When the Sacred Meets the State: Marx, Ideology and the Politics of Faith
-Ramphal Kataria
Abstract
This essay examines the complex relationship between religion, caste and constitutional democracy in India through the intellectual traditions of Karl Marx, Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru and B. R. Ambedkar. It argues that while religion has historically served as a profound source of ethical guidance, social solidarity and cultural identity, it has also been employed across civilizations as a means of legitimizing political authority and sustaining existing structures of power. Drawing upon Marx's theory of ideology, Gramsci's concept of cultural hegemony, Gandhi's ethical conception of Ram Rajya, Nehru's vision of a secular democratic state and Ambedkar's doctrine of constitutional morality, the essay explores the enduring tension between inherited identities and equal citizenship in a constitutional republic.
The study situates India's constitutional experiment within a broader comparative perspective, highlighting that the challenge before democratic societies is not the eradication of religion from public life but the preservation of institutional neutrality in societies marked by deep religious and social diversity. It further analyses how caste and religious identities have continued to shape democratic mobilization after Independence, illustrating both their emancipatory and exclusionary potential. Rather than advocating hostility toward religion, the essay contends that constitutional democracy requires a principled distinction between personal faith and public authority so that the state remains equally accountable to all citizens regardless of belief. Ultimately, it argues that the durability of the Indian Republic depends not merely upon electoral competition but upon the cultivation of constitutional morality, social equality and civic fraternity—the foundational principles envisioned by the framers of the Constitution.
"The ideas of the ruling class are in every epoch the ruling ideas."
— Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, The German Ideology (1845)
"Constitutional morality is not a natural sentiment."
— B. R. Ambedkar
The Republic beneath the Temple Bells
Democracies rarely die with the thunder of cannons. More often, they surrender quietly—not because constitutions are abolished, elections suspended or legislatures dissolved, but because the language of politics slowly changes. Citizens cease to be addressed as rational participants in a constitutional order and begin to be invoked as members of a sacred community. Public debate gives way to moral certitude, disagreement is recast as disloyalty, and political choices acquire the aura of divine sanction. When this happens, the republic is not overthrown; it is gradually transformed.
History bears witness to this recurring phenomenon. The Pharaohs of ancient Egypt ruled as living gods. Roman emperors were deified after death, and sometimes during their reign. Medieval European monarchs claimed the "Divine Right of Kings," insisting that resistance to the sovereign was resistance to God. The Ottoman Sultans fused imperial authority with the office of the Caliph. In modern Iran, the doctrine of Wilayat al-Faqih vests ultimate authority in a supreme religious jurist. Across centuries and civilizations, rulers have discovered an enduring political truth: power becomes more secure when it appears sacred.
The symbols have changed; the logic has not.
Modern democracy was conceived as a radical departure from this tradition. The Enlightenment replaced divine sovereignty with popular sovereignty. The legitimacy of the state was no longer to flow from scripture but from the consent of the governed. Constitutions, rather than sacred texts, became the source of public authority. Citizens, not believers, constituted the political community. Yet even within constitutional democracies, religion has remained a potent force in shaping public imagination and political identity. The relationship between faith and power was never severed; it was merely reconfigured.
India embodies this paradox more vividly than perhaps any other democracy. It is one of the world's oldest religious civilizations and its largest constitutional republic. The Constitution guarantees liberty of conscience, equality before law, and the secular character of the state. Society, however, remains deeply informed by religious traditions, caste identities, and cultural memories. The resulting tension—between constitutional citizenship and inherited identities—has shaped the trajectory of Indian politics since Independence.
To understand this tension, one must first step away from the immediate theatre of elections and return to the realm of political philosophy. Few thinkers offer a more penetrating framework than Karl Marx.
Marx: Religion beyond Belief
Karl Marx is perhaps the most misunderstood critic of religion in modern political thought. His oft-quoted observation that religion is "the opium of the people" has frequently been reduced to a slogan of militant atheism. In reality, Marx's argument was far more nuanced and sociological.
He wrote:
"Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions."
Religion, for Marx, was not merely an illusion imposed from above. It was also a genuine human response to suffering. It comforted those living under conditions of exploitation, insecurity and alienation. Like opium in nineteenth-century medicine, it relieved pain. But precisely because it relieved pain, it could also dull awareness of the structures producing that pain.
