal for challenging - fighting. An all loving heavenly mother would not make us crawl before her).
      Anyways, just like the right-wingers cannot conceive of spirituality (a spirit is a virtual entity, like a software running on multiple hardware brains, thus it first needs the hardware support before it can exist), like-wise they don't understand that the Gov is a condensed form of the people so that it can rule. Thus democracy (the ruling done by the people). No. They just want competition and the people which raise to the top of the social pyramid to rule them.
      Now, if you ask me, i have a problem with our type of representative democracy. I'm also against direct democracy. I'm in favor of a Rational Democracy - where its our rational side that does the "voting". Meaning that the Gov should be a national internet Forum for Policy Proposals, and we can transparently see what's the best policy with concrete arguments (how may people it advantages, by what degree - according to Maslow's pyramid of human needs, how many people it disadvantages, etc). Thus we can have a transparent score for each policy and thus rule in a rational way,

    • @Tsalagi978
      @Tsalagi978 3 года назад

      @@ubuntuposix not what Christianity teaches at all. Trinity one in substance and undivided. God the Father, God the Son, God the Holy Spirit. Not three gods but one God. I as an Orthodox Christian, worship the Holy Trinity.

  • @gnostic268
    @gnostic268 3 года назад +8

    Nope. There are pictures of Native American people being killed in "historic battles" on the walls of the Rotunda. As a Native person I find that abhorrent because we were also referred to as merciless Indian savages so the idea of the Capitol as a sacred space considering all the corruption that happens there invalidates that possibility

    • @user-fy4qu8rp4z
      @user-fy4qu8rp4z 3 года назад +2

      I agree, but this guy is not arguing that the Capitol is a sacred temple, but that there's people who see it as such, or that politians talk refere to it in a sort of lithurgical language

    • @StudeSteve62
      @StudeSteve62 3 года назад +2

      More haunted than sacred, perhaps...I'm Canadian, and you probably know about the hidden cemeteries being discovered at some of the dozens of former residential schools here...that ground would be hallowed too, for the very worst reasons...

    • @vitor262
      @vitor262 3 года назад +2

      I think that, when academics study religion, "sacred" is assumed to be prescribed by a group of people, not a category.
      So he's not arguing that the Capitol is sacred by it self, but that it is treated the same way a thing regarded as sacred is treated.
      So a place can be "sacred" to a group of people, even if me and you don't regard it as such.

  • @DrawnByDandy
    @DrawnByDandy 3 года назад +1

    I feel like I learned a lot, thanks :)

  • @cfromnowhere
    @cfromnowhere 3 года назад +1

    It is interesting to see that American Civil Piety (I use piety to avoid confusion in the following texts) is heavily influenced by Christian bias among government officials and lawmakers and Christian nationalism. As an increasing number of immigrants do not practice Abrahamic religions and Americans are losing interest in religion in general, what will this populational shift do to American Civil Piety? Will it shift away from Christianity as well?

    • @Windrake101
      @Windrake101 3 года назад

      It's less "immigrants", and more "people who are already citizens" that are increasingly not practicing Abrihamic faiths.

  • @IanZainea1990
    @IanZainea1990 Месяц назад

    And let's not forget that it is named The Capitol, after Capitoline Hill and Jupiter Capitolinus

  • @jakeaurod
    @jakeaurod 3 года назад +2

    How does this relate to other countries? Do they have the same sort of civil religion, or does it differ if they have a formal state religion? Or is this answered in other videos I haven't watched yet?

    • @vitor262
      @vitor262 3 года назад

      Those are very good questions

    • @varana
      @varana 3 года назад

      Speaking about Germany: Definitely not in the same manner. Sure, people may talk about the _dignity_ of the parliamentary assembly, but the exaggerated symbolism, religious language, or ceremonial mimikry of religious service, seems a really strange concept. Reciting the -creed- pledge of allegiance is ... weird. There are a few laws governing the use of the flag - but it's neither sacred, nor revered. "The Apotheosis of Konrad Adenauer" sounds like a really, really ridiculous idea.
      So no - American civil religion is not ubiquitous, or even that common. I would suspect that a formal state religion would rather increase the "sacredness" of the state's institution, but it's quite hard to find non-dictatorships with a state religion.

    • @Ruaryvash
      @Ruaryvash 3 года назад +2

      Bellah (cited in the video) would later elaborate on civil religion as being present in practically all nations. He asserted that In some way, shape, or form, a sovereign society requires reverence for the governmental structure in which it exists, in order for it to exist. And this reverence is coded into symbolic expressions within the culture of that society. American civil religion is very distinct because of the many overt ways it mirrors and extends from Protestant Christianity, but that's what makes it AMERICAN civil religion.

    • @varana
      @varana 3 года назад +1

      @@Ruaryvash To be honest, that stretches the definition of "religion" to an extent where the term is not really useful any more. "Reverence coded into symbolic expressions" is such a vague concept that it's more or less meaningless. The class greeting their teacher at the start of the lesson - it's a symbolic gesture expressing reverence. Is that "educational religion"?
      Yes, American civil religion stands out because of its explicitly religious form. That's what makes it American civil RELIGION.

