Los Angeles Times

Taking Trump’s faith on faith

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Re “Holy nonsense: The ‘godly’ side of Donald Trump,” Opinion, March 1

The juxtaposit­ion of Lawrence Downe’s op-ed article with the piece by Harold Meyerson, “Fugitive immigrants,” was appropriat­e.

The first discusses “The Faith of Donald J. Trump: A Spiritual Biography,” a book that has echoes of the faith-based justificat­ions used by slave owners, just as the second article makes reference to the echoes in the immigratio­n fight to the Fugitive Slave Act.

When selfishnes­s leads people to behavior they know is immoral, they search for rationales. Slave owners found an excuse for enslaving others in stating that their slaves were not fully human. Evangelica­ls who back President Trump because they want a rightwing Supreme Court find an equally specious excuse for supporting a clearly corrupt person by congratula­ting themselves on their belief in repentance and redemption. Elizabeth Rumelt Santa Barbara

Lawrence Downes spends two paragraphs commenting on an obvious misprint he found in the forward by Eric Metaxas to the book “The Faith of Donald J. Trump.”

Metaxas, a Yale graduate, has written several books on difficult subjects, including William Wilberforc­e, Dietrich Bonhoeffer and Martin Luther. He may be considered an expert on Christiani­ty.

Metaxas also hosts a talk show. He is smart, engaging and very funny.

Why does Downes even bother to mention what amounts to an obvious misprint? Is it to throw shade on Metaxas’ endorsemen­t of the book? What does it have to do with the book itself?

These two paragraphs say more about Downes than they do the authors of the book. Nathan Post Santa Barbara

Downes’ piece reminded me of a dream I had as a small boy during Franklin D. Roosevelt’s presidency.

I recall to this day that it posed to a sleeping boy the question, “What if everything that I was being taught was good — honesty, kindness, generosity — was in fact bad, and that all that I was being taught was bad, was good?”

Who could have imagined that a question posed to a child 75 years ago would be so dishearten­ingly relevant today? Who could have dreamed that Donald Trump would be president? Ronald Rubin Santa Monica

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