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Thursday, December 13, 2007
Charles Krauthammer :: Townhall.com Columnist
Knee-Deep in Religion
by Charles Krauthammer
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Who won Tuesday's presidential debate?


WASHINGTON -- Mitt Romney declares, "Freedom and religion endure together, or perish alone." Barack Obama opens his speech at his South Carolina Oprah rally with "Giving all praise and honor to God. Look at the day that the Lord has made." Mike Huckabee explains his surge in the polls thus: "There's only one explanation for it, and it's not a human one. It's the same power that helped a little boy with two fish and five loaves feed a crowd of 5,000 people."

This campaign is knee-deep in religion, and it's only going to get worse. I'd thought that the limits of professed public piety had already been achieved during the Republican CNN/YouTube debate when some squirrelly looking guy held up a Bible and asked, "Do you believe every word of this book?" -- and not one candidate dared reply: None of your damn business.

Instead, Giuliani, Romney and Huckabee bent a knee and tried appeasement with various interpretations of scriptural literalism. The right answer, the only answer, is that the very question is offensive. The Constitution prohibits any religious test for office. And while that proscribes only government action, the law is also meant to be a teacher.

In the same way that civil rights laws established not just the legal but also the moral norm that one simply does not discriminate on the basis of race -- changing the practice of one generation and the consciousness of the next -- so the constitutional injunction against religious tests is meant to make citizens understand that such tests are profoundly un-American.

Now, there's nothing wrong with having a spirited debate on the place of religion in politics. But the candidates are confusing two arguments.

The first, which conservatives are winning, is defending the legitimacy of religion in the public square. The second, which conservatives are bound to lose, is proclaiming the privileged status of religion in political life.

A certain kind of liberal argues that having a religious underpinning for any public policy is disqualifying because it is an imposition of religion on others. Thus, if your opposition to embryonic stem cell research comes from a religious belief in the ensoulment of life at conception, you're somehow violating the separation of church and state by making other people bend to your religion.

This is absurd. Abolitionism, civil rights, temperance, opposition to the death penalty -- a host of policies, even political movements, have been rooted for many people in religious teaching or interpretation. It's ridiculous to say that therefore abolitionism, civil rights, etc., constitute an imposition of religion on others.

Imposing religion means the mandating of religious practice. It does not mean the mandating of social policy that some people may have come to support for religious reasons. Continued...

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About The Author

Charles Krauthammer is a 1987 Pulitzer Prize winner, 1984 National Magazine Award winner, and a columnist for The Washington Post since 1985.

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Subject: repoly to baseballdoc
As an empirical fact, of course conservatives can be anything. However, note that most TH readers would not say the same thing about Christianity--the Christians who replied to my post made clear that "Christianity" means something very specific, and that for them the Bible has to be read in a very specific way, as literally true. Without that belief in literal truth, they wrote, a person is not a Christian, no matter what that person may actually think.

All I'm doing is applying a similar logic to "conservatism." Conservatism has a doctrinal content, a history, etc. All of this should impose some parameters for what a "conservative" believes. So, just as Christianity is not something you or I get to make up as we go along, neither is conservatism.

Bill Buckley put this much more cleverly than I years ago. In responding to a question about whether a Catholic could be a liberal, Buckely said that the answer was, yes, there were Catholic liberals. However, a Catholic who understands Catholicism correctly cannot be anyting but a conservative.

Let's try for some ideological quality control, so conservatives know what they really believe.

Bravo!
Mr. Krauthammer summarized my thoughts on this issue so well that I feel like I could've written this article myself (except not as eloquently as he has). Yes, as some of you have pointed out, the Constitutional test does not apply directly to individuals -- any person can choose to vote for or against any candidate for any reason whatsoever -- but the idea of basing a person's qualifications for President on his religious beliefs rather than his adherence to the Constitution is misplaced.

I think Homeschool Mom said it best:
"The only religious question worth asking
a candidate is, "How does your religion affect your defense and upholding of the Constitution and Bill of Rights?" If (s)he cannot uphold or defend the Constitution and Bill of Rights because their religion then they are categorically unfit for office."

Amen.

My support for or opposition to any candidate is not based on whether or not we agree the concept of grace or the divinity of Christ, it is for his or her adherence to Constitutional principles, free market capitalism, and individual liberty. A person's relationship with God is his or her own business.
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