Marx's concern, therefore, was not with spirituality itself but with the political economy of belief. He asked a deceptively simple question: Who benefits when existing social arrangements are regarded as sacred rather than historical?
This question transformed the study of politics.
In The German Ideology, Marx and Engels argued that "the ideas of the ruling class are in every epoch the ruling ideas." Political domination is sustained not only by armies, police or laws, but also by ideas that persuade people that existing hierarchies are natural, inevitable or divinely ordained. Economic power eventually becomes cultural power. The institutions of society—schools, churches, media, literature, and traditions—often reproduce the worldview of those who command material resources.
Religion can become part of this ideological apparatus, not because faith is inherently oppressive, but because sacred authority can be invoked to legitimise worldly power.
This insight extends beyond religion. Nationalism, culture, race and even historical memory can become ideological resources through which societies justify existing relations of power. The content may differ; the political function remains strikingly similar.
Gramsci and the Manufacture of Consent
The Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci refined Marx's insight while imprisoned under Benito Mussolini's fascist regime. Observing why revolutionary upheavals had failed to materialise in Western Europe, Gramsci concluded that modern societies were governed less through coercion than through consent.
Power, he argued, is most durable when people internalise the values of the existing order. Families transmit them. Schools normalise them. Cultural institutions celebrate them. Religious traditions sanctify them. Citizens begin to regard the prevailing order not merely as lawful but as morally legitimate.
Gramsci called this cultural hegemony.
The brilliance of hegemony lies in its invisibility. People obey not because they are forced to, but because they believe they ought to. Political authority becomes embedded in common sense.
This is why democratic politics can never be understood solely through elections or institutions. It is equally a contest over ideas, symbols, rituals and historical narratives.
Who defines patriotism?
Who defines national identity?
Who decides which historical memories deserve public reverence?
Who determines whether a religious symbol belongs to personal devotion or national identity?
These are not merely cultural questions. They are questions of political power.
Democracy and the Necessity of Distance
Modern constitutional democracies did not emerge because religion disappeared from society. They emerged because societies devastated by centuries of sectarian conflict gradually recognised that political authority required a different foundation.
The American Constitution prohibited the establishment of an official religion while protecting the free exercise of faith. France embraced laïcité, insisting upon institutional separation between church and state. Although these models differ significantly, they share a common principle: the legitimacy of the state must derive from equal citizenship rather than religious affiliation.
India adopted a distinctive approach. It neither embraced militant secularism nor established a state religion. Instead, it sought to maintain principled distance—respecting all faiths while identifying with none. This was not a rejection of religion but a constitutional strategy for governing an extraordinarily diverse society.
That strategy remains both ambitious and fragile.
Unlike many Western democracies, India did not inherit a culturally homogeneous population. It inherited an ancient civilisation marked by multiple religions, thousands of castes, hundreds of languages and deeply layered identities. The Constitution therefore attempted something unprecedented: to transform subjects into citizens without asking them to abandon their faith.
The challenge was immense.
The Indian Question
The central question confronting India has never been whether religion should disappear from public life. Such a proposition is neither realistic nor desirable. Religion has inspired profound traditions of compassion, sacrifice, social reform and ethical reflection. From the Bhakti and Sufi movements to the teachings of Guru Nanak, Kabir, Basavanna and Narayana Guru, faith has often challenged social oppression rather than reinforced it.
The real question is different.
Can a constitutional democracy preserve equal citizenship when political legitimacy increasingly draws upon religious identity?
That question becomes even more complex in a society where caste, too, has historically been justified through religious idioms. Here, the debate moves beyond Marx. It enters the intellectual world of Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi and Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar—two architects of modern India's moral imagination, united in their commitment to justice yet profoundly divided on the relationship between religion, society and democracy.
Their disagreement was not merely philosophical. It concerned the very foundations upon which the Republic would be built.
Should India's future rest upon the ethical resources of its civilisational traditions, or upon a constitutional morality deliberately insulated from religious authority?
The answer to that question has shaped every major political debate in independent India.
It continues to do so today.
The Mahatma, the Constitution and the Republic's Moral Dilemma
"My notion of Ram Rajya is not a Hindu Raj. It means the Kingdom of God on Earth."
