Religion in the White House

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Second Annual Wolfe Lecture on Religion and American Politics

Kenneth L. Woodward
Former Religion Editor,听Newsweek

顿补迟别:听March 14, 2019

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Abstract

This lecture argues that most of the ways we听think about the relationships between religion and politics are wrong. First, Woodward will argue that no听connection can听be found between any American president鈥檚听religious faith, or lack of it, and his听foreign or domestic policy. Woodward will illustrate his argument by examining several recent听presidents who听were mistakenly thought to be basing at least some policies on听their听religious convictions. The second part of this lecture examines the so-called 鈥渞eligious vote.鈥 Woodward will pay particularly close attention to the Evangelical vote in the 2016 election, and offers all听the reasons,听other than听religion, why Trump won that vote.

Speaker Bio

Kenneth L. Woodward

Kenneth L. Woodward听was the Religion Editor of听狈别飞蝉飞别别办听for thirty eight years. Over the course of his distinguished career he has written more than 1,200 articles, essays, and reviews for a variety of publications, including seventy cover stories for听Newsweek. He is the author of four books, which have been translated into nine languages. His most recent, on which this lecture is partially based, is听Getting Religion: Faith, Culture, and Politics from the Age of Eisenhower to the Ascent of Trump.听听

Event Photos

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Kenneth L. Woodward delivers the Second Annual Wolfe Lecture on Religion and American Politics, entitled, "Religion in the White House."

Woodward displays his book

Woodward displays the book, Getting Religion: Faith, Culture, and Politics from the Age of Eisenhower to the Ascent of Trump (Convergent, 2017), on which his remarks were partially based.

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Photos by MTS Photography

Event Recap

What is the relationship, if any, between a president鈥檚 religious beliefs and policies? On Thursday, March 14th, the Boisi Center welcomed Kenneth L. Woodward, former religion editor for听Newsweek, to Boston College to address this question in the 2nd Annual Wolfe Lecture on Religion and American Politics on 鈥淩eligion in the White House.鈥 Woodward argued that a president鈥檚 personal religious convictions have little influence over foreign or domestic policies; rather, religion has often been used as a justification for political decisions.

Woodward opened by discussing prevalent misunderstandings embedded in the stories we tell ourselves regarding national and religious identities. While there is widespread belief that the thirteen original colonies were predominantly devout Christian communities, Woodward argued that, at best, the colonists practiced a 鈥渂aptized heathenism,鈥 with only small percent of institutionally religious. Woodward pressed that religion in the colonial and revolutionary periods served a primarily social function in that it molded the conscience of citizens and provided a framework for the social order. In other words, religion wasn鈥檛 practiced as a good in itself; it was instrumentalized as a useful foundation for the social order.

Woodward went on to tie this instrumentalization of religion to the U.S. presidency. Woodward pressed that the president鈥檚 personal religion has, primarily, been used as a tool of persuasion for already-calculated political decisions, having little causal impact on political policies themselves. Woodward offered a few examples, including President William McKinley and his dealings with the Philippines. After the Spanish were defeated and lost control of the Philippines, Mckinley had military, geographic, and political reasons to ensure the Philippines never came under the control of any other foreign entity. To justify his invasion of the Philippines, McKinley instrumentalized religion by claiming that it was essential to "christianize" the Filipino people, disregarding that the Philippines had been a Catholic country for over three hundred years.

Towards the end of his lecture, Woodward discussed the presidential election of 2016 and its ties to religion, especially evangelicals. Many have argued that since four out of five evangelical Christians voted for Trump, religion was a key factor in the last election. According to Woodward, this is a mistake, as exit polls only provide the profile of voters and their choices, not the reasons why they voted for that candidate. Woodward, instead, contends that evangelicals voted for Trump in the last election for two reasons, neither of which have to do directly with their religion. First, a deep dislike and a distrust in Hillary Clinton. Second, economic hardship and anxieties about the future; many Evangelicals have an income of less than $30,000 a year, and have seen little wage increase since the 1980鈥檚.听

The Q&A session was dedicated to the future of the Republican party, the role of national religious figures, such as Billy Graham, and their relationships to the president, and the role of religion in the lives of young adults today.

Read More

Books

Balmer, Randall Herbert.听God in the White House: A History: How Faith Shaped the Presidency from John F. Kennedy to George W. Bush.听1st ed. New York: HarperOne, 2008.

Bowman, Matthew Burton.听Christian: the Politics of a Word in America.听Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2018.

Dulk, Kevin R. den and Elizabeth Anne Oldmixon, ed.听Mediating Religion and Government: Political Institutions and the Policy Process. 1st ed. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014.

Margolis, Michel F.听From Politics to the Pews: How Partisanship and the Political Environment Shape Religious Identity.听Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2018.

McDougall, Walter A.听The Tragedy of U.S. Foreign Policy: How America鈥檚 Civil Religion Betrayed the National Interest. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2016. 听

Woodward, Kenneth L.听Getting Religion: Faith, Culture and Politics from the Age of Eisenhower to the Ascent of Trump. New York: Convergent Books, 2017.听 听

Articles

Alvarado, Emmanuel and Thomas C. Wilson, advisor. 鈥淏eyond Culture Wars: The role of Christian Religiosity in the Public Support for Social Safety Net Policies in Contemporary America.鈥 PhD diss., Florida Atlantic University, 2010.

Carmy, Shalom. 鈥淧ersonal Ethics, Public Virtue, and Political Legitimacy in Biblical Kings and American Presidents.鈥澨Presidential Studies Quarterly听40, no.1 (March 2010): 76-89.听DOI:听10.1111/j.1741-5705.2009.03734.x

Domke, David, Anthony Greenwald and Penelope Sheets. 鈥淕od and Country: The Partisan Psychology of the Presidency, Religion, and Nation.鈥澨Political Psychology听32, no. 3 (2011): 459-484.听DOI:听10.1111/j.1467-9221.2010.00820.x

Jung, Cindy. 鈥淭he Trump Exception: Christian Morals and the Presidency ( U.S. Election).鈥澨Harvard International Review听37, no. 4, (Summer 2016): 7-9.

Other

God in America. 听

In the News

滨苍听, Kelsey Dallas, the faith editor for Deseret News InDepth, interviewed Kenneth Woodward about his time as Newsweek鈥檚 religion editor during a time of enormous social change and today鈥檚 religion crisis. Woodward argues that religion is disappearing from today鈥檚 public life and notes the absence of 鈥渘ational religious heroes鈥.