Q & A: Bill Frist

The Senate Majority Leader on key moral issues.

Why do we need laws regulating cloning and abortion?

In The Abolition of Man, C. S. Lewis warned that in conquering nature, nature is actually conquering mankind. The question facing us in this postmodern era is, Are we eternal souls made in God’s image, or just flesh and blood with only darkness at the end of our lives on earth? If human beings are special—if we are truly sacred—then we must not do evil to bring about good. The secret of human dignity is living within limits—moral limits that don’t hamper human advances, but promote them.

The House passed the Unborn Victims of Violence Act on February 26, and you support it. Why?

This bill recognizes that when a criminal attacks a pregnant woman and kills her unborn child, he has claimed not just one, but two, precious human lives.

Will the Senate attempt to pass a constitutional amendment defining what a marriage is?

There’s a second critical question facing our nation: What is family? Our Founders assumed the answer was obvious. They didn’t write into the Constitution the definition of family, because it wasn’t even an open question. But the activist judges in Massachusetts are intent on destroying the traditional definition of family. Marriage should not be redefined by activist judges. We will do whatever it takes to protect, preserve, and strengthen the institution of marriage against activist judges. If that means we must amend the Constitution, we will do it.

There seem to be continuous battles over the freedom of religious expression. What is at stake in this conflict?

We are a pluralist nation, as we should be. Government can’t make people religious or devout, but it can and must get out of the way and let religion flourish. Attempts to denude the public square of all religious expression betray a misunderstanding of the role of religion in a pluralist nation.

Copyright © 2004 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

Past Q&A columns include:

Franklin Graham | President of Samaritan’s Purse on Sudan (Feb. 16, 2004)

Frist’s web site has more information about the senator.

Also in this issue

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Cover Story

There's Just Something About This Man

Mark Allen Powell

He Is Risen

Compiled by Richard A. Kauffman

Emerging from the Shadows

Runo Samuelson in Baghdad

Evangelical Drift

Faith-based Child Abuse?

Corrie Cutrer

You Are or You Aren't

Answered by Erik Thoennes

Healing Genocide

Timothy C. Morgan

Life Imitates Art

Reviewed by Cindy Crosby

Mixing Religion and Politics

David Karanja in Nairobi

My Two Dads? Not in Florida

John W. Kennedy

News

Quotation Marks

Decalogue Debacle

Scholarship Wars

Sheryl Henderson Blunt in Washington, with 'CT' staff reports

Shaping Up Flabby Finances

Reviewed by Cindy Crosby

Spotlight on Sexism

Reviewed by Cindy Crosby

State of the Unions

Mark Stricherz in Washington

The <em>Christianity Today</em> News Wrap

CT Staff

The Language of Sin

Reviewed by Cindy Crosby

The Missions of Business

Reviewed by John P. Cragin

Pilgrims to Nowhere

A Justice that Restores

An interview with Howard Zehr

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An Arts Festival in the Heartland

By Mark Allen Powell

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Passages

By CT Staff

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Witnessing with The Passion

Ken Walker

Wire Story

Plan B (for Bad)

Lisa Griffin and Baptist Press

Review

Joan of Arcadia

Douglas Leblanc

A Captivating Vision

An interview with Paul Hattaway

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Go Figure

Forgiveness 101

Timothy C. Morgan

Border Crackdown

Timothy R. Callahan

A Copt at College

Amending Marriage

Tony Carnes

Lip Service

Jeff M. Sellers

Editorial

'The Longest Hatred'

A Christianity Today Editorial

A Bridge Over Troubled People

Deann Alford

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Crash-Helmet Christianity

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