


Evangelicals and Trump
So was the response by the 100 or so invitees to patiently ignore A and B as self-serving pablum and question the wisdom of C, as it would cause them to violate the law and put their tax-exempt status at risk? Mr. Trump claims to have overturned that law by executive order, but only Congress has the power, and it hasn’t done so. Last year, the president instructed the IRS not to enforce the rule, but experts say that has little effect.
The answer (as if you had to ask): By all accounts, the clergy ate it all up, lock, stock and smoking hypocrisy.
White evangelicals might be President Trump’s most unshakable supporters. Polls suggest as many as 81 percent back him. Too often, this support is dismissed by the president’s critics as a single issue transaction — so long as President Trump appoints Supreme Court justices who will overturn Roe v. Wade, they are willing to ignore any number of moral shortcomings. But the bond appears much stronger than just that.
Over and over again, the core Trump platform seems designed to cater to the concerns of white evangelicals that the country is slipping away from them on a more basic, cultural level as they become a smaller percentage of the overall population. Even the central theme of the Trump campaign to make American great “again” plays into this reactionary thinking that the country has drifted away from its white, Christian-centered, heterosexual past and turned toward something with which white evangelicals do not identify. They don’t want to just turn back the clock to 1972 on women’s reproductive rights, they’d like to turn it back on immigration, civil rights, separation of church and state, who serves in the military or merits a wedding cake and on and on.
This isn’t a religious conflict, it’s a cultural one. How else to explain that so many of these same institutions came down hard on President Bill Clinton for his relationship with Monica Lewinsky but have hardly batted an eye over the deluge of reports about President Trump’s alleged infidelities?
How evangelical leaders can reconcile Mr. Trump’s personal life, his incendiary tweets, his frequent lies, his bigotry toward people of color (not to mention the very minuteness of the role faith appears to have played in his life) with their unabashed worship of him is nothing short of a miracle. The Gospel seems so packed with lessons about love and forgiveness, helping others and steering clear of pride and greed that you would think the average minister would see this president as more of a lost soul in desperate need of their attention than someone to follow.
President Trump’s warning to evangelical leaders that if Democrats win big at the polls this fall, take control over Congress and then “quickly and violently” reverse Trump administration actions to date sounds more like Elmer Gantry than Billy Graham — opportunistic, insincere and dripping with narcissism. Yet this particular section of the congregation just loves him all the more.