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cover of episode For some conservative Christians supporting Trump, it's about the policies

For some conservative Christians supporting Trump, it's about the policies

2024/10/27
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Consider This from NPR

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Scott Detrow: 保守派基督徒对特朗普的支持似乎坚定不移,原因是什么? Chad Harvey: 我们关注的是政治纲领,而不是候选人的个人品德。即使候选人有严重的道德问题,只要他们的政治纲领符合我们的价值观,我们就会支持他们。 Chad Harvey: 政治在教会日常生活中所占比例很小,人们更关注生活琐事。然而,政治正在涉足曾经属于教会领域的议题,例如家庭和性。 Chad Harvey: 保守派基督徒关注的核心道德问题是生命的圣洁、宗教自由和跨性别议题。在选择支持的候选人时,我们主要基于其政治纲领,而非个人品德。 Chad Harvey: 每个人都有缺点,包括特朗普、哈里斯和拜登。因此,关注政治纲领比关注个人品德更重要。福音派和五旬节派基督徒并非一味支持特朗普,我们也意识到他的缺点。 Chad Harvey: 特朗普的政治纲领更符合我们的圣经观。对候选人的问责应该一视同仁,不能双重标准。 Chad Harvey: 马克·罗宾逊虽然言辞有时不当,但他代表了我们的价值观。对候选人的评价标准应该一致,不应该双重标准。 Chad Harvey: 我们认为特朗普在堕胎问题上比左派更体现了正义和怜悯。 Chad Harvey: 人们误解了福音派和五旬节派基督徒的政治动机,我们并非试图将美国变成基督教国家。大多数福音派和五旬节派基督徒更希望过平静的生活,传播福音,而非参与政治。 Scott Detrow: 对保守派基督徒对特朗普的支持,以及他们对候选人个人品德和政治纲领的权衡,进行了深入探讨,并分析了其背后的原因和误解。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

Why do conservative Christians support Trump despite his personal issues?

They focus on his platform, which aligns closer to their biblical views on issues like life and religious liberty.

How much does politics influence daily conversations in Pastor Chad Harvey's congregation?

Politics is a minor topic, comprising only 1-2% of conversations.

What does Pastor Harvey say about the role of politics in spiritual issues?

He views it as neutral, noting that politics is increasingly tackling spiritual issues like family and human sexuality.

What are the key moral issues driving the political views of Pastor Harvey's congregation?

Sanctity of life, religious liberty, and transgender issues.

How does Pastor Harvey explain the strong support for Trump among evangelicals?

He emphasizes that while Trump is flawed, his platform aligns more closely with evangelical values than the opposing side.

What does Pastor Harvey think about holding political candidates to moral standards?

He believes in applying consistent standards but acknowledges that all candidates have flaws.

How does Pastor Harvey view Lieutenant Governor Mark Robinson?

He finds Robinson winsome and aligns with biblical values, though acknowledges his political inexperience can be a weakness.

What does Pastor Harvey think secular listeners misunderstand about his congregation?

They often overestimate the role of politics and the desire for Christian nationalism, while the congregation prioritizes a peaceful life and sharing the gospel.

Chapters
Conservative Christians, particularly evangelicals and Pentecostals, have consistently supported Trump due to his policy platform, despite his personal controversies.
  • Trump appeals directly to religious conservatives in tight races.
  • Pastor Chad Harvey emphasizes looking at the platform, not the person.
  • Evangelicals see Trump's platform as closer to their biblical views.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
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And I'm Scott Detrow in Raleigh. On a late October evening in North Carolina's capital city, a massive stage in a dark auditorium is backlit by tall screens. And bass-thumping music and vocals are filling the space. There's a table of judges in front of the stage. Think American Idol.

a clearly religious focus. It's worship team audition night at Cross Assembly Church. Inside this congregation's nearly 1,700-seat sanctuary on a sprawling multi-wing campus that resembles a high school or community college.

Hey, Scott. Nice to meet you. Scott, good to meet you, man. This Pentecostal church is led by Pastor Chad Harvey, whose sermons, often to weekly crowds of about 3,000, usually wind up on Cross Assembly's social media channels. If I thought the faith...

of history, depending on the 2024 election, I'd be as anxious as you and popping as many pills as you are. Fortunately, I don't believe that stuff. My hope is in Jesus, not in the politics. But as Harvey ends up telling us, there is no way to completely avoid political discourse in the church. Every time I take this stage, I do not take it in my own name. I don't take it in the name of the lieutenant governor. I take it in the name

That is Republican Mark Robinson, North Carolina's lieutenant governor and now a gubernatorial candidate, speaking to cross assembly back in 2021, several years before he became the star of Democratic attack ads across the North Carolina airwaves for a string of controversial comments, stances and alleged actions.

Evangelical and Pentecostal conservatives are a powerful force in Republican politics. They have fueled the rise of candidates like Robinson, and they've stuck by former President Donald Trump for going on three presidential elections in a row. That's despite Trump's long list of criminal charges, sexual harassment and assault allegations, and regular brutal personal attacks on political opponents, all of which wouldn't fit many people's definition of a Christian. Kamala is mentally impaired.

