LYNCHBURG, VA. - Zeroing in on her evangelical base, Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann told 10,000 students at the nation's largest Christian university Wednesday not to compromise in their personal, spiritual or political beliefs.
"Don't settle, that's what Jesus says to us," the Minnesota Republican told a convocation of students at Liberty University, a religious school founded 40 years ago by the late televangelist Jerry Falwell.
Bachmann offered personal advice based on her own life, including a look inside her marriage to Twin Cities Christian therapist Marcus Bachmann, a close political adviser who accompanied her to the sprawling campus in the Virginia foothills.
"I respect my husband's leadership of our home," Bachmann told a smaller gathering of law and government students. "He respects me and what I bring to our marriage and relationship. He is the head of our home, and I'm not threatened by that, because I know this man loves me."
In response to a question from 23-year-old senior Sean Boden of Nathalie, Va., Bachmann said that she does not consider her quest for the presidency to violate fundamentalist doctrines about the submissive role of women in the church.
"I am not running to be anybody's spiritual authority," Bachmann said. "Scripture deals with scriptural authority. That doesn't in any way put me in spiritual authority over a man."
Boden said that the gender issue has been a concern among many evangelicals, but that he is a Bachmann fan. "I love the fact that she stands for her Christian values," Boden said. "She will stand strong even when she is standing alone."
Reaching out to evangelicals