When organized religion loses cultural authority, political movements increasingly supply the rituals, moral frameworks, and identity narratives people formerly found in faith communities. That shift turns policy disputes into existential moral tests and makes political affiliation function like religious belonging.
— If politics substitutes for religion, debates will escalate from policy disagreement to moral purges, raising stakes for civic pluralism, free speech, and institutional legitimacy.
Mike Johns
2026.03.25
100% relevant
The article’s headline and opening claim — 'When Religion Becomes Obsolete, Politics Tries to Save Us' — explicitly links declining religiosity to politics taking on salvific, meaning‑giving roles.
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