After former President Donald Trump gave his victory speech early Wednesday morning at the Palm Beach Convention Center, dozens of his supporters gathered in a lobby to sing “How Great Thou Art,” reciting from memory the words and harmonies of a classic hymn popular among evangelical Christians.
Evangelicals got it right. In several ways.
Be informed, not misled.
It was a fitting coda to an election in which Trump once again won the support of about 80% --- 8 in 10 white evangelical Christian voters,--- according to AP VoteCast, a sweeping survey of more than 120,000 voters. That level of support — among a group that represented about 20% of the total electorate — repeats the similarly staggering evangelical support that Trump received in 2020.
At an earlier Trump rally, the massive crowd began spontaneously singing Amazing Grace.
Crowd sings “Amazing Grace” at Pittsburgh Trump Rally before Trump takes the stage πΊπΈππΌ
— TONY™ (@TONYxTWO) November 5, 2024
This is why we will win!
Chills pic.twitter.com/nw38A1jjIX
Evangelicals who publicly supported Trump during the campaign were often mocked by the media and questioned by the so-called Christian Left.
And called "garbage" by our current sitting president.
A new message on a red hat showed up during this election, addressing the accusations that Christians worshiped Trump.
Jesus Is My Savior, Trump Is My President.
The Left and the legacy media underestimate the intelligence of the Christian people.
Christianity is a growing faith worldwide.
From 2020 to mid-2024, the world's population was expected to grow from more than 7.84 billion people to more than 8.11 billion, a 0.87% growth trend. The number of Christians worldwide was expected to climb from more than 2.52 billion to 2.63 billion, a 1.08% growth trend. Jan 22, 2024.
American Family News said, "Pastor Robert Jeffress of First Baptist Church of Dallas, one of Trump’s most prominent evangelical supporters since the 2016 campaign, called the election a “great victory.”
“Yes, there were some faith issues important to evangelicals, but evangelicals are Americans, too,” Jeffress said. “They care about immigration, they care about the economy.”
Some Trump critics fear he will implement a Christian nationalist agenda they see as giving Christians a privileged position in the country and flouting the separation of church and state.
Jeffress dismissed concerns of those who predict a Christian nationalist administration.
“People who are not Christians are unduly worried he’s going to institute some kind of oppressive theocracy. He has no interest in doing that,” Jeffress said, noting that Trump has shown no interest in banning same-sex marriage or imposing an absolute abortion ban.
The Republican platform pledged to defend Christians as well as Jews facing persecution. While it included a general pledge to protect the worship of all faith groups, those were the only two singled out by name. The platform also championed the right to “pray and read the Bible in school.”
Trump is pledging to support other evangelical priorities, such as support for Israel and a pushback on transgender rights, saying, “God created two genders, male and female.”
It wasn’t just white, non-Hispanic evangelicals supporting Trump. So did about just over half of Latino evangelicals and about 6 in 10 white Catholics, according to AP VoteCast. Overall, about 6 in 10 Mormons also backed the former president.
Pastor Abraham Rivera of La Puerta Life Center in North Miami, Florida, attributed Trump’s popularity among all Latinos, and evangelicals in particular, to their conservative values regarding morality and family.
“The gender identity issue that the left pushes a lot, I think it puts off a lot of Latino evangelicals,” Rivera said. Members of his congregation voiced some concerns about Trump’s “personality or things he says,” but not his policies, Rivera said.
He expects the frequent contacts that Latino evangelical leaders had with Trump’s first administration to continue, giving them a voice. In contrast, he felt doors “were shut closed” in the Biden White House, which seemed to disregard the values of many conservatives.
But Rivera added: “The idea that some evil Christian right is going to take over everything is just crazy.”
"How Great Thou Art."
After President Trump gave his victory speech, singing broke out in the lobby of the convention center.
What the Left can't understand, or doesn't want to understand, is that "Thou" in the hymn is about God and His greatness.
"Thou" is God, not Trump.
Trump is the right president for America at this time.
All mighty God is eternal. The Creator of all things.
He became flesh and dwelt among us, and ultimately, He laid down his life for our eternal salvation if we accept Him as our Lord and Savior and believe He rose from the dead.
Trump is obviously willing to lay down his life for his country, as many patriots have done.
America was founded upon those deeply held biblical principles. It will be sustained upon those same principles.
I believe that Trump is the right man, at the right time, for leadership in our country.
I also believe the so-called "progressive" Left is trying to create as much chaos and confusion as possible to mislead as many as possible.
Beware.
Be Informed. Be Discerning. Be Vigilant. Be Engaged. Be Prayerful.