In an era when Americans ask presidential candidates whether they prefer “boxers or briefs,” a candidate’s personal religious views should surely not be off-limits to questioners.
A contender who conceals his religious beliefs and practices is likely to conceal many other secrets from voters as well. Reasonably, Americans want to know as much about the person who seeks to represent and lead them as they can possibly find out.
It does not follow, however, that voters should cast ballots only for those who share their religious views. Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, Abraham Lincoln and numerous other great presidents won votes from those who utterly disagreed with their religious beliefs and practices. Repeatedly, Americans have elected presidents who did not share their religion, but did, in a deeper sense, share their faith.
So let us invite candidates to discuss their personal religious views, and if they regularly employ religious rhetoric, let them continue to do so. Far better for candidates to reveal themselves to voters – even down to their taste in underwear – than for us to elect a president whose values, faith, and ultimate concerns remain a riddle.
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