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The Tikvah Podcast

Wilfred McClay on the Soul of America (Rebroadcast)

The Tikvah Podcast

Tikvah

Judaism, Politics, Religion & Spirituality, News

4.6620 Ratings

🗓️ 4 June 2020

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Professor Wilfred McClay penned his essay, “The Soul of a Nation,” just three years after the terror attacks of September 11, 2001. The essay—a deep reflection on the history, nature, and future of American civic religion—was written in part as a response to the deep questions American were asking themselves about civil society, faith, and public life in the aftermath of moment of deep and profound crisis.

The United States again finds itself in a moment of pain and crisis. In the spirit of helping us think more profoundly about our soul as a people, we are rebroadcasting our 2017 podcast with Professor McClay revisiting his essay.

Musical selections in this podcast are drawn from the Quintet for Clarinet and Strings, op. 31a, composed by Paul Ben-Haim and performed by the ARC Ensemble as well as “Baruch Habah,” performed by the choir of Congregation Shearith Israel, and “Further Down the Path” by Big Score Audio.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to the Tikva podcast on Great Jewish Essays and Ideas. I'm your host, Jonathan Silver.

0:13.5

Today's conversation is about the beliefs that as Americans we hold about ourselves and the great

0:18.7

national story that embodies our self-understanding

0:21.1

as a country. If you want to look at the official doctrines of American government, you'd be

0:26.1

wise to study the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, the Federalist papers, and the

0:31.1

various anti-federalist essays to which they were so powerful a response. And of course,

0:36.1

the seminal court cases, the rulings and dissents

0:38.9

handed down by Supreme Court justices over the last 220-some years, these are all elements,

0:44.0

as I say, of America's political and legal doctrine. But to understand how Americans think about

0:49.5

ourselves, you need to understand the civic story that we tell about who we are as a nation.

0:55.0

This is the story that carries the past that we share, the memories that we educate our children

1:01.0

to assume as their own, and that points toward a common future.

1:05.0

All nations have this narrative understanding of their origins, and a great many civic rituals

1:10.0

come into being that help us recover

1:11.7

and renew the national narrative. In the case of the United States, our national story is a kind

1:17.3

of reenactment of the Exodus story from the Hebrew Bible, fleeing oppression, wandering in the

1:22.5

wilderness, arriving at a new providential land where we can live in freedom. This is the Israelite story, and it was adapted in each generation, from the Puritan settlers

1:33.3

to the American founders, to enslaved African Americans yearning for freedom, to the pioneers

1:39.3

of the American West, and perhaps nowhere more resonantly than in the civil rights leaders of the 20th century,

1:46.0

where Martin Luther King Jr. thundered prophetically that like Moses he too had been to the

1:51.0

mountaintop, and he too had seen the promised land of constitutional equality.

1:56.0

This narrative of self-understanding and the rituals that go along with it are together called civil religion.

...

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