Chattanooga Times Free Press

Lee won’t use ‘biblical’ victim witness standard if governor

- BY KIMBERLEE KRUESI

NASHVILLE — A pastor who’s an adviser to Tennessee GOP gubernator­ial candidate Bill Lee says the Bible requires victims of sexual misconduct and other offenses to have at least two or three witnesses.

Steve Berger, pastor of Franklin-based Grace Chapel, made the remarks during a Sept. 30 sermon that focused on the nomination of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh and Christine Blasey Ford’s allegation­s against the judge.

Berger’s sermon started off saying the requiremen­t applied to accusation­s against church elders, but he later applied the requiremen­t to Kavanaugh and stated Ford was not meeting biblical requiremen­ts.

“But do you understand, beloved, that we either have two to three witnesses for civility or we have no need of witnesses and have injustices ready to happen every single time,” Berger said in his sermon. “In our broken world, this is the best we’ve got.”

Berger is one of Lee’s advisers on engaging and recruiting faith-based organizati­ons to address state issues. He’s also pastor of the church that Lee attends regularly. Berger did not return a voicemail from The Associated Press.

In a campaign where religious faith has become a defining characteri­stic of the Republican candidate, Lee describes the governor’s office as a “calling.” However, his campaign said Monday the biblical requiremen­t cited by Berger would not become the state standard if Lee is elected governor Nov. 6.

In a follow up statement to the AP, Lee stressed that sexual misconduct allegation­s would be taken seriously under his leadership.

“In my administra­tion, there will be a zerotolera­nce policy toward sexual misconduct,” Lee said. “My daughter is entering the workplace and I want her to have every opportunit­y that her male counterpar­ts would, including a safe work environmen­t. The dignity of women must be respected, and I’m thankful the Me Too movement has advanced that.”

Lee’s promise comes at a time when states across the country are facing scrutiny for how they handle allegation­s of sexual misconduct amid the explosion of the #MeToo anti-harassment movement.

In Tennessee, the issue has become a key talking point in the high-profile U.S. Senate race. Republican U.S. Rep. Marsha Blackburn has criticized former Democratic Gov. Phil Bredesen’s handling of sexual misconduct complaints during his administra­tion. Bredesen has countered that he protected victims throughout his tenure.

Lee is running against Democrat and former Nashville mayor Karl Dean, who is Catholic. Dean has not made his faith a part of his campaign to the degree Lee has, such as when asked about his stances on policy issues such as the death penalty — the Catholic Church dictates that the death penalty is never acceptable.

“My faith is important to me and I believe faith based initiative­s have a place in government but the government doesn’t get to pick the faith or remove the need to follow the constituti­onal authority regarding church and states entangleme­nts,” Dean said in a written statement Tuesday.

Dean says his political track record shows how he would lead Tennessee.

Lee, who’s making his first run in Tennessee politics, won the competitiv­e Republican primary for Tennessee governor earlier this year. Many credited the victory to his faithbased, positive message.

“My faith is the most important thing in my life, and that won’t change when I’m the governor,” Lee said in one early ad.

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