Our religious culture is formed by the sum of our individual decisions. It need not be and should not be imposed by collective acts of government. The first way is more dynamic and accommodating, allowing for change over time while respecting the current contributions of all individuals. The second way is a violation of the principle of personal responsibility. Upholding the right of personal responsibility, particular with regard to freedom of individual conscience, promotes national unity. Furthermore, the first approach constitutes a more genuine measure of our religious culture since religious culture is a grassroots phenomena that is too diverse to be distilled into static one sentence declarations or pronouncements while the second approach unfairly tilts the free market place of ideas infrastructure against minority viewpoints.