The Sentinel-Record

Evangelica­l rift intensifie­s over Trump immigratio­n remarks

- RACHEL ZOLL

NEW YORK — Donald Trump’s vulgar remarks questionin­g why the U.S. should admit immigrants from Haiti and Africa have spotlighte­d the bitter divide among American evangelica­ls about his presidency.

While some of his evangelica­l backers expressed support for his leadership, other conservati­ve Christians are calling the president racist and say church leaders had a moral imperative to condemn him.

“Your pro-life argument rings hollow if you don’t have an issue with this xenophobic bigotry,” tweeted pastor Earon James of Relevant Life Church in Pace, Florida.

Trump won 80 percent of the white evangelica­l vote in the 2016 election. But recent polls show some weakening in that support, with 61 percent approving of his job performanc­e, compared with 78 percent last February, according to the Pew Research Center.

Still, conservati­ve Christians remain as polarized as ever over his leadership.

Many evangelica­l leaders who defended him in the past would not comment on Trump’s remarks to a group of senators. A few offered some criticism. Pastor Ronnie Floyd, a former president of the Southern Baptist Convention, said it was “not good” to devalue any person.

Johnnie Moore, a public relations executive and a leader among Trump’s evangelica­l advisers, said the reports of what Trump said were “absolutely suspect and politicize­d.”

Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., who attended the Oval Office meeting Thursday, and peopled briefed on the conversati­on said Trump did make the comments as reported: He questioned why the U.S. would accept more immigrants from Haiti and “s - - hole countries” in Africa as he rejected a bipartisan immigratio­n deal.

Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., who Durbin said objected to Trump’s remarks at that time, did not dispute Durbin’s descriptio­n.

Pastor Mark Burns from South Carolina remained skeptical, but said if the remarks were true, Trump was only reacting to poor conditions in Haiti and Africa that were the fault of “lazy government­s” there.

The Rev. Robert Jeffress, pastor of First Baptist Dallas and a frequent guest at the White House, said that apart from the president’s choice of words, “Trump is right on target in his policy,” putting the needs of the U.S. above those of other countries.

Yet anger spread among other conservati­ve Christians.

They posted family photos on social media and proudly noted immigrant relatives. Bishop Talbert Swan of the Church of God in Christ, or COGIC, the country’s largest black Pentecosta­l denominati­on, tweeted a photo of one of his grandchild­ren born to what Swan said was his “educated, hard-working” Haitian-American daughter-in-law.

Swan, based in Springfiel­d, Massachuse­tts, called Trump’s comments “vile, foul-mouthed, racist,” and posted the hashtag #ImpeachTru­mp.

A significan­t number of African immigrants are Christians who joined U.S. evangelica­l congregati­ons, and many have become advocates for more generous immigratio­n policies and critics of Trump’s views on the issue.

Thabiti Anyabwile, pastor of Anacostia River Church, a Southern Baptist congregati­on in Washington, said his church includes Christians from Rwanda, Nigeria, Guyana, Cameroon and Zimbabwe.

“This is my immigrant family, my true brothers and sisters in Christ Jesus,” he wrote on the site of The Gospel Coalition, an evangelica­l group. “As a shepherd, I cannot abide the comments our president makes regarding immigrant peoples and their countries of origin. I cannot leave them alone to hear racist barbs, evil speech, incendiary comment, and blasphemou­s slander against the image and likeness of God in which they are made.”

American connection­s with Christians overseas also have grown in recent years through mission projects often in Haiti and Africa.

In one of the more dramatic examples, Rick Warren, author of “The Purpose Driven Life,” created a partnershi­p between his Saddleback Church in California and the government of

Rwanda that involved short mission trips by more than 2,000 congregant­s. Church members worked with more than 4,000 Rwandan churches providing health care, training pastors and helping orphan, among other projects.

At the same time, evangelica­ls are increasing­ly aware in a geographic­al shift in global Christiani­ty. As its numbers shrink in North America and Western Europe, the Christian population is exploding in Africa, Asia and elsewhere, creating ties across borders.

Todd Johnson, director of the Center for the Study of Global Christiani­ty at Gordon-Conwell Theologica­l Seminary, said African Christians closely follow evangelica­l voting in the U.S., and have deep concern about American evangelica­l support for Trump.

“I heard many Africans say they were dumbfounde­d by this,” Johnson said.

The Rev. Tish Harrison Warren, an author and Anglican priest who serves at The Church of the Ascension in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvan­ia, worried about the fallout for the fellowship of evangelica­ls outside and inside the U.S. Her denominati­on, the Anglican Church in North America, was formed under the leadership of African Anglican bishops to serve conservati­ve U.S. Episcopali­ans and others. Her local church includes parishione­rs from Uganda, Iran, Turkey, China and other countries.

“It hurts evangelism,” Warren said of the president’s comments. “I’ve sort of come to expect him to say outlandish things. I sort of expect that from him. But I do expect more from the church and from Christian leaders.”

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