“You know, the term ‘Christian’ means different things to different people,” Romney told me. “Jews aren’t Christian. That doesn’t preclude a Jew from being able to run for office and become president. I believe that Jesus Christ is the savior of the world and is the son of God. Now, some people say, well, that doesn’t necessarily make you a Christian because Christian refers to a certain group of evangelical Christian faiths. That’s fine. That’s their view. Others say, no, anyone who believes in Jesus Christ as the son of God and the Savior should be called Christian. That’s fine, too. I’ll just describe what I believe and not try to distinguish my faith from others. That’s really something for my faith to do and for the churches amongst themselves to consider.” ~Byron York
You would think that Christian conservatives would have a hard time swallowing this “I’m OK, You’re OK” approach to defining basic terms. I suppose this is the sort of relativistic babble you end up having when you start out from a position of espousing shared “values,” but Romney is making a mistake here. He will not say directly that he believes Mormons are Christians, which he seems to believe, but he doesn’t want to say that those who think otherwise are mistaken. This attempt to have it both ways is going to dissatisfy a lot of Christian and Mormon voters alike.
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November 20th, 2007 at 7:24 am
M.Z. Forrest
I think the ambiguity helps him, at least until someone desires to systematically correct it. “anyone who believes in Jesus Christ as the son of God and the Savior should be called Christian,” is about as close as you can come to an Evangelical statement of faith without actually making one. For people not aware of the fine distinctions in comparative religion and people of good will generally, I think this will be sufficient. (While rejecting Trinitarian belief seems to be a rather coarse distinction to me, I’m afraid for others it is a fine distinction.) With the Evangelical leadership that has endorsed him, I’m not sure those distinctions are going to be made. This doesn’t take away the very realistic ceiling he has due to those who won’t vote for a Mormon. Given his polling in Iowa and other states he has campaigned, he appears to have enough voters to compete for the nomination.