How Hillary Clinton’s Faith Affects Her Policies

Dr. Paul Kengor

Grove City College


November 10, 2007

While Hillary Clinton is not shy about bringing her faith into house of worships for the purpose of rallying voters, she is also—surprisingly to both conservative Christians and secular liberals—not shy about bringing it into the public square.

A lifelong Methodist, Mrs. Clinton has openly professed the basic fundamentals of the Christian faith, from the resurrection to the atoning death of Christ to the Trinity. She prays, reads the Bible, gets counsel from ministers, raised a Christian daughter, goes to church, and frequently attends and has even led Bible studies. Though she and her husband both have brazenly transformed church services into mini-political conventions, not even the most cynical right-winger would insist that Hillary and Bill were playing politics when they eagerly attended Sunday school as eight-year olds.

Hillary is a very liberal Christian. The greatest paradox of Mrs. Clinton is the way her Christian faith has reinforced her commitment to human rights when it comes to civil rights and children’s rights and even gay rights, but not the rights of unborn children. Her unmatched stridency on the abortion issue, where she refuses to draw a line even on partial-birth abortion, prompts many conservative Christians to question her not simply as an elected official but as a professing Christian.

It will surprise both sides to hear that Hillary has criticized those who misinterpret the separation of church and state. She says that “freedom of religion” should not mean “freedom from religion.” Like her husband, she has spoken in favor of prayer in public schools and cites Scripture in arguing that marriage should be restricted to a man and woman (though she seems increasingly ambivalent on this subject).

Generally, however, Hillary Clinton is a classic Religious Left politician. An early, largely unnoticed window into her spiritual thinking was a telling April 1996 keynote speech to the annual United Methodist General Conference. As was typical of Mrs. Clinton’s talks on religion, her speech made no reference to abortion, and neither did the introduction by Bishop Richard B. Wilke, for whom she had done legal work back in Arkansas. Yet again, there was no mention of unborn children in a speech focused on how children need justice, love, and compassion.

Mrs. Clinton began by talking about the church of her youth, about her mother and Sunday School, about Vacation Bible School, and even about some of her daughter Chelsea’s church experiences. All of that laid the groundwork for her theme, which secular liberals would condemn if Hillary were not one of their own: Christians, insisted Hillary, must “put into action what we believe” in all spheres of life, including the public sphere.

The first lady said she was “heartened” to learn that the Methodist Council of Bishops had renewed its call “to make the welfare of children a top priority.” “Children need us,” said Mrs. Clinton. She cited Jesus as the chief motivation in her government healthcare initiative: “We know so well what Jesus said to his disciples in Mark, holding a small child in his arms, that whoever welcomes one such child in my name, welcomes me, and whoever welcomes me, welcomes not me, but the one who sends me…. Take the image we have of Jesus—I can remember so clearly walking up the stairs so many times to my Sunday School class, and seeing that picture that is in so many Methodist churches, of Jesus as the Shepherd. Taking that face and transposing it onto the face of every child we see, then we would ask ourselves, ‘Would I turn that child away from the health care that child needs?’”

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pgsmith49
11/24/2007 1:36 PM
I wanted only to give my rating of the article, but after I hit one star (because there was nothing less to select that would truly reflect my negative reaction), I was appalled when the header showed that I had given it two stars. There seems to be no way to change it either. I guess that's the way it is in politics--someone else always seems to somehow manipulate things to suit their own preferences.

Now, to my point--I really have difficulty with the thought that Hillary Clinton can seriously wear the label of "Christian". I know some may want to challenge me with Matt. 7:1 (the "judge not" verse), yet later on in that discourse Jesus indicates that all one has to do is look at what is produced (fruit) by the individual(tree) to determine their legitimacy. A close look reveals too many thorns among the fruit for the things mentioned in the article to be anything more than pseudo grapes or figs. "Christian" translates into "righteous"--that's not created by just a few good works.
chedz
11/18/2007 4:42 PM
Um, Mrs. Clinton is running for elected office. she is aruguably one of the most ambitious politicians of the age. I don't buy that we are seeing anything insight into her faith. We are seeing insight on how she wishes to be perceived by Christians.
littlered4795118
11/16/2007 2:25 PM
I am dismayed that so many equate Christianity and the politics of the right. I was pleased to see your more careful analysis of Mrs. Clinton's positions. I am a Christian who is a registered Republican but I am increasingly becoming disenchanted with my party. The GOP position most attractive to me is the commitment to provide opportunities for others to better themselves, instead of just throwing money at a problem. However, I am seeing that as a GOP way of saying that we want to keep what we have and not spend any money investing in others. This does not jibe with my sense of Christian justice. Also, I am ambivalent about my position on abortion, but I think my thoughts might echo Mrs. Clinton's. I am opposed to abortion on principle, but I know that women will always have abortions, so I want them to be safe. For Christians it seems that abortion is the MAJOR issue Maybe if we settled some of the social issues, abortion would be less prevelant. God is not a Republican.
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