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In addition to introducing a newly passionate Emile to society during his adolescent years, the tutor also introduces him to religion.
According to Rousseau, children cannot understand abstract concepts such as the soul before the age of about fifteen or sixteen, so to introduce religion to them is dangerous.
He writes, “ it is a lesser evil to be unaware of the divinity than to offend it ” Moreover, because children are incapable of understanding the difficult concepts that are part of religion, he points out that children will only recite what is told to them – they are unable to believe.
Book IV also contains the infamous “ Profession of a Savoyard Priest ,” the section that was largely responsible for the condemnation of Emile and the one, paradoxically, most frequently excerpted and published independently of its parent tome.
Rousseau claims at the end of the “ Profession ” that it is not “ a rule for the sentiments that one ought to follow in religious matters, but ... an example of the way one can reason with one ’ s pupil in order not to diverge from the method I have tried to establish.
" Such a claim was clearly difficult for many readers at the time to accept and still is.
Rousseau, through the priest, leads his readers through an argument with only one concluding belief: “ natural religion .” Even more importantly, after this brief excursion into religious education, religion does not play any role in Emile ’ s life ; religion, however important to Rousseau ( Rousseau is believed to have created the Savoyard Vicar by combining the traits of two Savoyard priests whom he had known in his childhood: Abbé Gaime from Turin and Abbé Gâtier from Annecy ), is insignificant in Emile ’ s education and socialization.

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