— Mahatma Gandhi
"If Hindu Raj does become a fact, it will, no doubt, be the greatest calamity for this country."A
— B. R. Ambedkar, Pakistan or the Partition of India
The Evening That Symbolized a Republic
On the evening of 30 January 1948, as Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi fell to Nathuram Godse's bullets in the gardens of Birla House, independent India lost more than its foremost political leader. It inherited an unresolved philosophical dilemma.
Gandhi had spent three decades invoking religion in public life—not to establish a theocratic state, but to awaken the moral conscience of a colonized people. His prayers drew from the Bhagavad Gita, the Quran, the Bible, and devotional traditions across India. He spoke of Truth (Satya) and Non-violence (Ahimsa) as spiritual principles that should govern politics. For Gandhi, religion was not a sectarian identity but an ethical discipline.
Yet the man who insisted that "my religion transcends Hinduism" was assassinated by someone who believed Gandhi had betrayed Hindu interests. That tragic irony has haunted Indian politics ever since.
It raises a question that extends beyond Gandhi himself:
Can religion inspire politics without eventually becoming an instrument of political power?
Modern India's constitutional journey may be read as an attempt to answer precisely this question.
Gandhi's Ram Rajya: Ethics, Not Theocracy
Few concepts in Indian political thought have generated as much admiration—and as much misunderstanding—as Gandhi's idea of Ram Rajya.
To many contemporary ears, the phrase suggests a religious state governed according to Hindu scripture. Gandhi repeatedly rejected such an interpretation. Writing in Young India and Harijan, he clarified that Ram Rajya was neither a Hindu kingdom nor a demand for religious rule. "By Ram Rajya," he explained, "I do not mean Hindu Raj. I mean Divine Raj, the Kingdom of God." In another context, he remarked that for him, Rama represented the ideal of truth and justice rather than a sectarian deity.
For Gandhi, therefore, religion was not primarily institutional. It was moral. Politics divorced from ethics became a struggle for power; politics infused with moral discipline could become a means of public service. His understanding of religion resembled what philosophers describe as civil religion—a shared ethical vocabulary capable of inspiring sacrifice, compassion, and restraint.
This vision was shaped by diverse influences: the Bhagavad Gita, Jain principles of non-violence, Christian teachings such as the Sermon on the Mount, Leo Tolstoy's moral philosophy, John Ruskin's critique of industrial civilization, and the devotional traditions of India's Bhakti saints. Gandhi's religiosity was deeply ecumenical. His prayer meetings included verses from multiple faiths, and he consistently argued that all religions contained elements of truth.
Yet Gandhi's political language carried an inherent ambiguity.
Symbols rarely remain confined to the intentions of those who first employ them. Once introduced into mass politics, they acquire meanings shaped by history, memory, and collective emotion. The language of Ram Rajya, conceived by Gandhi as an ethical metaphor, entered a political culture in which religious symbols already possessed immense social power.
Historians continue to debate whether this vocabulary unintentionally widened the space for later forms of religious mobilization. Some argue that Gandhi demonstrated how religion could humanize politics; others contend that any sustained use of sacred symbolism inevitably blurs the distinction between moral inspiration and political legitimacy. Whatever one's conclusion, the debate itself reveals how difficult it is to keep ethical religion separate from electoral politics once sacred symbols enter the public arena.
Nehru's Republic of Reason
If Gandhi sought to moralize politics, Jawaharlal Nehru sought to constitutionalize it.
Unlike Gandhi, Nehru was profoundly shaped by the European Enlightenment. He admired scientific inquiry, rational debate, and historical criticism. While he never dismissed religion as irrelevant to individual life, he believed the modern state must remain institutionally neutral among competing faiths. In The Discovery of India, Nehru celebrated India's plural civilizational heritage, yet he consistently warned against communal nationalism and religious exclusivism.
For Nehru, the Republic would not derive its legitimacy from any sacred tradition but from democratic institutions and constitutional law. His famous description of large dams, laboratories, and universities as the "temples of modern India" was more than rhetorical flourish. It reflected a conviction that national progress required a civic imagination anchored in science, education, and public reason rather than sectarian identity.
This did not imply hostility toward religion. Nehru recognized that faith would continue to shape Indian society. His concern lay elsewhere: once the state identified itself with a particular religious tradition, equal citizenship would inevitably become vulnerable. The task of government, therefore, was not to reform private belief but to guarantee public equality.
