“ Mr.
President … you said you were the chosen one. You were … You are
here in this time because God ordained you.’”
– Rick
Perry
People like Former
Secretary of Energy Rick Perry and conservative commentator Wayne
Allyn Root believe Donald Trump is the “Chosen One,” relating his
presidency to the second coming of God.
"The King of Israel?
The second coming of God? He thinks he's Jesus. That's where we are,"
tweeted Diana Butler Bass, a scholar specializing in American
religion and culture.
Trump has actually referred to
himself as the “Chosen One,” and though many doubt he has a
Messiah complex, (Trump later tweeted he was "kidding" and
"being sarcastic" when he called himself the "chosen
one.”), the belief that Trump was specifically chosen by God to
occupy the office is prevalent among evangelicals.
Perry puts it like this:
"God's used imperfect people all through history. King David
wasn't perfect. Saul wasn't perfect. Solomon wasn't perfect … If
you're a believing Christian, you understand God's plan for the
people who rule and judge over us on this planet in our government.”
John Fea, professor of
American history at Messiah College, explains that the phrase “Chosen
One” is probably part Christianity, part science fiction, part
myth, part fantasy, part Harry Potter." Fea said. "But at
the same time, there is embedded within that phrase this idea that
God chooses certain people — and evangelicals will believe this —
that God chooses certain people for particular moments in time to
serve his purposes."
In this interpretation of
Trump as “God’s Chosen One” people view him as a King Cyrus-like
figure, anointed by God to save America from cultural collapse. That
claim about Trump has been made in books and even a feature film called The
Trump Prophecy (2018).
According to Anthea Butler
of Religion News Service, Christian followers of Trump even created a
coin with images of Trump and Cyrus on it to use during their
prayers. Also there have been a series of paintings of Trump as a
kind of redeemer figure by John McNaughton. Others depict Trump being
hugged by Jesus, or signing bills at the resolute desk with Jesus
standing behind him. Butler says, “These images, for some
evangelicals, are fan images of the hopes and the realities they
believe President Trump’s election has wrought.”
In interviews with 50
Trump supporting evangelicals, Julie Zauzmer, religion reporter for
The Washington Post,
found evangelicals find Trump appealing because he “sees America
like they do, a menacing place where white Christians feel mocked and
threatened for their beliefs.” He is also, “against abortion and
gay rights and…has the economy humming to boot.” These are all reasons for Trump's popularity with evangelicals.
Similarly, in a personal
essay, Elizabeth Bruenig, opinion columnist for the Post and a
Catholic convert from evangelicalism, wrote that “Trump’s
less-than-Christian behavior seemed, paradoxically, to make him a
more appealing candidate to beleaguered, aggravated Christians.”
Bruenig believes
evangelicals feel oppressed by a culture that forces them to sell
wedding cakes to gay people and watch television programs where
single women occasionally have sex. Christians are supposed to turn
the other cheek; they need an agnostic bully to stand up for them.
Indeed, for many white
evangelicals, Trump proclaiming himself the divine agent of racist
retribution is a restatement of the basic tenets of their faith.
However, some very disturbing sects have been emboldened with Trump's
election.
Most
notable of those religious frightening ideologies are those
who profess Christian Identity (also known as Identity Christianity).
They include racist, anti-semitic, white supremacists who hold that
only Germanic, Anglo-Saxon, Celtic, Nordic, Aryan people, and those
of kindred blood are the descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and
hence the descendants of the ancient Israelites.
Christian Identity beliefs
were primarily developed and promoted by authors who regarded
Europeans as the "chosen people" and Jews as the cursed
offspring of Cain, the "serpent hybrid" or serpent seed.
White supremacist sects and gangs later adopted many of these
teachings.
Christian Identity holds
that all non-whites (people not of wholly European descent) will
either be exterminated or enslaved in order to serve the white race
in the new Heavenly Kingdom on Earth under the reign of Jesus Christ.
Its doctrine states that only "Adamic" (white) people can
achieve salvation and paradise.
Of course, few
evangelicals are self-professed racists or those with a Christian
identity who deify Trump as the savior of the white race. Many of
these Christians are true believers in Christ who have worked for
equality and justice in the U.S. and they still do so today. Even if
they don't necessarily idolize Trump as the Chosen One, these same
evangelicals don’t want to criticize Trump. They see him as one of
their own. Indeed, they view Trump as a politically anointed
Christian leader who will get back their governmental clout.
