Cult of the Supreme Being

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Etching of the festival of the Supreme Being, 8 June 1794.
Etching of the festival of the Supreme Being, 8 June 1794.
Painting of the same festival
Painting of the same festival
On the cathedral of Clermont-Ferrand, "The French people recognizes the Supreme Being and the immortality of the soul".
On the cathedral of Clermont-Ferrand, "The French people recognizes the Supreme Being and the immortality of the soul".

The Cult of the Supreme Being (French: Culte de l'Être suprême) was a religion based on deism devised by Maximilien Robespierre, intended to become the state religion after the French Revolution.

Robespierre believed that there was someone who was watching over France, and that was the Supreme Being. The cult represents an innovation in the "de-Christianization" of French society during the Revolution, in that Robespierre sought to move beyond simple agnosticism (often described as Voltairean by its adherents) to a new and, in his view, more rational devotion to the Godhead. (Compare the cult of Reason, advocated by Jacques Hébert and the enragés, and explicitly opposed to Robespierre's more theistic concept of the Supreme Being.)

It became popular for devout revolutionaries to baptise their children not with Father, Son and Holy Ghost but with Liberty, Equality and Fraternity, the slogan of the French Revolution.

Robespierre's proclamation of the cult as the new state religion in 1794 was possibly one of the factors that prompted the Thermidorian Reaction. The Cult of the Supreme Being was thus aborted instantly.

This new state religion by Robespierre did not allow freedom of religion, which angered the population of France because it contradicted the supposed ideals of freedom of the Revolution.

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