Political Hotsheet
By

Brian Montopoli /

CBS News/ May 11, 2012, 6:00 AM

Romney poised for pilgrimage to Liberty University

Billy Hathorn,Wikimedia Commons

Updated 8:42 a.m. Eastern Time

(CBS News) On Saturday, presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney will travel to Lynchburg, Virginia, to deliver the commencement address at the evangelical Christian university founded in 1971 by the late televangelist Jerry Falwell Sr.: Liberty University.

Liberty - which was founded under the name Lynchburg Baptist College - identifies itself as the largest Christian university in the world, and it has become a go-to setting for Republican presidential candidates eager to appeal to evangelicals. Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush and John McCain all made the trip to Liberty, with Mr. Bush offering the commencement address while in the White House. Saturday will mark Romney's first visit to the school.

In the past year, several 2012 Republican presidential primary candidates used visits to Liberty to spotlight their faith. Michele Bachmann delivered an intensely personal and religious speech during which she told students, "don't settle for anything less than what this great and mighty God has planned for you." Rick Perry offered something akin to a sermon, telling students, "My faith journey is not the story of someone who turned to God because I wanted to. It is because I had nowhere else to turn." 

For Romney, who is Mormon, faith is a delicate issue. Some Christians do not believe that Mormonism is a legitimate branch of Christianity; One prominent Dallas pastor, Dr. Robert Jefress, referred to Mormonism as a "theological cult" while introducing Perry at last year's "Values Voters Summit." Though Mormons believe in the divinity of Jesus Christ - the full name of the church is the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints - they treat The Book of Mormon, a text unique to Mormonism, as divine scripture on equal footing with the Bible. A prominent leader in the Southern Baptist Convention, Richard Land, stops short of calling Mormonism a cult outright but says, "I wouldn't call it a cult but it claims to be Christian and isn't. It's theology is like a cult but socially and culturally it doesn't act like a cult." One poll last year found that one in five Americans say they do not feel comfortable with Romney's faith. 

When it was posted to Liberty's Facebook page, the announcement that Romney would give Liberty's commencement address prompted hundreds of comments, some of which criticized the university for inviting Romney. Many critics charged that Mormonism goes against the teachings at Liberty, where, as CNN reported last month, one freshman textbook includes a passage that reads: "Mormon doctrine stands in stark contrast to Jewish and Christian monotheism, which teaches that there is only one true God and that every other 'God' is a false god." Liberty student Braedon Wilkerson complained that the school is "sacrificing the Bible for the Republican party." 

Liberty ended up removing the announcement from its Facebook page, with Chancellor Jerry Falwell, Jr. saying that the critics were either supporters of rival candidates or "online students who were not as familiar with Liberty University's traditions." (Liberty says it has more than 12,000 students on campus and more than 70,000 enrolled online.) The chairman of the Liberty board's executive committee told the Richmond Times-Dispatch that Falwell Sr. would have been proud to have Romney as a guest.

Liberty is an obvious forum for Romney to address concerns about his faith to an evangelical audience. But he appears unlikely to do so. In excerpts released by the Romney campaign Friday morning, Romney offered up a variation on his now-familiar attacks on the president, tailored to the forum: "I'm not sure quite why, but lately I've found myself thinking about life in four-year stretches. And let's just say that not everybody has filled these past four years with as much achievement as you have."

Romney does not address his faith in the excerpts; the closest he comes is when he says "the best cultural assets are values as basic as personal responsibility, the dignity of hard work, and, above all, the commitments of family."

Sources inside his campaign say the candidate, who largely avoided discussing his faith during the GOP primary campaign, does not plan to make a major speech on Mormonism during the general election, either.

They say Romney gave that speech already, when he was a presidential candidate four years ago, when he said "I believe in my Mormon faith and I endeavor to live by it."

"My faith is the faith of my fathers," Romney continued in the December, 2007 speech in Texas. "I'll be true to them and to my beliefs. There's one fundamental question about which I'm often asked: What do I believe about Jesus Christ? I believe that Jesus Christ is the son of God and the savior of mankind."

"I will take care to separate the affairs of government from any religion, but I will not separate us from the God who gave us liberty," he added.

Romney struggled to connect with evangelical voters during the Republican primary fight, with evangelicals largely rallying around Rick Santorum instead. In a general election matchup with President Obama, however, he is widely expected to win the support of evangelical voters. Jeffries, the pastor who called Mormonism a cult, said last month that "[g]iven the choice between a Christian like Barack Obama who embraces very unbiblical principles like abortion and a Mormon like Mitt Romney who supports biblical values like the sanctity of life and marriage, I think there's a good biblical case for voting for Mitt Romney."

Romney's remarks at Liberty - which in 2009 revoked its recognition of the campus College Democrats because the club's "parent organization stands against the moral principles" held by the university - are expected to come before more than 14,000 graduates and more 34,000 people overall. Liberty says the remarks, in the university's football stadium, will also be streamed to its more than 70,000 online students.  

