The Rise of Donald Trump: Why I'm Embarrassed and Ashamed  of My Fellow 
Evangelicals

_www.christianpost.com_ (http://www.christianpost.com) 


 
 

By _Julie Roys_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/julie-roys/)   , CP 
Op-Ed Contributor
March 19, 2016|8:01  am





 

If you had asked me three months ago what the greatest threat to  
evangelicalism is, I might have said the evangelical Left. For the past decade, 
 I 
have been dismayed as more and more professed evangelicals have abandoned  
biblical orthodoxy and have embraced _gay  marriage_ 
(http://www1.cbn.com/cbnnews/us/2015/June/Campolos-Gay-Marriage-Support-Highlights-Divide)
 , 
_socialism_ 
(http://thefederalist.com/2015/10/01/the-christian-temptation-towards-socialism/)
  and  recently — the notion that _Muslims and Christians worship 
the  same God_ (http://julieroys.com/?s=god's+glory) . 
These pose very real threats, undermining the integrity of the church and 
its  witness to a lost and dying world. But now, evangelicalism has an 
equally  pernicious foe — the Trumpian, evangelical  Right.




 

At first, I couldn't believe the news reports. Donald Trump could not  
possibly be the choice of the Religious Right. How could a man who flaunts his  
moral indiscretions, uses foul language, insults the handicapped, and 
praises  Planned Parenthood become the darling of evangelical voters? Add to 
this 
the  fact that Trump openly _advocated  murdering the family members_ 
(http://www.mediaite.com/tv/trump-the-military-would-not-refuse-my-orders-even-if-t
hey-consider-them-illegal/)  of terrorists. And, when challenged on  
whether the military would follow his murderous and illegal order, Trump  
responded: "They won't refuse. They're not gonna refuse me." 
Not only is Trump crude, brash, immoral and proud. He has zero respect for  
the rule of law and talks like some Third World Dictator, not the leader of 
the  free world. Surely, I assured myself, the exit polls must be wrong. 
And, to some  extent they were.




 

As a _Religion  News Service_ 
(http://www.religionnews.com/2016/03/10/2016-election-trump-cruz-sanders-clinton-surveys/)
  article explained, exit polls 
lump marginal evangelicals  and devout evangelicals together because they 
usually ask only one question  about religion. When pollsters have asked 
additional questions, though, it  becomes clear that Trump's support is not 
nearly as strong among devout  evangelicals as it is among nominal ones. In 
Missouri, for example, only 30-33%  of Christians who attend church one or more 
times a week voted for Trump,  compared to 46% of all evangelicals. 
Still, one-third is a sizeable number. Plus, it's not just the anonymous  
evangelical masses who are supporting Trump. Liberty University President 
_Jerry  Fallwell, Jr., endorsed him_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/jerry-falwell-jr-trump-bible-king-david-a-man-after-god-own-heart-russell-moore-1591
43/)  too, claiming Trump's indiscretions weren't  any worse than King 
David's, and arguing that we're electing a president, not a  pastor. (Of 
course, 
King David repented of his sin, but Trump said he _doesn't  feel a need to 
ask God for forgiveness_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/trump-why-do-i-have-to-repent-or-ask-for-forgiveness-if-i-am-not-making-mistakes-video-141856
/) .) 
Ben Carson, a man widely respected for his sincere Christian beliefs, has  
endorsed Trump too, _though  somewhat begrudgingly_ 
(http://thinkprogress.org/politics/2016/03/15/3760261/carson-offered-position-by-trump/)
 . And, just 
recently, the _Trump  campaign hired Sarah Huckabee_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/politics/first-draft/2016/02/25/sarah-huckabee-mikes-daughter-joins-donald-
trump-campaign/) , Mike Huckabee's daughter, as a senior  advisor, sparking 
rumors that her father, a former pastor, may soon endorse  Trump. 
Though deep divisions already existed between the evangelical Right and and 
 the Left, now deep fractures are also forming between #NeverTrump or  
#AnyoneButTrump evangelicals and #Trump2016  evangelicals.




