Civil Religion: Road to Redemption Or American Heresy?. Flake, Kathleen, Carlson, John D. (John David), Gibson, David, 1969-, Silk, Mark.. 2018. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, http://cdm17265.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/rc/id/132.
APA citation style
(2018). Civil Religion: Road to Redemption or American Heresy?. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, http://cdm17265.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/rc/id/132.
Chicago citation style
Civil Religion: Road to Redemption Or American Heresy?. 2018. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, http://cdm17265.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/rc/id/132.
Note:
These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
"Civil religion" has been described as a powerful, shared, but nondenominational belief in the United States as an exceptional nation, a "city upon a hill" that was great because it was good. But today civil religion is coming under scrutiny as some see the angry populism of the Trump era turning the cohesive force of patriotism into “blood-and-soil” nationalism. Can a country in which the national anthem has become a dividing line still rally around civic sacraments and symbols?
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