Dayton Daily News

Judeo-Christian values take center stage during Solid Rock political rally

- By Josh Sweigart Staff Writer Contact this reporter at (937) 554-0876 or email josh.sweigart@coxinc.com.

Speakers and attendees at a rally at Solid Rock Church in Lebanon Monday spoke about supporting conservati­ve and Christian values in next year’s Republican primary election.

Several hundred attended the event, featuring Jenna Ellis, a lawyer known for being part of former President Donald Trump’s legal team attempting to overturn the 2020 election; U.S. Senate candidate Josh Mandel; secretary of state candidate John Adams; and former state lawmaker Candice Keller, who founded a conservati­ve advocacy group.

Ellis, who wrote a book about interpreti­ng the U.S. Constituti­on through the Bible, pushed back on criticism Mandel received this week for saying, “There’s no such thing as separation of church and state.”

“We need to go back to the Judeo-Christian founding principles of our country, that recognize that eternal immutable truth that our founders recognized in the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce, saying that our rights come from God, our freedom, not our government,” Ellis said.

Mandel said he is running his campaign out of churches and if elected plans to vote with the Bible in one hand and Constituti­on in the other.

“We should be instilling faith in the classroom, in the workplace, and everywhere in society,” he told the crowd, proudly retelling how he was escorted by police out of a recent Lakota Local School District board meeting he attended to denounce critical race theory.

The intersecti­on of schools and personal values has become a major part of Mandel’s campaign. Mandel tweeted recently: “Shut down government schools and put schools in churches and synagogues.”

Asked about this in an interview with the Dayton Daily News prior to Monday’s event, Mandel said he supports measures such as the “backpack bill” that would allow parents to spend state education funding at any type of school they want.

“Give the choice to parents, allow parents to decide what school is best for their kids and have the dollars follow the child,” he said when asked if this would extend to secular, Islamic or other non-Judeo-Christian schools.

Concerns that government measures amid the pandemic such as workplace vaccine mandates were infringing on Americans’ religious freedoms resonated with many who came to Solid Rock on Monday evening.

Don Sexton of West Carrollton said he was looking for a conservati­ve message: “That means anything that pertains to the Bible and what I believe.”

Caron Armstrong of Liberty Twp. also said she was looking for conservati­ve values in candidates, such as schools listening to parents and allowing religious observance.

Other leading GOP candidates for U.S. Senate include state Sen. Matt Dolan, R-Chagrin Falls, former Ohio Republican Party Chair Jane Timken, author and Middletown native JD Vance, and Cleveland businessme­n Bernie Moreno and Mike Gibbons.

Democratic contenders for the seat being vacated by Republican Rob Portman are northeaste­rn Ohio U.S. Congressma­n Tim Ryan and Columbus attorney Morgan Harper.

 ?? ?? Jenna Ellis, an attorney known for working on former president Donald Trump’s legal team, addresses a rally at Solid Rock Church in Lebanon on Monday.
Jenna Ellis, an attorney known for working on former president Donald Trump’s legal team, addresses a rally at Solid Rock Church in Lebanon on Monday.

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