In 1934, at the age of 28, Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote a letter to a friend about an upcoming conference that would involve members of churches from several countries and denominations. In this letter, he wrote, “We must make it clear—fearful as it is—that the time is very near when we shall have to decide between National Socialism and Christianity. It may be fearfully hard and difficult for us all, but we must get right to the root of things, with open Christian speaking and no diplomacy. And in prayer together we will find the way.”[1] This was before the Holocaust began, before WWII began. But Bonhoeffer saw that one could not embrace the Christian faith and embrace the political tide of his nation that was so enamored with the Nazi party. The two simply were not compatible. On April 9th, 1945, he was executed for his part in the German resistance to the Nazi regime.
The necessity of such a distinction—between the values of our faith and the values embodied in large segments of the wider culture—is once again becoming apparent. It is alarming to see so many people in the United States embracing Donald Trump in his bid to become President of the United States. No, Trump is not Hitler, but he nevertheless embodies values that should cause serious concern among Christians.
One of the great ironies of Trump’s candidacy, however, is that so many of his supporters are evangelical Christians. While many evangelicals, as well of Christians of other stripes, oppose Trump, he doesn’t need all of us. He only needs enough to get elected. Christian support for Trump is essential for his success moving forward.
I myself identify as an evangelical, though this may not tell you much. The term “evangelical” has become rather diffuse over the last couple of decades. It can describe Christians as different as Franklin Graham and Jim Wallis. According to the National Association of Evangelicals, there are four primary characteristics of evangelicalism:
Conversionism: the belief that lives need to be transformed through a “born-again” experience and a life long process of following Jesus.
Activism: the expression and demonstration of the gospel in missionary and social reform efforts.
Biblicism: a high regard for and obedience to the Bible as the ultimate authority.
Crucicentrism: a stress on the sacrifice of Jesus Christ on the cross as making possible the redemption of humanity
These four characteristics fit me quite well, but I will never support Donald Trump. In fact, I will never support Donald Trump because I’m an evangelical Christian. He mocks everything Christians should embody. He scapegoats the culturally vulnerable. He shows deep contempt for those whom he sees as different (e.g., Muslims and Mexicans). He has openly and unashamedly derided both women and ethnic minorities. He has even said that a man should treat women “like shit.” He has posed on the cover of Playboy. He consistently insults and demeans those with whom he disagrees. He has belittled Holy Communion, referring to it as drinking his “little wine” and eating his “little cracker.” Consistent with this last offense, he is flippantly dismissive of the idea that he needs to engage in any type of personal repentance.
Nevertheless, a substantial number of evangelicals are backing Trump. Why would they do this? According to the New York Times,
“Social conservatives are taking a look at Trump and saying he’s not with me on all these issues, but the overall larger imperative for us is to tear down this system that has not served us for a very long time,” said Gregg Keller, a former executive director of the Faith and Freedom Coalition, which was founded by the Christian conservative Ralph Reed.


Thank you for your comments.
Donald J. Trump has made a big deal about not being politically correct. But there is a much bigger deal at stake here: that of refusing to be religiously correct!
Jesus and His disciples were often accused of “breaking the Sabbath” and of other such things. Never once did Christ ever break ANY of His Father’s Commandments at all! What He refused to do, also teaching the same to His disciples, was to ever be religiously correct, not then, not ever!
What criteria have we all been given by which we can identify those who are genuine? We shall know them by their fruits! And what are fruits? Are they good and acceptable behavior? If so, then the “fruit” remains on the tree. Rather, Biblical Fruit falls off of the tree and dies, leaving the seeds behind to grow more trees. That is the nature of the fruit about which Jesus was speaking.
One who bears fruit affects the behavior of those around him in positive ways without those affected realizing, at least at first, the source of their change-for-the-better. But the fruit can be obvious to those with eyes to see and ears to hear.
I don’t personally endorse political candidates. Instead, I treat all such as object lessons from which the whole world these days can learn from, both the good and the bad. Where does the buck stop at anyway? Right here with We-the-People! Who raised the children who have become our leaders today? We-the-People! Who are the ones who should be upholding the Ninth Amendment concerning the rights we have always had even though these are not specifically mentioned in the Constitution? Yes, We-the-People should be doing so. We have long had the right to keep marriage fully Biblical, to order and raise our families according to every word that proceeds out of the mouth of the Father in heaven. Why haven’t we been faithful in doing so?
We have a lot of finger-pointing to do at our individual selves. We each need to do as James has declared: Look into that Great Mirror, individually and personally, which is that Law of Liberty, the Ten Commandments, of our Creator God! If we SAY that we love God, but keep not His Commandments, that exposes us all as liars, and the Truth is definitely NOT in us! Jesus said, “REPENT, and believe the Gospel”! Repentance is not this world’s sorrow. Rather it means to soberly decide to stop breaking God’s own Ten Commandments and to determine to start keeping them. How is this so hard to understand?
“A good understanding have all they that DO His Commandments”!
we are trying to elect a President, not a religious leader. if we make our country all about our religion, we are no better than middle eastern countries that allow their religion to rule their country. we have every religion in the world represented in this country…they all have the same basic morals. we need someone to run this country that knows what they are doing, not a career politician.
Thank you, David. This was needed. I consider you spiritually awake. Didn’t Jesus say, “Those of you who are not spiritually asleep, come follow me.”
“I am not suggesting that Trump would usher in an era as tragic as the one Bonhoeffer foresaw”
No, you’re implying it (“it” being that Trump is Hitler) via your introductory paragraph. Yes yes, it’s merely an example of a time a tough choice had to be made blah blah. There are literally hundreds of other examples you could have used that were not A) unoriginal, and B) an accurate embodiemnt of Goodwins law personified.
I’m not saying your wrong, merely that the whole Trump is Hitler thing makes people tune you out and reactionary and unhinged. If your issue is that Trump seeks to enforce immigration laws against illegal Mexican immigrants, then please, point to another country that has ever existed that has allowed unchecked mass illegal immigration. Aren’t there “pearly gates” somewhere where you have to go through immigration to be granted access?
So please stop mischaracterizing his immigration policies or violating Goodwin’s law, your good points risk being ignored by your uninformed hysterics