Daily News (Los Angeles)

Pastors say video depicting Trump as godly is `very concerning'

- By Ken Bensinger The New York Times

A viral video praising former President Donald Trump has offended a key Iowa constituen­cy in the lead-up to next week's critical Iowa caucuses: faith leaders.

The video, which Trump first posted to Truth Social last week and then played before taking the stage at several rallies in Iowa over the weekend, is called “God Made Trump.” In starkly religious, almost messianic tones, it depicts the former president as the vessel of a higher power sent to save the nation.

“God looked down on his planned paradise and said, `I need a caretaker,' so God gave us Trump,” begins the video, which appears to use artificial intelligen­ce to mimic the voice of Paul Harvey, a conservati­ve radio broadcaste­r who died in 2009. Trump, it adds, “is a shepherd to mankind who won't ever leave nor forsake them.”

Since the video was posted, it has been widely shared, racked up millions of views and drawn a lot of attention. But much of that attention has been negative, particular­ly among Iowa's pastors, some of whom said they were shocked and offended by the content.

“It was very concerning,” said Pastor Joseph Brown of the Marion Avenue Baptist Church in Washington, Iowa, a town of 7,500 people about 40 minutes south of Iowa City. He took issue, he said, with how it used language plucked from the Bible — such as describing Trump's arms as “strong” yet “gentle” — to compare Trump directly to God, rather than a servant of a higher power.

“The original sin of Satan or Lucifer is not that he wanted to take over God's position but that he wanted to be like God. There is only one god, and it's not Trump or any other man,” said Brown, who voted for Trump in 2016 and 2020 but says he will not this year.

The opinions of religion leaders like Brown carry considerab­le weight in Iowa. More than threequart­ers of the state's population identifies as Christian, according to the Pew Research Center, and 28% of the population describes themselves as evangelica­ls — both measures are well above the national average. What's more, the prepondera­nce of voters in Iowa primary elections have historical­ly been evangelica­ls.

Trump, who rarely attends church, has nonetheles­s managed to gain the support of a large swath of the nation's faithful — particular­ly less traditiona­l, non-churchgoin­g Christians. But the cohort has not universall­y embraced him.

A high-profile example came in November, when Iowa evangelica­l leader Bob Vander Plaats endorsed one of his rivals in the primary race, Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida.

For pastors like Darran Whiting of Liberty Baptist Church in Cedar Rapids, who say they would never vote for Trump, the video only underscore­s why.

“God has ordained servant leadership, not the arrogant, self-serving righteous leadership that particular video portrays,” said Whiting, who plans to vote for DeSantis. He noted that while Trump's campaign did not make the video, the former president's decision to share it speaks to his endorsemen­t of its message.

The clip's authors are members of the Dilley Meme Team, an organized collective of video producers who call themselves “Trump's Online War Machine.” The group's leader, Brenden Dilley, describes himself as Christian and a man of faith, but says he has never read the Bible and does not attend church. He has said that Trump has “God-tier genetics” and, in response to outcry over the “God Made Trump” video, he posted a meme depicting Trump as Moses parting the Red Sea.

Other members of the meme team frequently express religious faith, and one, a musician named Michael Beatty, has recorded several albums of original Christian songs. Multiple passages in “God Made Trump” hew closely to language from the Bible, and they are delivered in a voice that sounds nearly identical to Harvey's when he spoke at the 1978 Future Farmers of America convention. That speech was called “So God Made a Farmer.”

A different oratory by Harvey, “If I Were the Devil” in 1965, is the seeming inspiratio­n for another video created by the Dilley Meme Team that went viral last summer. Called “If I Were the Deep State,” it also features a voice-over that sounds like Harvey, a symbol of Midwestern practicall­y and old-fashioned conservati­ve values, in this case delivering ominous lines about fraudulent elections, corrupt prosecutor­s and the medical establishm­ent.

“If I was the Deep State, you would fear to ever resist me,” the video intones. “If I was the Deep State, you would wish I was really the devil.”

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