Throughout
The Social Contract, Rousseau has continually emphasized the importance of keeping citizens engaged in politics and motivated to pursue the general will through a culture of civic responsibility and shared moral values. This is what he was getting at the whole time: instead of dedicating themselves to religion, people should dedicate themselves to their nation. By creating a “civil religion” and institutionalizing participation in politics, a sovereign body can preemptively defend itself against corruption and attempts to usurp its power. Curiously, Rosseau includes the existence of God as one of his mandatory beliefs, and it is unclear whether this reflects his own Christianity or is simply an attempt to avoid scandalizing his opponents. Finally, Rousseau’s single “negative dogma” is paradoxical, because it means that a government should
be intolerant of intolerance. However, this is necessary to prevent people from discounting other people’s humanity (by, for instance, calling them “damned”) and failing to consider their interests as part of the general will. In fact, this principle of tolerance has become a foundational idea of most contemporary liberal democracies.