When politics meets spirituality, sparks fly! Vivek Ramaswamy just turned a pointed question about his Hindu faith into a fiery mic-drop moment at a Charlie Kirk event.
Asked why a Hindu would dive into conservative politics, Ramaswamy shot back: "I’m not running to be a pastor, I’m running to lead this country."
Sharing a viral video on X, Ramaswamy said, "Started as a very awkward moment when a young man questioned my faith. Ended with a beautiful moment of education & a celebration of our Constitution. Only in America."
A participant named Liam Birmingham asked Ramaswamy why a "polytheistic ideology" like Hinduism would share "Christian values."
Ramaswamy responded by clarifying that he is a monotheist from the Vendanta tradition of Advaita philosophy. “With due respect, I’ll just cut in right there because it’s one thing I have a little bit of authority on. I believe in this one true God from the Vedanta tradition of Advaita philosophy," he told Birmingham.
And he continued, "I believe there's one true God. He resides in all of us and he appears in different forms, but it's one true God. So I'm an ethical monotheist. That's the way I would describe my faith. Now I will tell you, I'm not running to be pastor of Ohio. I'm running to be governor of Ohio. And I didn't run to be pastor of America. I ran to be president of the United States of America."
Drawing parallels with Christianity, Ramaswamy highlighted the conceptual similarity between the Hindu understanding of divine manifestations and the Christian doctrine of the Holy Trinity.
“Doesn’t make you a polytheist, does it?” he questioned, adding that both faiths reconcile “the one and the many.” The exchange took a different turn when Ramaswamy invited Birmingham on stage, commended him for his question, and handed him a copy of the US Constitution.
He requested the young man to read Article VI, Clause 3 aloud, which states that "no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States."
The crowd went wild, the clip went viral, and suddenly America is talking about faith, freedom, and who gets to lead.
Asked why a Hindu would dive into conservative politics, Ramaswamy shot back: "I’m not running to be a pastor, I’m running to lead this country."
Sharing a viral video on X, Ramaswamy said, "Started as a very awkward moment when a young man questioned my faith. Ended with a beautiful moment of education & a celebration of our Constitution. Only in America."
Started as a very awkward moment when a young man questioned my faith. Ended with a beautiful moment of education & a celebration of our Constitution. Only in America. ❤️ 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/AxZJbvcbqL
— Vivek Ramaswamy (@VivekGRamaswamy) October 8, 2025
A participant named Liam Birmingham asked Ramaswamy why a "polytheistic ideology" like Hinduism would share "Christian values."
Ramaswamy responded by clarifying that he is a monotheist from the Vendanta tradition of Advaita philosophy. “With due respect, I’ll just cut in right there because it’s one thing I have a little bit of authority on. I believe in this one true God from the Vedanta tradition of Advaita philosophy," he told Birmingham.
And he continued, "I believe there's one true God. He resides in all of us and he appears in different forms, but it's one true God. So I'm an ethical monotheist. That's the way I would describe my faith. Now I will tell you, I'm not running to be pastor of Ohio. I'm running to be governor of Ohio. And I didn't run to be pastor of America. I ran to be president of the United States of America."
Drawing parallels with Christianity, Ramaswamy highlighted the conceptual similarity between the Hindu understanding of divine manifestations and the Christian doctrine of the Holy Trinity.
“Doesn’t make you a polytheist, does it?” he questioned, adding that both faiths reconcile “the one and the many.” The exchange took a different turn when Ramaswamy invited Birmingham on stage, commended him for his question, and handed him a copy of the US Constitution.
He requested the young man to read Article VI, Clause 3 aloud, which states that "no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States."
The crowd went wild, the clip went viral, and suddenly America is talking about faith, freedom, and who gets to lead.
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