Trump Aide: He’s a ‘person of deep faith’

Donald Trump tripped over himself on Monday as he attempted to quote from the Bible to connect with the crowd of students at one of the most prominent Christian university in the country. "Two Corinthians, 3:17, that's the whole ballgame," Trump said, drawing laughter from the crowd of students at Liberty University, who knew Trump was attempting to refer to "Second Corinthians."

NEW YORK — (CNN) An adviser for Donald Trump’s campaign defended the businessman’s spirituality after he misspoke when quoting a Bible verse at Liberty University, insisting that “he’s a person of deep faith, he’s just not a person that puts it on his sleeve.”

Sam Clovis, Trump’s campaign co-chair, appeared on CNN’s “New Day” Thursday morning and rejected the suggestion that Trump was pandering to evangelicals in light of Trump’s admission that he misspoke saying “2 Corinthians” rather than “second Corinthians” at Liberty because he was referring to notes from Tony Perkins.

“I work with him. I’m around him. I spend a lot of time with him. He’s a person of deep faith. He’s just not a person that puts it on his sleeve and enunciates that,” Clovis told CNN’s Alisyn Camerota.

Trump said in an interview with CNN’s Don Lemon Wednesday that Perkins, the president of the Family Research Council, had given him notes on what to say when he visited the evangelical university in Lynchburg, Virginia.

“Tony Perkins wrote that out for me — he actually wrote out 2, he wrote out the number 2 Corinthians,” Trump said. “I took exactly what Tony said, and I said, ‘Well, Tony has to know better than anybody.’ ”

Trump’s pronunciation of the Bible verse drew laughter from the Christian audience — but he downplayed it, saying his Scottish mother would have said “two Corinthians,” as well.

Clovis, who referred to himself as an “orthodox conservative,” said “spiritual life is a journey.”

“I think his spiritual journey is one where he is internalizing this as he goes forward,” Clovis said. “I’m very confident that Donald Trump is a person of faith, and I love being around him. In fact, a couple of us there, we often sit down and talk about these very issues with Mr. Trump, so I’m not in any doubt about the depth of Donald Trump’s faith.”

Clovis also discussed Trump’s stepped up criticism of Republican rival Ted Cruz, whom in recent weeks Trump has called “nasty” while referencing Cruz’s unpopularity in Congress.

“What Mr. Trump is passing on is what other people are saying about Ted Cruz,” Clovis said. “The inside the beltway stuff is I think really fascinating, when you start to see the interactions inside the United States Senate, and who is able to get along and who is not. And I think that is where those comments come from.”

He added: “People who work with Sen. Cruz inside the Senate — that’s the word that gets out on the street. All Mr. Trump is doing is passing on what other people are saying about Ted Cruz.”

The-CNN-Wire ™ & © 2016 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved. (Photo: CNN)

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