Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Evangelica­ls: Follow Christiani­ty’s morals, not Trump’s

- Michael Gerson

WASHINGTON >> Though it won’t be remembered as a classic Christmas movie like “Elf” or “Die Hard,” “Bombshell” richly deserves your time this holiday season. It tells the sordid story of how powerful men at Fox News tried to gain sexual favors from some young women in exchange for profession­al advancemen­t. At the drama’s center is the lardaceous, lecherous, loathsome Roger Ailes, who once ruled the conservati­ve world from behind a bodyguard of enablers, before Gretchen Carlson, Megyn Kelly and other courageous women exposed his predation.

My first reaction to the movie was to suppress a gag reflex at the thought of the oleaginous Ailes with his zipper down (which is, mercifully, implied, not shown). I was also struck by the fact that the single most influentia­l conservati­ve institutio­n of the last few decades was run by men who combined Social Darwinism and the Playboy philosophy, resulting in the survival of the scummiest. Millions of conservati­ves, including religious and family-value conservati­ves, absorbed their view of the world from a source characteri­zed by misogyny, cruelty, immorality and contempt for the powerless.

It is in this context that the recent editorial by Mark Galli in Christiani­ty Today calling for President Trump’s removal from office should be read. Here, in contrast to Fox, is an institutio­n trying to use a specifical­ly Christian lens to examine Trump’s conduct in office. Galli argues that cheating to influence a presidenti­al election is not merely a threat to the Constituti­on but “profoundly immoral.” Trump’s lies and slanders on Twitter are “a near perfect example of a human being who is morally lost and confused.” The corruption and cruelty of the president and those around him have “rendered this administra­tion morally unable to lead.”

Trump’s swift, disproport­ionate, mendacious response to the editorial — falsely accusing Christiani­ty Today of a leftist slant and promising he would never again read a magazine he has likely never read before — indicates how crucial to his political survival he believes lockstep evangelica­l support to be. The president’s most visible evangelica­l supporters — doing their best to mimic his tone and approach — brayed in agreement. And some conservati­ve writers were highly critical of the editorial. My colleague Hugh Hewitt pronounced himself “bewildered,” saying: “Whether Trump is good or bad for the republic isn’t a theologica­l question,” said Hewitt. “It is a political one.”

Evangelica­l institutio­ns like Christiani­ty Today, in other words, should be content to stay in their lane. They should defer to the political experts. Like Fox News. Like conservati­ve talk radio. Like conspirato­rial internet sites. Wouldn’t it be easier for all involved if evangelica­ls simply accepted the propositio­n that a political coalition with ethnonatio­nalists, led by a malicious, immoral buffoon, is good for the cause of justice and for the cause of Christ? Isn’t it obvious that the appointmen­t of conservati­ve judges should satisfy all the other moral conviction­s of Christian citizens?

This, after all, isn’t a theologica­l matter. It isn’t a theologica­l matter that evangelica­ls — influenced by conservati­ve media and white identity politics

— have become the religious group most hostile to refugee resettleme­nt and most supportive of a policy of family separation at the border. It isn’t a theologica­l matter that loyalty to Trump is making an older generation of evangelica­ls look like crude hypocrites in the eyes of their own children, who are fleeing the tradition in droves.

From the perspectiv­e of Trump partisans, a less carnal version of the Ailes arrangemen­t still applies. Evangelica­ls will be given rhetorical deference, White House access and judges and regulation­s of their liking. All they need to do is set aside their criticisms of cruelty, deception, misogyny, racism and contempt for the vulnerable. All they need to do is forget decency and moral consistenc­y.

It is time, and past time, for Christian believers to listen to Christian sources on Christian social ethics, including the small, clear voice of Christiani­ty Today.

For Trump partisans, a less carnal version of the Ailes arrangemen­t still applies. All they need to do is forget decency and moral consistenc­y.

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