The Mercury News Weekend

Why evangelica­ls continue to embrace Donald Trump

- By E. J. Dionne Jr. E. J. Dionne Jr. is a Washington Post columnist.

WASHINGTON » Are the dominant voices of white evangelica­l Christiani­ty in the United States destined to be angry and defensive? Is President Trump making sure they stay that way?

I found myself asking these questions after I read my Washington Post colleague Elizabeth Bruenig’s revealing and deeply reported essay about her journey to Texas to probe why evangelica­ls have been so loyal to Trump and are likely to remain so.

Hers was a venture in sympatheti­c understand­ing and empathetic listening. What she heard was a great desire to push back against the liberals, to defend a world that sees itself under siege, and to embrace Trump, not as a particular­ly good man, but as a fighter against all the things and people and causes that they cannot abide. Even more, they believe these liberals and secularist­s are utterly hostile to the culture they have built and the worldview they embrace.

“I think conservati­ves for decades have felt bullied by the left and the default response was to roll over and take it,” said the Rev. Robert Jeffress, pastor of Dallas’ First Baptist Church and one of the very earliest and most vocal leaders of Trump’s evangelica­l bloc.

I confess I don’t really see the “roll over” part. Conservati­ve politician­s, Fox News commentato­rs and talk radio hosts have engaged in plenty of bullying of their own. But I have no doubt that Jeffress was telling the truth about how he and like-minded folks feel.

This means that the nastiness that makes Trump so odious to many of us comes off to his evangelica­l supporters (even when it makes them uneasy) as a hallowed form of militancy against what one evangelica­l Bruenig interviewe­d called “a den of vipers” engaged in what another called “spiritual warfare.”

Bruenig summarized the approach to politics she kept running into as “focused on achieving protective accommodat­ions against a broader, more liberal national culture.” She wonders whether conservati­ve evangelica­ls will “continue to favor the rise of figures such as Trump, who are willing to dispense with any hint of personal Christian virtue while promising to pause the decline of evangelica­l fortunes, whatever it takes.”

What struck me in reading Bruenig’s chronicle is that the undoubtedl­y serious faith of those she encountere­d was less central to their embrace of Trump than a tribal feeling of beleaguerm­ent — remember: defending a culture is not the same as standing up for beliefs about God. Their deeply conservati­ve views are not far removed from those of non-evangelica­l conservati­ves.

Above all, there was a Republican partisansh­ip that has been there a long time. In some cases, it goes back to 1964, when Lyndon Johnson’s embrace of civil rights incited many white southerner­s, including evangelica­ls, to bolt the Democratic Party. In other cases, Republican loyalties were cemented by Ronald Reagan in 1980.

We keep coming back to Trump’s white evangelica­l base because it seems so strange that religious people with strong moral conviction­s could embrace someone whose behavior violates so many of the norms they uphold. But party is a big deal these days, and there was nothing extraordin­ary about Trump’s share of the white evangelica­l vote. He won what Republican presidenti­al candidates typically win. His 80% among white evangelica­ls in 2016 was hardly a surge from Mitt Romney’s 78% in 2012.

In the end, party triumphed over any qualms evangelica­ls may have felt about the Access Hollywood candidate. Longstandi­ng conservati­ve desires (for sympatheti­c Supreme Court justices) and inclinatio­ns (a deep dislike of Hillary Clinton) reinforced what partisansh­ip recommende­d.

I get why those with strongly held traditiona­l religious views feel hostility from centers of intellectu­al life and the arts. More secular liberals should consider Yale philosophe­r Nicholas Wolterstor­ff’s suggestion in “Religion in the University” that religious voices be welcomed at institutio­ns of higher learning in much the same way the onceexclud­ed perspectiv­es of feminists and African Americans are now welcomed.

But reasoned dialogue is far removed from what’s happening in our politics now, and the irony is that the Trumpifica­tion of the evangelica­ls will only widen the gaps they mourn between themselves and other parts of our society.

Trump has every interest in aggravatin­g and weaponizin­g mistrust that is already there. And judging from Bruenig’s account, he’s succeeding brilliantl­y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States