In the late 1970s and 1980s
white conservative evangelicalism became fused with the GOP. This
merger is known as the “Christian” or “Religious” Right
today. John Fea posits this political movement was born out of fear
that the removal of prayer and Bible reading in schools, the growing
diversity following the Immigration Act of 1965 (Hart-Celler Act),
the intrusion of government (“big government”) into segregated
Christian academies in the South, and the legalization of abortion
were undermining America’s uniquely Christian identity.
John Fea explains …
“The leaders of the
Christian Right believed the best way to 'reclaim' or 'restore' this
identity was by gaining control of all three branches of government.
Jimmy Carter, a self-proclaimed “born-again Christian,” was not
championing these issues to the degree that many evangelical
conservatives wished. As a result, white evangelicals gravitated to
Ronald Reagan, a man who seemed to understand evangelical concerns,
or was, at the very least, willing to placate evangelicals.”
Now, the political
evangelical support for Trump's “Make America Great Again” rule
is firmly rooted in antipathy to abortion and marriage equality. It gains
traction through Trump's fear mongering with vicious immigration
policies such as building a border wall and enacting Muslim bans.
Most evangelicals view the entire existential struggle as a necessity
to protect the country’s religious foundation from incursions by
the secular left.
The transformation of
“evangelical” from a theological position to a “racial and
political” one is a prime driver of the increasing hostility of
liberals to religion.
According to surveys by
the Pew Research Center, the percentage of liberals who believe that
churches and religious organizations positively contribute to society
dropped from nearly half (49 percent) in 2010 to only one-third (33
percent) in 2019. And according to 2016 data from the Voter Study
Group, only 11 percent of people who are very liberal say that being
Christian is at least fairly important to what it means to be
American – compared to 69 percent of people who identify as very
conservative.
With the Trump presidency,
it is evident that left-leaning people with weaker religious ties are
opting out of religion because they dislike Christian conservatives’
social agenda. Politics is now a driving factor behind the rise of
the religiously unaffiliated.
This shift is reducing
churches’ ability to bring a diverse array of people together and
break down partisan barriers. That threatens to further undermine
trust in religious groups and make our politics more and more
divisive.
David Campbell, a
political scientist at the University of Notre Dame, says …
“We have very few
institutions left in the country where people who have different
political views come together. Worship was one of those — and
without it, the list is smaller and smaller.”
One very interesting
division surely comes from the many millions of non-white
evangelicals in America – of course, not very many of them voted
for Donald Trump. So, division within the ranks of the faithful makes
a political evangelical stand a fractured ideology.
Nonetheless, as ridiculous
as it may be, millions of evangelical Christians believe that in
Donald Trump, who perceived during his candidacy he could murder
someone in Times Square and not lose his base, they have precisely
the person “chosen” by God to lead this country back to God and
to protect it against the attempts of atheists and liberals to turn
it in the other direction.
The cult of true believers
cannot be talked out of their Chosen One doctrine by reasoned
arguments. They cling to End Time prophecies and conspiracy theories
to support their political beliefs – beliefs being spread by
politicians like Rick Perry and Nikki Haley.
I wonder how many remember
that Rick Perry, who ran unsuccessfully for president in both 2012
and 2016, called Trump's candidacy “a cancer on conservatism”
that “must be clearly diagnosed, excised and discarded.”
“My fellow Republicans,
beware of false prophets,” Perry said of his then-rival while
addressing a conservative group in mid-2015. “Do not let itching
ears be tickled by messengers who appeal to anger, division and
resentment.”
Perhaps
Perry's own “itching ears” have caused his recent conversion to
the Trump Chosen One belief. Superstition has it that itching or
buzzing in the left ear is said to mean you are being badmouthed, or
will face bad luck. It appears he, like so many other Republicans who
once discredited Trump, has caved to political pressures … and much
of that pressure has come from the voting block of the evangelical
right seeking their own religious influence.
Here
is what the Bible actually says of prickling feelings in the auditory
structure:
“For the
time will come when people will not put up with sound doctrine.
Instead,
to suit
their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of
teachers
to say
what their itching ears want to hear.”
2 Timothy
4:3 New International Version (NIV)
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