Entertainment Music Why Hailey Baldwin Says Her 'Common Denominator' with Husband Justin Bieber Is Church "I wouldn't consider myself religious," Justin Bieber says in a new Vogue interview By Jordan Runtagh Jordan Runtagh Jordan Runtagh is an executive podcast producer at iHeartRadio, where he hosts a slate of pop culture shows including Too Much Information, Inside the Studio, Off the Record and Rivals: Music's Greatest Feuds. Previously, he served as a music editor at PEOPLE and VH1.com. He's written about art and entertainment for more than a decade, regularly contributing to outlets like Rolling Stone and Entertainment Weekly, and appearing as a guest on radio and television. Over the course of his career, he's profiled the surviving Beatles, Brian Wilson, Aretha Franklin, Roger Waters, David Byrne, Pete Townshend, Debbie Harry, Quincy Jones, Brian May, Jerry Lee Lewis, James Taylor and many more. A graduate of NYU's Tisch School of the Arts, he lives in Brooklyn, where he can be found DJing '60s soul records. People Editorial Guidelines Published on February 7, 2019 02:00PM EST Hailey Baldwin says that faith is the bedrock of her new marriage with Justin Bieber. In a revelatory new Vogue cover story, the newlyweds opened up about their whirlwind romance and how they reunited after their initial split in 2016. Though they’d met as children in 2009, their first real connection came at a service for the Hillsong Church in New York City several years later. “One day Justin walked into Hillsong and was like, ‘Hey, you got older.’ I was like, ‘Yeah, what’s up?’” Baldwin, 22, remembers. “Over time he became my best guy friend. I was running around with him as his homie, but we weren’t hanging out [romantically].” Hailey Baldwin and Justin Bieber Are ‘Fighting’ to Do Marriage the ‘Right Way’: ‘We’re Committed to Growing Together’ Justin Bieber and Hailey Baldwin on the March 2019 cover of Vogue. Annie Leibovitz They ultimately did date briefly. While they remain vague on the precise details of their (temporary) split, they allude to some form of betrayal. “Negative things happened that we still need to talk about and work through,” Baldwin says. “’Fizzled’ would not be the right word — it was more like a very dramatic excommunication. There was a period where if I walked into a room, he would walk out.” The pair would cross paths again in June 2018 at a religious conference in Miami, where they connected on a romantic — and spiritual — level. Within weeks they were engaged and in September they said “I do” at a courthouse ceremony in New York City. “The common denominator, I promise you, is always church,” Baldwin says of their union. “By then we were past the drama.” Justin Bieber & Hailey Baldwin Reveal They Remained Celibate Until Marriage in Vogue Interview Annie Leibovitz Despite their devotion to God, Bieber, 24, is hesitant to put any labels on himself. “I wouldn’t consider myself religious,” he says. “That confuses a lot of people because they’re like, ‘Well, you go to church.’ I believe in the story of Jesus — that’s the simplicity of what I believe. But I don’t believe in all the religious elitism and pretentiousness, like people are better than you because they come to church, like you have to go to church and dress a certain way. I get sensitive when religion comes up because it’s been so hurtful to a lot of people. I don’t want to be thought of as someone who stands for any of the injustice that religion has done and does do.” ‘Lonely’ Justin Bieber Had a ‘Legitimate Problem’ with Xanax and Sex While ‘Depressed’ on Tour: ‘It Got Pretty Dark’ Annie Leibovitz Bieber has recently been taking a break from music in order to work on what he calls “character stuff” with his full attention and energy. “Just thinking about music stresses me out,” he says. “I’ve been successful since I was thirteen, so I didn’t really have a chance to find who I was apart from what I did. I just needed some time to evaluate myself: who I am, what I want out of my life, my relationships, who I want to be — stuff that when you’re so immersed in the music business you kind of lose sight of.”