    • @2712animefreak
      @2712animefreak 3 года назад

      @@varana It's relatively easy to find them, though. Germany even borders one: Denmark. Norway and the UK have state religions as well.

  • @longschlongsilver7628
    @longschlongsilver7628 3 года назад

    Sometimes I wonder what an American religion would be like if Christianity stopped being in the picture. Would it be like the state religion of the Roman Empire, or would it be something different entirely?

  • @amyjones2490
    @amyjones2490 3 года назад +1

    It's not a religious building but it is impressively built and decorated by hand I might add. As a relatively new country it is grandly built and should be honored as an American. There are 2 kinds of people in this world...builders or destroyers.

    • @ANDROLOMA
      @ANDROLOMA 3 года назад

      I agree strongly with your concluding sentence. It takes no talent to maim, kill, and destroy. It takes talent to create, repair, and build. That's why I found it more sublime to be a worker than a soldier. If you quote my second and third sentences, cite me as the source, since it's original as far as I know.

  • @naturalfreeness322
    @naturalfreeness322 3 года назад

    This is not a game to the politician they believe in the political zealousness of their religion. It explains the manic extreme points of view of patriotism.

  • @perfesserblue1790
    @perfesserblue1790 3 года назад

    I like the phrase "Civic Piety".
    It gives a certain dispassionate perspective to the discussion, separates civic respect from "Religionism".

  • @carloswater7
    @carloswater7 3 года назад +1

    At 9:00 to 9:06 is the reason why this video was demonetized.

  • @archingelus
    @archingelus 3 года назад

    yes that religion is called Nationalism and it is not exclusively Americans, there are many denominations across the worlds and their sacred book is called "Constitution"

  • @MasterDoctorBenji
    @MasterDoctorBenji 2 года назад

    It's kind of like the South Park episode where in the future religions don't exist. Yet the science communities still fight.
    It seems no matter what, humans need something. Something to deify and worship.

  • @sawyermcdonell7915
    @sawyermcdonell7915 3 года назад +1

    suggestion: i would love a video about the theological reasons why muslims aren’t allowed to create images of their prophets (if you haven’t already)

  • @JohnDee0
    @JohnDee0 3 года назад +1

    The US capitol is a Cultist building inspired by free-masonry. The goddess on top of the building is Persephone a goddess of underworld also a representation of Venus. The apotheosis of George Washington is the sacred marriage between him and Venus. The Babylonian believed that the king would merge with the goddess at his death (Sacred marriage between Innana (Venus) and Dumuzid (Mars) . The patron of the US is not the president but Persephone the goddess of the underworld same as the goddess of war (Athena).

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 3 года назад +1

      You seem to have got your goddesses mixed up, if you equate Persephone to Venus, Athena and the goddess of war: unless of course you think that there's only one goddess?
      And what about Lady Justice, who stands blindfolded with a sword and scales over law courts: she was admitted to the Roman pantheon by Augustus under the name of Justicia, but that was their name for Ma'at, the goddess who presided over Egyptian courts.

    • @JohnDee0
      @JohnDee0 3 года назад

      @@faithlesshound5621 It's exactly that, all those goddesses stem from the early archetype of the goddess associated to the queen of Heaven i.e. Inanna and the planet Venus. And Ma'at is the guardian of the field of reeds (the place of afterlife) which later became Elysium field in Greek mythology which is also associated to Venus in Babylonian lore and in Jewish stories to the garden of Eden. Inanna had double association of garden of fertility and goddess of war.

  • @77soko77
    @77soko77 2 года назад +1

    What about Washington sitting in the baphemet position in the "apotheosis"....

  • @markadams7046
    @markadams7046 3 года назад

    A USO ad came up at the end of your video when I watched it if it's any consolation.

  • @davidbarber3821
    @davidbarber3821 3 года назад +1

    As I was reading Prof Christine Hayas book a coworker & I talked about wht denotes a " cult " & we thought how government fits the characteristics of a " cult "

  • @RhizometricReality
    @RhizometricReality 3 года назад +2

    Monuments to the tyranny of capital

  • @moumous87
    @moumous87 3 года назад

    This was a great video!!!

  • @Benni777
    @Benni777 3 года назад

    Why was this country created to separate church and state, if our capital building was inspired and looks like a church?? 🤷🏻‍♀️🤦🏻‍♀️

    • @realtalk6195
      @realtalk6195 2 года назад

      American secularism is about 'freedom of religion', not 'suppression of religion' as was the case with the French Revolution and its ideological descendants (fascism and communism). Same word, different purposes. American secularism is so that the gov't doesn't favor one religion over the other. It's why Protestants fled Catholics, and the Calvinists and Anabaptists fled mainline Protestants.

  • @SidheKnight
    @SidheKnight 3 года назад +3

    Very interesting video!
    It takes bravery to make a video so closely related to such a controversial topic as the events of Jan 6, 2021 and you handled it perfectly.
    I'm surprised you didn't mention the tearing down and replacement of the American Flag with the Trump Flag, considering how the former is viewed as a "sacred" symbol by many Americans.

  • @MrDanielEarle
    @MrDanielEarle 3 года назад

    Thanks, Andrew