Vice President J.D. Vance , a convert to Catholicism whose faith has been central to his adult life, writes about his religious journey in a new book that could ultimately serve as a sort of origin story for a future presidential campaign.
“Communion: Finding My Way Back to Faith” comes out Tuesday from Harper , and The Associated Press obtained a copy ahead of its release. The HarperCollins imprint also put out “Hillbilly Elegy,” the best-selling memoir from 2016 that helped make Vance a national figure.
Vance has been working on and off on his new book since then, a tumultuous decade that included a Hollywood movie about his youth, a short stint as a U.S. senator from Ohio and now vice president to Donald Trump .
There’s not a lot about Trump or other insider stories from Vance’s political years, although he does express regret for criticizing the Democratic Party’s “childless cat ladies,” a comment that came back to haunt him while Trump’s running mate.
Instead, “Communion” serves as a sort of manifesto for the role of religion in public life. Vance writes about transitioning from Protestant Christianity to atheism to Catholicism, and he credits his faith with giving him a sense of purpose he didn’t get through his education at Yale University or working in the financial industry.
The book hits shelves less than five months before the midterm elections that will shape the final two years of Trump’s second presidency. The midterms will also mark the unofficial start of the next presidential campaign, in which Vance is expected to be a contender.
Vance recalled ‘fusion’ between religion and politics
Vance wrote how he witnessed “the fusion between Republican politics and the Christianity of my youth.” At that time, Vance wrote, “I heard a fair amount about the evils of abortion and homosexuality,” as well as then-President Bill Clinton’s “rumored moral failings.”
Alongside these religious observations, Vance said he felt he was “starting to witness the beginning of a fissure in the Republican Party: between its business elites and its religious rank and file.” That’s something, Vance went on, that would “eventually lead to my election as vice president.”
Vance’s grandmother - his mamaw, as he calls her - was a central figure in his life, and her death led to an atrophying of his Christianity.
“With her gone, no one really cared about my faith, and soon I stopped caring, too,” he wrote. Christianity became “completely irrelevant” to him, including when he served in Iraq in the Marine Corps.
At the end of his service in 2006, Vance wrote that he “was no longer, in any real sense, a Christian.”
A near-death experience helped shape Vance’s faith
Returning to his military base after his grandmother’s funeral, Vance wrote that he lost control of his car on a rain-slicked road, but inexplicably stopped before hurtling into a guardrail and potentially over the side of a mountain.
He said it was “the closest I’ve ever come to a supernatural experience,” and the feeling remained “even during my later years as a strident atheist.”
As his military service wrapped up, a colleague introduced Vance to the work of author Ayn Rand, whose notion of the virtuousness of selfishness stood “in as stark opposition to Christian morality as anything I’d ever read.” This notion appealed to Vance, he wrote, noting that Rand’s philosophy “filled a void left by the faith I’d discarded” and that he became a “self-professed atheist and meritocrat.”
“I didn’t care about God’s will,” he wrote. “I cared about my own.”
‘I will marry this girl’
Immediately struck by his now-wife Usha Vance , the vice president wrote that he told a friend he thought he was “obsessed” with her while they were in law school together. He praised her intensity, intelligence and curiosity.
“I will marry this girl,” he wrote. “Or I will be a lifelong bachelor.”
He also wrote how their discussion about death, sparked by Joan Didion’s “The Year of Magical Thinking,” highlighted their different views on the afterlife - she was worried by it and he wasn’t, even in his atheist years.
“Usha, like Didion, dreaded neither the ‘loss of heaven’ nor ’the pains of hell’ for the most logical of reasons: She simply didn’t think they exist. I came to believe in both, but I still didn’t find either particularly motivating,” he wrote.
Peter Thiel was a turning point
In the midst of this, Vance wrote that he attended a talk by Peter Thiel, a Silicon Valley investor who would become one of Vance’s early political backers. He was impressed by Thiel’s discussion of hypercompetition among professionals, accompanied by “technological stagnation.”
“Possibly the smartest person I’d ever met, he identified very openly as a Christian,” Vance wrote, adding that Thiel “defied the simple social template I had constructed - that dumb people were religious and smart people were atheists.”
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