World War 2 And the Religion of the State

I was recently reminded of how much of western culture, in the 1970s, was about World War 2. In that period, the second world war was only thirty years before and the people of responsible age (that is, those in their forties through their sixties) had spent many of their formative years in it. And World War 2, which was in many ways only the second great industrial war, had been a total war in a way the world had not really seen before. And I think that this total war had the effect, as few other things besides Communism have had, of turning the state into a religion. And I think that this may have had some strange effects afterwards.

When I say that the second World War turned the state into a religion, I mean that the war, and by extension the state, became the primary purpose of its citizens’ lives. (I’m going to confine my remarks to America, since I know its history best, but from what I’ve read this was largely true of many other countries as well.) This was not absolute, of course, and individuals might have maintained a better set of priorities. Still, the state tried very hard to make itself the purpose of its citizens lives. You can see this in the way that people were encouraged to do everything “for the war effort”. You can find all sorts of examples of magazine ads by companies who aren’t selling products because their factories are now making weapons, but that they will one day resume, so don’t forget them! There was also an enormous amount of propaganda produced, which covered almost everything, since the war touched on almost everything. There were ads which encouraged people to accept rationing of food. There were ads encouraging people to put all their spare money into government bonds rather than buy things for themselves. There were ads that encouraged young women to get a job in the war effort to help bring their sweethearts and husbands home sooner. And from what I recall talking to relatives to had lived through it, much of it worked. As much as people might grumble and there was a thriving black market, people did take up the spirit of the thing and often think about the war effort whose nearest land battles were many thousands of miles away.

And the thing is, while all this can be done as a matter of secondary loyalty, fallen human beings are weak and this kind of total subservience to the state had the effect, I am beginning to suspect, of supplanting God with the state in the hearts of many people. I’ve heard the explanation that many people fell away from Christianity after WW2 because Christian churches were too compliant with the governments that brought us to such an awful war. The horrors of World War 2 broke people. Christianity’s old tired answers were no longer good enough. I’ve heard many such things. And, truth be told, they’ve never sounded very convincing. Christianity made sense under the horrors of the Roman empire and Germanic barbarism but didn’t make sense after the horrors of World War 2? The secular governments of the world plunged people into war and starvation, and Christianity didn’t stand against them enough, so let’s abandon Christianity and become completely secular? These aren’t serious explanations.

The explanation that the people started worshiping an idol—the State—and as idol worship does, this caused the people to turn away from God? That does, at least, explain.

I don’t want to overstate this idea. I’m just beginning to turn it over in my mind. But it does explain a bunch of things which had always not-quite-fit.


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6 thoughts on “World War 2 And the Religion of the State

  1. euginenier's avatar euginenier

    I think you’ve reversed cause and effect here.

    The cult of the state/cult of personality predates WWII. If anything WWII was a holy war between rival state cults that mostly started in the 1930s.

    While FDR’s cult of personality wasn’t as all pervasive as the ones in Germany, Japan, or the Soviet Union, there are definitely anecdotes about it during the 1930s.

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    1. The cult of personality is a different thing than what I’m thinking about, here. As I said in the post, it’s not a fully formed thought, so it’s hard to explain what I mean precisely when I don’t entirely know, myself. 🙂 That said, the difference between cult of personality and the effect of the total war is probably in the conscious intentionality. The cult of personality required people to outright reject other beliefs, rather than to unconsciously supplant them. As such, the cult of personality affected different and fewer people. The effect of total war was more insidious because it didn’t come with the same sign posts to warn the person going down that path. And from what I’ve read, the cults of personality in Germany, and the Soviet Union were far less successful than their enforcement through the secret police of those states might lead you to believe. For example, Hitler was very opposed by the Catholic part of Germany until the war was heavily underway. To give an example: before the war, he was forced to make the practice of killing the mentally disabled secret, for example. (Japan is a bit irrelevant because they were never Christian.)

      The Soviet Union is also a bit of a sui generis because the state was formed as a totalitarian state and proceeded to brutalize its people in order to try to achieve this. Moreover, as officially atheist, it heavily persecuted the practice of Christianity.

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  2. euginenier's avatar euginenier

    I’ve heard the explanation that many people fell away from Christianity after WW2 because Christian churches were too compliant with the governments that brought us to such an awful war. The horrors of World War 2 broke people.

    I’ve heard that about WW1 but never about WW2.

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      1. euginenier's avatar euginenier

        The fighting in WW2 had a much more “heroic” character than WW1.

        A single torpedo launched from a single plane wins the decisive battle, vs millions of men order “over the top” on a near suicidal charge into enemy machine gun fire ultimately results in moving the front a few yards.

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  3. kawaiif13f157c36's avatar kawaiif13f157c36

    If I’m not mistaken this was also known as “civil religion” stemming from the older concept of “God, Gold, and Glory” though not necessarily in that order.

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