They will also be featured prominently in local media outlets -- and since Liberty is in Virginia, one of the most important battleground states of the 2012 election, Romney has an extra incentive to steer clear of controversy. Instead of wading into the culture wars or the debate that broke out over his invitation to the university, expect the candidate to largely offer friendly advice and his standard message of economic competence.

In the remarks released by the campaign, Romney talks about the importance of raising children well and hints to the graduates that if he is elected, their future will be brighter.

"Although opportunities seem scarce in this economy, it is not for nothing that you have spent this time preparing," he plans to say. "America needs your talent and your energy, all the more now that our country's in a tough spot. For you and so many young Americans, our current troubles can be discouraging. You are ready for jobs that were supposed to be ready for you. Millions wait on the day when there are jobs for everyone willing to work, and opportunities to match your hopes and your goals. But don't lose heart, because that day is coming."

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
30 Comments Add a Comment
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thomasmc1957 says:
No surprise that the Bigot Candidate would speak at Bigot U.
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omnibus66 says:
"Religion is the opiate of the people" - Karl Marx

An opiate is something that dulls, blinds, desensitizes, but gives a sense of well-being. A very good description of religion. And best of all, it gives the religious leaders complete control while raking in copious amounts of money. Who could ask for more?
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freevoices replies:
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You're quoting Karl Marx?? REALLY?!?!?
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1stlttightwad says:
Your choice. Vote for Romney who is a Christian and lives a moral life and has been successful. Or vote for Obama, whose motives and real beliefs are hidden..Take a look at Obama's photos from August 2011...He is not wearing his watch OR his wedding band...Hmmm, Muslims during the celebration of Ramadan(August) may NOT WEAR ANY JEWELRY.. This was noticed by the press corp and Jay Carney said,"The presidents watch is in for repair" WHAT REPAIR DID HIS WEDDING BAND NEED? And oh yeah, get this.....Obama has never been baptised as a Christian.
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Cincinnatifan says:
The Mormam-ite visits the Falwell-ites. Let them stew in each others vile natures.
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Mormons-Are-Christian says:
If there had been no Nicene Creed or Emperor Constantine, Evangelicals' theology would be quite similar to Mitt Romney's In fact, there would likely be no need for the Mormon Church to restore Jesus Christ's church. Mormons' theology is based on New Testament Christianity, not Fourth Century Creeds. For example, the Church of Jesus Christ (LDS) views on Baptism, Lay Ministry, the Trinity, Theosis, Grace vs. Works, the Divinity of Jesus Christ are closer to Early Christianity than any other denomination. And Mormon teenagers have been judged to "top the charts" in Christian Characteristics by a UNC-Chapel Hill study. Read about it here:

http://MormonsAreChristian.blogspot.com/

According to a 2012 Pew Forum poll of members of the Church of Jesus Christ (LDS) 98 percent said they believe in the Resurrection of Jesus Christ, and 97 percent say their church is a Christian religion. They volunteer 7 times as many hours as does the general population, according to a 2012 University of Pennsylvania study. Mormons have a better understanding of Christianity than any other denomination, according to a 2010 Pew Forum poll:

http://www.pewforum.org/Other-Beliefs-and-Practices/U-S-Religious-Knowledge-Survey.aspx

11 of the signers of the Declaration of Independence (including several presidents) were non-Trinitarian Christians. Those who now insist on their Fourth Century Trinitarian and salvation-only- by-grace definition of Christianity for candidates for public office are doing our Republic an injustice.
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lillyhorton says:
I believe Romney is disqualified due to actions in Maine.
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ju78iklo9 says:
Is Mean-Spirited thinking he'll uncover bible-thumping, stone-throwing, GOP gay-hating proselytes?
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Muleshoe2 says:
It's amazing to me that the religious right can't see how Republicans use them and throw them away every election cycle.

At least one Liberty student had the nerve to point out his school is sucking up to the GOP. Nice work, kid, now sit back and see what the GOP ever does for you (unless your Daddy is a one-percenter).

Then again, it's also amazing to me that those same people can't see how the dollars they donate to those TV hucksters they call preachers might as well be set on fire.

As a different kind of TV personality says, "If you could reason with religious people, there wouldn't BE any religious people."
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skeezix06 replies:
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Rule of thumb. If they're not TV, they're almost certainly not really christian.
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greenlantern1 says:
George Romney claimed that ne was brainwashed.
Was he brainwashed or was he a liar?
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smirk5 says:
Romney will show up in his church-sanctioned magic underwear to talk to those crazy Christian cultists that actually believe that the holy trinity isn't 3 separate Gods.
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1stlttightwad replies:
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Hmmm, doesn't the Catholics prayer go...In the name of the Father, AND,the SON, AND the Holy Ghost. Seem like 3 separate to me.
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