 

This week, the Washington Post ran an article on how "_Donald  Trump is 
tearing evangelicals apart_ 
(https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/acts-of-faith/wp/2016/03/15/evangelical-christians-are-enormously-divided-over-donald-trump
s-runaway-candidacy/) ." The article included testimony from an  
evangelical pastor who said he receives calls every day from distressed pastors 
 whose 
congregations are divided over the controversial candidate. Some Trump  
supporters reportedly have even threatened to leave their churches if their  
pastors dare to preach anything against him. 
Trump has also pitted evangelical leaders against each other. 
When Falwell first announced his support for Trump, Southern Baptist leader 
 Russell Moore _called  the endorsement "absolutely unbelievable"_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/jerry-falwell-jr-trump-bible-king-david-a-man-afte
r-god-own-heart-russell-moore-159143/)  and tweeted: "Trading in the  
Gospel of Jesus Christ for political power is not liberty but slavery." 
This week, Moore even admitted that "this election _makes  me hate the word 
'evangelical_ 
(https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/acts-of-faith/wp/2016/02/29/russell-moore-why-this-election-makes-me-hate-the-word-evangelical/)
 .'" 
"The word 'evangelical' has become almost  meaningless this year," Moore 
said, "and in many ways the word itself is at the  moment subverting the 
gospel of Jesus Christ." 
Moore is right.




 

For years, I have defended conservative evangelicals against accusations 
from  the Left that we care more about preserving power than advancing the 
gospel. I  have argued that we support pro-life candidates because we love the 
unborn; we  defend traditional marriage because it leads to human 
flourishing; and we  advocate for limited government because it respects the 
dignity 
and agency of  human beings created in God's image. We are not the ugly 
stereotype. We are  compassionate conservatives. 
I still believe these are the core convictions of many of my devout,  
evangelical brothers and sisters. But clearly, not all. I admit, I am ashamed  
and embarrassed by my own tribe. And, I am grieved. 
Recently, Denny Burke, a pastor and professor of biblical studies at Boyce  
College, wrote _about  his experience_ 
(http://www.dennyburk.com/i-spent-super-tuesday-with-donald-trump/)  attending 
a Trump rally. Burke said 
repeatedly Trump  berated protestors from the stage, turning a tense situation 
into 
a potentially  dangerous one. 
"Probably my main take-away from listening to (Trump) in person was his  
ability to stoke anger and outrage," Burke wrote. "The people he appeals to 
are  frustrated with their government. They are frustrated with jobs being 
shipped  overseas. And they are frustrated with a sense that the political 
elite don't  listen to them. He knows how to stoke that frustration into a 
blazing rage, and  that is what he does at his rallies." 
I understand Trump followers' anger. Much of it is legitimate — and there's 
 certainly a part of me that would like to stick it to the establishment 
too.  But, every demagogue that has ever risen to power has done so riding a 
wave of  legitimate rage and discontent, from Stalin to Mussolini and yes — 
Hitler. 
As Christians, though, we normally distinguish between the means and the 
end.  Though we may agree with the end of a political movement, we refuse to 
engage in  any sinful means of achieving that end. Yet, as Trump rallies have 
turned  violent and even racist, his evangelical support has not waned. As 
he warns  (incites?) of riots if he's denied the nomination, Christians 
rattle their  sabers with the rest of Trump's thugs.




 

Truly, Trump's Christian supporters seem to be just like his godless ones,  
proving Trump's boast, "I could stand in the middle of  5th Avenue and 
_shoot  somebody and I wouldn't lose voters_ 
(http://www.cnn.com/2016/01/23/politics/donald-trump-shoot-somebody-support/) 
." Little does he or his 
supporters seem  to realize that that isn't an endorsement of Trump's movement, 
but 
an  indictment. 
So, this is what evangelicalism has become. On the Left, we are abandoning  
orthodoxy for gay rights and solidarity with other religions. And on the 
right,  we are an angry mob, overlooking sin and vice for the sake of our 
righteous  indignation. For those on the Right and the Left, our faith has 
succumbed to  politics. 
We are no longer serving Christ; we are serving idols. And, our big tent,  
once a haven for so many seeking salvation, is now ripping at the seams. If 
we  continue as we are now, I fear there will soon be nothing left except 
shreds of  cloth and vestiges of the  gospel.


-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
  • [RC] Ev... BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community
    • Re... David Block
      • ... Centroids
        • ... David Block
          • ... Dr. Ernie Prabhakar
            • ... Chris Hahn
              • ... Dr. Ernie Prabhakar
                • ... Chris Hahn

Reply via email to