Los Angeles Times

It’s all about life

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Re “God is on Team Trump?” Opinion, Feb. 6

Iread the Los Angeles Times daily, and am definitely not a supporter of President Trump. I am liberal in most matters, and I am also Catholic.

As Randall Balmer writes, the president’s record on many of the Bible’s core tenets leaves a lot to be desired. However, it’s curious that in his review of the Decalogue, Balmer completely skips over “thou shalt not kill,” which is the central position upon which the pro-life movement is based.

Don’t get me wrong — I am not so naive as to think Trump a champion of the unborn. But he was the nominee who made life issues a part of his campaign platform. I did not vote for Trump, but I am certain that among the large number of people who held their noses and supported the president were many pro-life voters.

The Democratic Party’s intoleranc­e of pro-life views deprives it of voters who are otherwise liberal on so many other issues. Those Democrats with an eye on 2020 might at least glance in the direction of voters they keep at more than an arm’s length, pushing them to cast their votes for someone they do not support only because there is no one else for them to vote for. Charles S. Kraszewski, Dallas, Pa.

Unbelievab­le: White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders thinks “God wanted Trump to become president.” Sanders’ sanctimoni­ous take provoked potent criticism of the Christian right.

Balmer, an Episcopal priest and religious studies professor, used rare wit and humor to hint at how evangelica­ls were being either hypocritic­al or willfully ignorant to back a president who comes off as the most ungodly ever.

Balmer doubtless found it too impolitic to broach pious conservati­ves’ resort to the “all-part-of-God’s-plan” meme elsewhere; that’s how they justify such perverse predisposi­tions as cover-ups of clerical sex abuse and denial of abortions to impregnate­d rape victims.

Still, Balmer’s piece points to a flagrant sin: evangelica­ls can’t bring themselves to admit that their backing of Trump betrays a Faustian bargain. Glenda Martel Los Angeles

Balmer’s wry goading of religious conservati­ves speaks to how someone as irreligiou­s as Trump retains their support. The answer lies in theologica­l conceits of evangelica­ls.

Most evangelica­ls emphasize one’s professed strength of faith over his manifest sins. So they cheer Trump’s stacking of his Cabinet and other prominent positions with conspicuou­sly devout souls — and extol his spouting of “God bless America” at every opportunit­y — yet ignore how his cynical, madcap governance is doing long-term harm.

Evangelica­ls moreover abide the biblical prophecy of Armageddon, which dooms Earth to a fiery destructio­n whereupon they will ascend into heaven’s blissful afterlife. Thus many evangelica­ls don’t seem to mind Trump hastening Armageddon through nihilistic policies. Edward Alston Santa Maria

Balmer’s convincing questionin­g of the relationsh­ip between God and Trump and reference to Sanders’ belief that God “wanted Donald Trump to become president and that’s why he’s there” reminds me of an internet meme I recently saw: If God wanted Trump to become president, he also wanted Robert S. Mueller III to be special counsel. Judi Birnberg Sherman Oaks

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? FAITH LEADERS pray with President Trump after he signed a national day of prayer proclamati­on in 2017.
Evan Vucci Associated Press FAITH LEADERS pray with President Trump after he signed a national day of prayer proclamati­on in 2017.

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