In this respect, Nehru's secularism was less a philosophical rejection of religion than a constitutional method for managing diversity.
Ambedkar: Democracy Against Hierarchy
No thinker challenged the relationship between religion, caste, and democracy more radically than Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar.
Where Gandhi saw religion as a source of ethical regeneration, Ambedkar examined the historical role of religious authority in sustaining social hierarchy. His critique was directed not at spirituality itself but at structures of inequality that had acquired religious legitimacy.
In Annihilation of Caste, Ambedkar argued that caste was not merely a social custom but an institutional order reinforced through religious doctrine and everyday practice. Political democracy, he warned, could not flourish upon a social foundation organized around inherited inequality. Universal adult franchise would have limited meaning if citizens continued to inhabit a society structured by graded hierarchy.
His warning remains one of the most profound reflections on democracy ever written:
"Political democracy cannot last unless there lies at the base of it social democracy."
For Ambedkar, social democracy meant more than electoral participation. It required a moral commitment to liberty, equality, and fraternity—principles he regarded as inseparable. Liberty without equality would privilege the powerful; equality without liberty would suppress individuality; both required fraternity, a sense of common belonging that transcended caste and religious divisions.
It is significant that Ambedkar traced fraternity not to inherited hierarchy but to shared humanity. In later life, his embrace of Buddhism reflected his search for a religious philosophy compatible with equality and reason rather than social exclusion.
Constitutional Morality
Perhaps Ambedkar's most enduring contribution to Indian political thought is his insistence on constitutional morality.
Borrowing the expression from the nineteenth-century historian George Grote, Ambedkar transformed it into a foundational principle for the Indian Republic. Constitutional morality demanded loyalty not to rulers, castes, or religious communities, but to institutions, procedures, and the equal dignity of citizens.
He reminded the Constituent Assembly that constitutional morality was "not a natural sentiment." It had to be cultivated through education, public culture, and democratic practice. A Constitution, however carefully drafted, could not preserve liberty if citizens and leaders alike remained captive to inherited prejudices or sectarian loyalties.
This insight remains strikingly contemporary.
Constitutions regulate the exercise of power; they cannot by themselves reshape social consciousness. A democratic order survives only when citizens accept that political disagreement is legitimate, that minorities possess equal rights, and that the state belongs equally to those of every faith and of none.
In this sense, constitutional morality does not compete with personal religion. Rather, it establishes the common civic framework within which individuals of different beliefs can coexist as political equals.
The Constituent Assembly's Great Experiment
The debates of the Constituent Assembly reflected these competing intellectual currents. Gandhi's moral influence remained immense, though he was not a member of the Assembly. Nehru articulated the vision of a democratic, plural republic. Ambedkar, as Chairman of the Drafting Committee, translated constitutional ideals into institutional design. Members such as K. M. Munshi, Alladi Krishnaswami Ayyar, Hansa Mehta, Dakshayani Velayudhan, and others enriched these discussions with diverse perspectives.
The Constitution that emerged in 1950 did not create a secular society. That would have been impossible in a civilization as religiously diverse as India. Instead, it created a secular state—one committed to liberty of conscience, equality before law, and non-discrimination on grounds of religion, caste, sex, or place of birth.
Significantly, sovereignty was vested not in any sacred text, monarch, or religious institution, but in the opening words of the Preamble:
"We, the People of India..."
These four words marked a profound constitutional revolution.
Political authority would derive from citizens.
Faith would remain free.
The state would remain accountable to all.
An Unfinished Conversation
Independent India inherited three powerful traditions.
From Gandhi came the conviction that politics requires moral restraint.
From Nehru came the commitment to scientific temper and institutional secularism.
From Ambedkar came the insistence that democracy cannot survive without social equality and constitutional morality.
These traditions have never existed in perfect harmony. They continue to shape public debates over religion, caste, identity, and citizenship. The Republic's history may, in many ways, be read as an ongoing conversation among these three visions.
Understanding that conversation is essential before turning to the arena where these ideas acquired electoral significance. For once moral ideals entered the competitive world of democratic politics, religion and caste ceased to be merely philosophical questions. They became instruments through which communities were mobilized, identities consolidated, and political legitimacy contested.
