When Christian voters support the least Christian candidate

When Christian voters support the least Christian candidate August 28, 2015

There once was a time when evangelical voters favored candidates who were Christians and who modeled “family values.”  Today the favorite candidate among evangelical voters is someone who says he has never repented of his sins, has been married three times, brags about his sexual conquests, and has made much of his fortune by building gambling casinos.

At least those who once called themselves “the moral majority” can no longer be accused of being “judgmental” in their politics.

Is this indifference to a candidate’s faith and morals a sign of political maturity in the Christian right?

Or is it the end of the Christian right, with its members caring more about such issues as immigration more than they do moral or religious issues?

From Frank Bruni, Trump-ward, Christian Soldiers? – The New York Times.

Let me get this straight. If I want the admiration and blessings of the most flamboyant, judgmental Christians in America, I should marry three times, do a queasy-making amount of sexual boasting, verbally degrade women, talk trash about pretty much everyone else while I’m at it, encourage gamblers to hemorrhage their savings in casinos bearing my name and crow incessantly about how much money I’ve amassed?

Seems to work for Donald Trump.

Polls show him to be the preferred candidate among not just all Republican voters but also the party’s vocal evangelical subset.

He’s more beloved than Mike Huckabee, a former evangelical pastor, or Ted Cruz, an evangelical pastor’s son, or Scott Walker, who said during the recent Republican debate: “It’s only by the blood of Jesus Christ that I’ve been redeemed.”

When Trump mentions blood, it’s less biblical, as Megyn Kelly can well attest.

No matter. The holy rollers are smiling upon the high roller. And they’re proving, yet again, how selective and incoherent the religiosity of many in the party’s God squad is.

[Keep reading. . .]

"They do indeed demonstrably have it harder, yes, at least economically. The cost ratio for ..."

The Prodigal Generation
"On an instinctual level people feel scarcity. It's an innate sense that drives people to ..."

The Prodigal Generation
"I finally got around to reading Uri Berliner's article about NPR. (I had actually flagged ..."

Beliefs as Status Symbols
"I know that after college I did odd jobs for a year before going to ..."

The Prodigal Generation

Browse Our Archives