Vice President JD Vance Speaks at Religious Freedom Summit Praying for Better Protection of "the dignity of all peoples" and Quotes Tertullian - FULL TEXT + Video
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The International Religious Freedom Summit, held from Feb. 4-5th in Washington D.C., brought together a broad coalition of partners that passionately supports religious freedom around the globe for an annual two-day in-person event. These 90+ organizations represent over 30 distinct faith traditions and are the core of the civil society movement to advance international religious freedom around the globe. Over the past three years, the Summit partners have built a diverse coalition that is working to advance freedom of religion, conscience, and belief around the world. But even as the movement for international religious freedom grows, we are witnessing increased levels of religious restriction and persecution around the world. Raising voices in solidarity with those who suffer due to their beliefs is more important than ever. This years summit had just over 1500 attendees from 41 countries, and 168 speakers. (IRF Summit)
Officials, and of course, many survivors of religious persecution, thank you all for convening and participating in this summit, which is on a topic whose importance unfortunately grows with each passing moment, will hopefully be aided by our new administration.
Please be seated. I always feel weird when people are standing to hear me speak; it's not going to be that good. Ladies and gentlemen, please have a seat. Religious freedom, of course, is the freedom to practice one's own faith and act according to one's own conscience, and it's the bedrock of civil society in the United States of America and across the world. We know that in America, faith nurtures our communities at home and abroad. It fosters a love for one's neighbors, inspires generosity and service, and calls us to treat one another with dignity, to lift up those in need, and to build nations grounded in moral principle. In America, our founding fathers rightly recognized this, listing freedom of religion first among the liberties enshrined in our great Constitution. Before he was elected president, John Adams, who was the first vice president, observed that politicians quote, "May plan and speculate for Liberty, but it is religion and morality alone which can establish the principles upon which Freedom can securely stand." That's an important lesson for any lawmaker.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, it was the same church father who is credited with first coining the phrase "religious liberty." Decades later, another Christian apologist would advise Emperor Constantine, "Religion cannot be imposed by force. The matter must be carried on by words rather than by blows." This line of thought runs from the early church fathers to the modern era, where we recognize that we can't force our faith on anybody. America's founders recognized that their own writings were in dialogue with these philosophical predecessors. In his personal correspondence, Adams himself made references to both Tertullian and other church fathers. Thomas Jefferson owned an edition of Tertullian's collected writings, which he marked up, and which today sits in the Library of Congress. In fact, in a personal copy of his own Notes on the State of Virginia, Jefferson went so far as to handwrite Tertullian's quote about faith in the margins of a passage on religious liberty. This is the legacy that has guided America's political principles from the founding to this very day. We remain the world's largest majority-Christian country, and the right to religious freedom is protected by the people for everybody, whether you're Christian, Jewish, Muslim, or of no faith at all.
Religious liberty is not simply about legal safeguards; it is also about fostering a culture in which faith can thrive, so that men and women can fully appreciate and respect the God-given rights of their fellow citizens. One of the wonderful apparent paradoxes of religion is that in connecting us to the sacred and to the universal, it deepens our commitment to the particular, to our neighbors, to our obligations to one another, to the individual communities that all of us call home. I know that many of you came from all over our country, and I know that I come from a poor part of our country. Growing up, my family and I were Christians, but we weren't regular churchgoers. My grandmother, who raised me, was a deeply faithful woman in her own way, but she was skeptical of institutionalized religion and rarely attended Sunday services herself. But on the occasions when we did go, whether it was with her or later with my father to his Pentecostal church in Southwestern Ohio, and certainly now as a member of my own congregation, I was always struck by what I saw. My grandma once told me that in the area of Eastern Kentucky where she grew up, even the Episcopalians were snake handlers. I don't know if that was true, but that was just Grandma's little spin on her own community. Think about it: church was a place, and still is, where people of different races, different backgrounds, and different walks of life came together in commitment to their shared communities and, of course, in commitment to their God. It was a place where the CEO of a company and the worker of a company stood equal before their worship of God. It was a place where people united not just in the pews, but in acts of service, on mission trips, charity drives, and in rallying around one another in times of sickness or grief, or, of course, in celebration of new life. Are these not the kinds of bonds and virtues that lawmakers today should strive to cultivate?
I'm pleased to say that they certainly were in the first administration, and they will be even more so in the second. In his first term, the cause of advancing religious freedom was central to his foreign policy in China, across Europe, and throughout Africa and the Middle East. The first administration took critical steps to protect the rights of the faithful, whether that was by rescuing pastors who were persecuted by foreign regimes or bringing relief to the Yezidi Christians and other faith communities facing genocidal terror from ISIS. In his domestic policy, the first term brought a new high watermark for religious Americans. He took decisive action to defend religious liberty, combat anti-Semitism, and preserve the conscience rights of hospital workers and faith-based ministries as they provided care to their fellow Americans, and to remove barriers for religious organizations and businesses to contract with the federal government. You shouldn't have to leave your faith at the door of your people's government, and under his leadership, you won't have to.
We are only in the third week of his second term, but I think it's safe to say we've accomplished maybe more in the last two weeks than a lot of administrations have in a few years. This administration is intent on not just restoring but on expanding the achievements of the first four years, and certainly of the last two weeks. In this short period, the president has issued orders to end the weaponization of the federal government against religious Americans, pardon pro-life protesters who were unjustly imprisoned under the last administration, and, importantly, stop the federal censorship used to prevent Americans from speaking their conscience and speaking their mind, whether it's in their communities or online. Our administration believes we must stand for religious freedom not just as a legal principle, as important as that is, but as a lived reality both within our own borders and especially outside. In recent years, our nation's international engagement on religious liberty issues has been corrupted and distorted to the point of absurdity. How did America get to the point where we're sending hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars abroad to NGOs that are dedicated to spreading atheism all over the globe? That is not what leadership on protecting the rights of the faithful looks like. This must change.
Part of our protecting religious freedom initiatives means recognizing in our foreign policy the difference between regimes that respect religious freedom and those that do not. The United States must be able to make that distinction. We must be able to look at catastrophes like the plight of Iraq's Christians over the past three decades and possess the moral clarity to act when something has gone wrong. This administration stands ready to do so. Thankfully, the president chose to nominate a secretary of state, one of my dear friends and I believe one of the great living champions of religious liberty across the globe, a person whose dedication to religious liberty flows from his faith in the same way that mine does. That's our great secretary of state, Marco Rubio, confirmed 99 to nothing by the US Senate. But both at home and abroad, we have much more to do to more fully secure religious liberty for all people of faith. I am grateful for the painstaking work that everyone in this room has poured into that effort. I pray that together we will be able to better protect the dignity of all peoples as well as the rights of all believers to practice their faith according to the dictates of their conscience. Thank you all for your work in preserving religious liberty. Thank you for safeguarding the rights of faith communities across the globe. And thank you most of all for believing, because we know that the source of religious liberty is the recognition that all of us are equal under the rights and laws of God, and that principle will guide us in the years to come. God bless you all. Thank you for having me.
Sources: https://www.irfroundtable.org/event-calendar/irf-summit-2025
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