Marshalltown, IA – Voter after voter that turned out to Senator Marco Rubio’s event at a local community center, many from the same church, said they were there to answer one question: “Which nominee will represent my faith?” “I want to hear their beliefs, their faith in God, their Christianity and relationship with Christ,” Jodi Smith, 36, said as she waited with her husband and two young boys for Rubio’s event to begin.
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Smith, who is also considering Ted Cruz and Ben Carson, wasn’t disappointed. Rubio, a Catholic who was raised Mormon for a stretch and also attends his wife’s Baptist Church, took a question from an audience member on how to “get us back to our Judeo-Christian roots” and dove into a rousing testimony to the importance of religion. “When I’m done teaching you what my faith teaches, you’re going to hope that my faith influences me,” Rubio said, “because my faith teaches me that I have a moral obligation to care for the less fortunate.” He recalled how Jesus instructed his followers to help the poor and sick. He said he prayed for Solomon’s wisdom as a leader. He talked about how prayer helped his family through the campaign, where he was often separated from his children, and how the prayers of his supporters touched his heart. “The prayers of the righteous are incredibly powerful,” he said. “God listens to those petitions.” The crowd watched rapt in silence – then rose to applaud and stayed there, standing and cheering for some time. Rubio’s religious vocabulary is one of his many political assets. But the big news of the day on the faith front was the surprise news that Liberty University president Jerry Falwell Jr. had endorsed Donald Trump, a thrice-married casino billionaire who was pro-choice until relatively recently and told an evangelical conference in Iowa last year he never asks God for forgiveness.
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