It is in that transformation—from ethical language to electoral strategy—that the next chapter of India's democratic story unfolds.
Religion, Caste and the Democratic Imagination: From Constitutional Citizenship to Identity Politics
"Democracy is not merely a form of government. It is primarily a mode of associated living."
— B. R. Ambedkar
The Promise of Equal Citizenship
When the Constitution of India came into force on 26 January 1950, it sought to accomplish something unprecedented in the history of the subcontinent. It transformed a civilization long organised around religion, caste, kinship and local loyalties into a political community founded upon a radically different principle: equal citizenship.
For the first time in Indian history, every adult—irrespective of caste, religion, gender, wealth or education—became an equal participant in the political process. The Constitution did not abolish religion. It did not erase caste from society. Nor did it ask citizens to abandon their inherited identities. Instead, it sought to establish a higher civic identity through the idea of citizenship.
This constitutional project was revolutionary because it challenged an older social imagination. Traditional societies had long defined individuals by birth. Constitutional democracy defined them by rights.
The ballot replaced lineage.
Law replaced privilege.
Citizenship was expected to transcend inherited hierarchy.
Yet constitutions do not remake societies overnight. They provide a normative framework within which societies gradually transform themselves. The distance between constitutional aspiration and social reality is often measured not in years but in generations.
India's democratic experience illustrates this tension with remarkable clarity.
Democracy Did Not Eliminate Identity
The framers of the Constitution hoped that democratic institutions would gradually weaken the political significance of caste and religious divisions. In practice, however, democracy produced a more complex outcome.
Universal suffrage empowered communities that had historically been excluded from political power. Marginalized groups organized themselves, articulated new political aspirations, and demanded representation. This was one of democracy's greatest achievements. Electoral politics became a vehicle through which historically disadvantaged communities entered public life.
Yet the same democratic process also incentivized the mobilisation of social identities.
Political scientists have long observed that electoral competition rewards collective organisation. Communities that vote cohesively possess greater bargaining power than individuals acting alone. As elections became increasingly competitive, political parties across ideological traditions sought support through networks of caste, religion, language and region.
Identity became both a means of empowerment and an instrument of political mobilisation.
This dual character is crucial to understanding Indian democracy.
The political assertion of historically oppressed communities cannot be equated with the instrumental use of identity for electoral gain. One represents a struggle for inclusion; the other reflects the strategic logic of democratic competition. In practice, the two often overlap, making the boundary difficult to draw.
Ambedkar's Anxiety
Few thinkers anticipated this dilemma more clearly than B. R. Ambedkar.
He welcomed universal franchise, yet repeatedly warned that political equality alone would not dissolve entrenched social hierarchies. A society structured around caste, he argued, could not automatically produce democratic citizenship merely by introducing elections.
His concern was profound.
Political democracy rests upon the principle that every vote is equal.
Caste rests upon the principle that every person is not.
The coexistence of these two principles creates an enduring contradiction.
In Annihilation of Caste, Ambedkar argued that caste fragments society into self-contained groups, limiting the development of fraternity—the sense of shared belonging essential to democratic life. Without fraternity, liberty and equality remain fragile.
His warning continues to resonate because caste has displayed extraordinary resilience. It has adapted to urbanisation, economic change and democratic politics rather than disappearing under their influence.
The Electoral Logic of Identity
Elections reward organisation.
Communities organise more easily than isolated individuals.
This insight is neither uniquely Indian nor uniquely democratic. Political sociology across the world demonstrates that voters often respond to identities they perceive as meaningful—religious affiliation, ethnicity, language, race or region.
India's diversity magnifies this tendency.
Caste networks provide social trust, local leadership and organisational capacity. Religious institutions often serve as centers of community life. Regional identities reflect historical experiences and cultural traditions. Political parties naturally seek to engage these existing social formations.
The challenge arises when identity ceases to be a basis for representation and becomes the primary language through which political legitimacy is claimed.
At that point, democratic competition risks shifting from debates over public policy to contests over symbolic recognition.
Questions of employment, healthcare, education and economic inequality may gradually yield space to disputes over historical memory, religious symbolism or community honour.
Identity politics is therefore not merely about identity. It reflects the incentives embedded within democratic competition itself.
