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Interview

Q & A: Marco Rubio on His Faith of Many Colors

The Florida senator's religious background takes many shapes, but he knows how it translates into policy.
Photo by Susana Raab

Q & A: Marco Rubio on His Faith of Many Colors

As speculation has grown over who Mitt Romney will pick as his running mate, Florida Senator Marco Rubio has topped nearly every list. Rubio has also drawn attention with the release of his memoir, An American Son, as well as his brief time in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, his baptism into the Roman Catholic Church, and his ties to an evangelical church. Christianity Today online editor Sarah Pulliam Bailey spoke with Rubio about his diverse faith background, how his faith influences his policy positions, and why Christians should be involved in the public square.

You were baptized as a Mormon and then as a Roman Catholic. Can you describe your faith journey?

My mother desperately wanted to give her kids a wholesome environment, and we were born into a traditional Catholic family. We had extended family members who were and remain active members of the LDS church, which does provide a very wholesome environment. We joined the church for a little less than three years when I was very young, after we moved to Las Vegas in 1979. I'm not sure my mom ever fully understood the church theologically. As a family we were never fully immersed in it because my father didn't buy in, so there are many intricacies to the faith that we never really got involved in. By the time I was in sixth grade, we had left the Mormon Church and gone back to Catholicism, and I did my First Communion on Christmas Day 1984.

And you attended an evangelical church for a period of time?

Sometime in 2000, I unfortunately got really busy with my political stuff. I perhaps didn't do a good job of spiritually leading my family, which is one of the roles I play alongside my wife. In the meantime, my wife and my sister found an excellent local church, Christ Fellowship. It does a phenomenal job on two fronts: bringing people to Jesus, and teaching the written Word through phenomenal preachers. And it has a fantastic children's program. For a period of time, it became our church home almost exclusively. I felt called back to Catholicism around 2004, but have maintained the relationship with Christ Fellowship and attend their services often or listen to the podcasts.

'I really don't endorse criticisms of the President's faith.' -Marco Rubio

Did you have a conversion moment when you acknowledged your sins and Jesus' death on the cross?

There has never been a moment when faith hasn't been an important part of my life. There have been moments when I've been more alive in my faith than others. There have been times when I've been more involved in my faith, dedicating more to it, and giving it more importance. Like everybody else, unfortunately, it's usually in time of need that we tend to turn to our faith.

It would be unfair to say I had a moment of conversion. But one moment when my faith journey took on a different aspect was when my children became a bit older. I recognized that perhaps the most important part of my job in raising them is that I have only a handful of years to influence them and to inspire in them the knowledge of Jesus, Christianity, and what it means for salvation. If I fail in that regard, everything else becomes less meaningful.

Would you describe yourself as an evangelical?

I'm a Roman Catholic. I'm theologically in line with the Roman Catholic Church. I believe in the authority of the church, but I also have tremendous respect for my brothers and sisters in other Christian faiths. I recognize, as the Catholic Church does, that there are excellent teachings of the Word throughout other denominations. The elements of salvation are found in these churches as well. Some unifying principles bind all Christians: that God became a man and died for our sins, and that without that sacrifice, all of us would be doomed.


From Issue:
July/August 2012, Vol. 56, No. 7, Pg 34, "Marco Rubio's Faith of Many Colors"
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Comments

Displaying 1–3 of 6 comments

Maria Olafsdottir

March 18, 2013  5:48am

Mr. Warner commented: "The contraception question has nothing to do with religious freedom of individuals to practice their faith as they see fit. It has to do with desire of some religious organizations to discriminate against their employees and not provide benefits or choices that normal employees are entitled to." This is untrue. "Normal employees" have never been entitled to employer-funded contraception-- a novelty imposed by Obamacare. A government mandate that a person or organization pay for items that the payer finds sinful and abhorrent is an assault on religious freedom. Under Obamacare, individual Christians must pay for insurance coverage for abortion, contraception, transgender treatments, and for other "treatments" they find sinful and abhorrent, and that they will never use. This is pure tyrrany.

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Maria Olafsdottir

March 18, 2013  5:45am

Mr. Warner wrote re: same sex marriage "if you don't believe in it, don't do it." Christians are concerned with children who are placed with same sex couples. Homosexual child sexual abuse far exceeds heterosexual. I have seen photos online of toddlers with "two dads." The affliction on that child's face was hauntingly sorrowful and despairing. Why, if, in the 60's, a marriage license was seen as a useless piece of paper, is marriage so sought after by homosexuals now? Why are they not satisfied with "civil unions"? Is marriage seen by some homosexuals as a stepping stone to legitimizing their access to children? Christian opposition to same sex "marriage" is not about a denial of "civil rights." It is about the safety of children, and that should be brought out. The public debate is silent on the safety of children from homosexual predators.

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Steve Skeete

June 19, 2012  4:57pm

In response to this article my view is that the questions put to Mr. Rubio were tame and the answers provided very diplomatic. Mr. Rubio was not pushed, nor were the questions probing nor searching. He was allowed throughout to get away with superficial answers. There was nothing robust about the questioning and nothing forth-coming about the answers. Ms. Bailey appeared to be either limited or restrained from taking Mr. Rubio beyond certain areas of comfort and safety. As a result, for someone like me who does not know much about him, I remain at a lost when he speaks of “failures”, “faults” and “real mistakes" and imperfections. Ms. Bailey also failed to help by assuming that the “irregularities” and “financial slip-ups” he mentions are common knowledge. The interview appeared to move along mechanically and inexorably towards some designed course. At the end, I really do not know much about Rubio the potential Vice Presidential candidate, and precious little about his faith.

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