Caste: Between Justice and Calculation
The history of caste politics after Independence illustrates this complexity.
The Constitution recognised that formal equality alone could not remedy centuries of structural exclusion. Provisions for reservations in education, legislatures and public employment sought to expand opportunities for historically disadvantaged communities. These measures emerged from the constitutional commitment to substantive equality rather than electoral strategy.
Over time, however, caste also became an important basis of political mobilisation.
The rise of backward class movements, the implementation of the Mandal Commission recommendations, and the emergence of parties representing Dalits and Other Backward Classes transformed the social composition of Indian politics. Many scholars view these developments as deepening democracy by enabling previously excluded groups to exercise political agency.
At the same time, electoral competition encouraged increasingly sophisticated calculations of caste arithmetic. Candidate selection, coalition-building and campaign strategies frequently reflected detailed assessments of local social composition.
This produced an enduring paradox.
Democracy expanded representation.
Yet it also institutionalised identity as a central currency of electoral politics.
Religion and Public Life
Religion presents a similar complexity.
India has never adopted the model of strict separation found in some Western democracies. Religious festivals, institutions and charitable organisations have long contributed to social life. The Constitution protects freedom of religion while permitting state intervention to promote social reform and ensure equality.
Political engagement with religious communities has therefore taken multiple forms across different periods of independent India. Successive governments have addressed questions relating to personal laws, pilgrimage, minority institutions, temple administration, and religious endowments. Social and political movements have also invoked religious symbols to mobilise support, articulate cultural aspirations or express historical grievances.
These developments have generated continuing constitutional debate.
Some scholars argue that public recognition of religious diversity reflects India's plural character.
Others caution that sustained reliance on religious symbolism risks blurring the distinction between civic citizenship and religious identity.
The debate remains unresolved because it concerns competing understandings of secularism itself.
A Distinctive Indian Secularism
Unlike the French principle of laïcité ('secularism' is the constitutional principle of secularism in France. Article 1 of the French Constitution is commonly interpreted as the separation of civil society and religious society), Indian secularism has generally been understood not as the exclusion of religion from public life but as equal respect for all religions combined with the constitutional obligation of the state to maintain neutrality among them.
Political philosopher Rajeev Bhargava describes this approach as one of principled distance.
The state may engage with religious institutions where necessary to protect equality or facilitate reform, yet it should avoid identification with any one faith as the basis of political legitimacy.
This model reflects India's unique historical circumstances.
Its success, however, depends upon constant constitutional vigilance.
Neutrality cannot be reduced to indifference, nor respect transformed into preference.
The state must remain accountable to citizens before communities.
The Republic's Continuing Conversation
More than seven decades after Independence, India continues to negotiate the relationship between constitutional citizenship and inherited identities.
Religion remains a source of profound ethical meaning for millions.
Caste continues to shape social opportunity and political organisation.
Democracy has given voice to communities once excluded from power.
It has also encouraged new forms of identity-based mobilisation.
The constitutional challenge, therefore, is not to erase religion or caste from society. Such an ambition would neither be feasible nor compatible with liberty of conscience. Rather, the challenge is to ensure that the institutions of the state remain guided by constitutional principles rather than sectarian loyalties.
Ambedkar understood this tension with remarkable clarity. He recognised that the Constitution could establish political equality, but only society itself could cultivate fraternity.
The survival of the Republic depends upon sustaining that civic imagination.
For constitutional democracy ultimately rests not upon shared religion or shared ancestry, but upon a shared commitment to equal citizenship under law.
That ideal remains unfinished.
It is perhaps the Republic's most demanding—and most enduring—aspiration.
Conclusion
The Republic Above the Sacred
"A democratic state is not a godless state. It is a state that refuses to choose one God over another."
Every civilization eventually confronts the same political question: Who is sovereign?
The answer has varied across history. Monarchies vested sovereignty in kings, believing them to rule by divine sanction. Theocracies vested sovereignty in religious authority, treating sacred law as the source of political legitimacy. Modern constitutional democracies offered a radically different answer. Sovereignty belongs neither to rulers nor to priests, but to the people.
This transformation was perhaps the greatest political revolution of the modern age. It did not diminish religion; rather, it relocated its place within society. Faith continued to guide the conscience of individuals and communities, but it ceased to define the legal status of citizens. Equality before law replaced inherited privilege. Public authority was expected to derive from constitutional consent rather than theological doctrine.
India embraced this constitutional vision while refusing to erase its civilizational inheritance. The framers of the Constitution did not ask Indians to become less religious. They asked the state to become more impartial. They understood that in a country of extraordinary diversity, the legitimacy of government could not rest upon any single religious tradition without weakening the equal citizenship promised by the Constitution.
This was neither an easy compromise nor a complete settlement. It remains an ongoing constitutional experiment.
Marx reminds us that every political order produces ideas that help sustain itself. Religion, like nationalism, language or history, can become a source of solidarity, but it can also become an instrument of power. His warning was not directed against faith as a personal commitment. It was directed against the tendency of all systems of authority to present contingent political arrangements as timeless and unquestionable.
Ambedkar extended that warning into the Indian context. His concern was not simply with religion but with every form of inherited hierarchy that denied equal human dignity. Political democracy, he argued, could not endure without social democracy. Liberty, equality and fraternity were not independent values but mutually sustaining principles. Elections alone could not create a democratic society if citizens continued to relate to one another through structures of exclusion.
Gandhi, by contrast, believed that politics required moral foundations. He feared that a politics detached from ethical restraint would become an exercise in domination. His invocation of Ram Rajya reflected a search for justice, compassion and public virtue rather than a blueprint for a theocratic state. Whether such moral language can remain insulated from political appropriation is a question that historians and philosophers continue to debate. Yet Gandhi's deeper insight—that public life cannot survive without ethical responsibility—remains profoundly relevant.
Nehru sought to reconcile these traditions through constitutional institutions. His secularism was not an attempt to privatize religion but to ensure that the state belonged equally to every citizen, irrespective of faith. In a society as plural as India, neutrality was not indifference; it was the condition of fairness.
These four thinkers—Marx, Gandhi, Nehru and Ambedkar—arrived at different conclusions, yet together they illuminate the central dilemma of every democratic republic. Religion is among humanity's oldest sources of meaning. Politics is among humanity's oldest struggles for power. The challenge is not to abolish one in favour of the other, but to prevent either from overwhelming the space that belongs to citizens as equals.
Comparative experience reinforces this lesson. France demonstrates the possibilities and tensions of strict secularism. The United States combines constitutional separation with a deeply religious public culture. Indonesia recognises religion while preserving a plural constitutional order. Turkey illustrates how the relationship between religion and the state can shift over time. Each model reflects a distinct historical journey. None offers a universal template.
India's path must necessarily be its own.
Its constitutional promise lies not in becoming a religion-free society, nor in transforming the state into an instrument of any particular faith, but in preserving a political order where every individual enjoys equal protection, equal dignity and equal freedom of conscience.
Such a republic does not ask its citizens to abandon belief.
It asks them to recognise that citizenship is the one identity they all share.
In the end, the health of a democracy is measured not by the intensity of its religious devotion, but by the strength of its constitutional commitment. A society may remain deeply spiritual while insisting that public power answer only to constitutional law. Indeed, that distinction protects religion as much as it protects democracy. Faith flourishes best when it is embraced freely rather than enlisted by the state. Likewise, democratic institutions command the greatest legitimacy when they serve citizens without regard to creed.
The Republic, therefore, must always stand a step above the sacred—not because the sacred lacks value, but because the Republic belongs equally to those who pray in temples, mosques, churches, gurudwaras, monasteries, synagogues, or to those who choose not to pray at all.
That is the quiet genius of constitutional democracy.
Its highest loyalty is neither to a throne nor to an altar.
It is to the equal dignity of every human being.
"A constitutional republic does not ask its citizens to abandon their faith; it asks the State to refuse the privilege of one faith over another."
Final Reflection
The French philosopher Ernest Renan, in his famous 1882 lecture What Is a Nation?, observed that a nation is not held together merely by race, language or religion, but by "the desire to live together."
The Constitution of India transformed that aspiration into a political covenant.
Its opening words do not invoke a deity.
They do not privilege a community.
They do not proclaim a civilization.
They simply declare:
"We, the People of India..."
Perhaps no four words better express the idea that in a constitutional democracy, the ultimate sovereign is not faith, caste, lineage or power—but the people themselves.
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