Every Republican did what she did. In fact, in the closing weeks of a tight race in North Carolina, Trump has been appealing directly to religious conservatives. Christians, get everyone you know and vote. You have to vote. Consider this. Conservative Christian support for Trump seems to be unwavering. And Pastor Chad Harvey says there's a simple reason. We look at the platform, not the person.

And so you can have some people with some pretty deep moral struggles who are upholding a platform that we support. Ahead, we talk to Harvey about how he and other conservative Christians see the campaign and the country. From NPR, I'm Scott Detrow.

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It's Consider This from NPR. Last week, we spent time in the key swing state of North Carolina. And on a Monday night, Pastor Chad Harvey and I sat down to talk in a small side prayer room at Cross Assembly Church about faith and the election. How much does politics come up day-to-day conversation when you're talking to people here, when you're talking to people in the congregation, when you're doing your pastoral work?

You know, it's very interesting. I think an outsider looking into the evangelical Pentecostal movement would assume that politics plays a huge role in the life of the church. It actually doesn't. I'd say one to two percent of my conversations are about politics. I think a lot of people are just trying to make ends meet. They're trying to live their lives. But politics, surprisingly, does not play as big a role in the life of a faith community like this that a lot of people would. Now, I

I've told our folks this, you know, our church is accused of being a little bit too political. And I said, you know, the church is not getting more political. Politics is getting more spiritual. And so we're seeing this infiltration into the political realm of things that used to be the church's territory, family, human sexuality. Now politics is starting to tackle those spiritual issues. And in your perspective, is that a good thing or a bad thing? You know, I think...

I think it's neutral. It is interesting to me, and I'm wondering what you think about this.

So many of the big issues in this race are those kind of spiritual world issues. It's what does it mean to be a family? It's what role should the government play in regulating abortion? It's what to do with people who are coming into this country as immigrants. Obviously a big theme in the Bible. How do you think about the big issues that are out there and what the role is for the church to play in having conversations with people? Yeah, so there are some issues that I feel...

the political world has now infringed, if you would, on my territory. Yeah. Human sexuality, the sanctity of life. I think with our congregation, if you were to ask, what are the moral issues that are really driving your views of the political climate? It would be number one, the sanctity of life. Um,

religious liberty, I think is becoming more and more of an issue as well. This whole transgender thing. And again, the transgender thing is an umbrella term that encompasses title nine and athletics and all that should biological males be in women's athletics. That umbrella term is a huge issue.

How do you think about which candidates you're going to support? Is it through the lens of the issues they support? Is it through how they come across as individuals? Scott, I think what I've told our congregation is we look at the platform, not the person. And so you can have some people with some pretty deep moral struggles who are upholding a platform that we support. And I tell our people, don't pay as much attention to the struggles, pay attention to the platform.

Because here's what the Bible says. There's no righteous, no not one. We're all messed up people. This core message that we have of the gospel, it's the good news. The bad news of the good news is we're all messed up people. So whether it be some of the accusations that have been lodged at Mark Robinson recently, whether it be Kamala Harris and Willie Brown and did you work at McDonald's, Donald Trump.

telling Howard Stern the sexual revolution of the 1970s was my personal Vietnam. They're all messed up people. And so that's the one thing we have to keep in mind as a congregation. Let me just ask the direct question about this with Trump, because I think we have all in this country been thinking about this for a decade now, for good or bad. And I think there's a lot of people outside the evangelical or Pentecostal world, people who either are different religious affiliations or more secular people,

who kind of have, they think, you know, Donald Trump has such a high support from so many Christians around the country, and yet is somebody who lives in a gold tower with his name on it, who crudely insults people, and among other things, you know, is facing criminal charges. And they just feel like this is not the message, as I understand it, of Christianity, but there's such a strong support. I know you've gotten this question before. What's the best way you explain it to someone who says, I just don't understand that? Yeah, yeah. So I would say...

Again, I keep going back to we're all messed up people. Trump is messed up. Kamala Harris is messed up. Joe Biden has had accusations thrown at him. We're all messed up individuals. And so I think what I keep coming back to is a lot of people seem to think that we're having a continuous 24-7 Trump rally in the evangelical Pentecostal circle. We're actually not. We're well aware of his foibles. We're well aware of where he's messed up.

I think the reason Trump is resonating with evangelicals is this mess aside that we all know about.

The platform he's supporting, like it or not, is closer aligned to our view of Scripture than the other side. Does that create a world, though, where there's never any accountability for anybody personally? I do think that at some point that there will be a line that's crossed. And so at that point, what I said is true. That's fine. Let's just make sure we're using that standard across the board. So this candidate did this. I can't support him. That's fine. Don't support him. All

Only thing I'm asking is use that same standard. You mentioned the Lieutenant governor. I want to ask about that because I think one of the first things that drew us was that, was that he's, he's spoken to, to cross assembly in the past and you've gotten to know him a little bit. Yeah. Yeah. What do you make of him as a candidate and as a man? You know, um,

As a man, very winsome. I think one thing that drew him to a lot of individuals in our congregation is we have somebody in high political office who's talking our language. I've said many times about Mark Robinson, for every strength is a corresponding weakness. His strength is he's not part of the political system. The weakness is sometimes he talks like a man who's not part of the political system, and maybe he...

Phrases, things that make people uncomfortable. But as an individual, I really feel like the values that he espoused from the pulpit really resonated with our biblical worldviews. What I'm hearing is that line hasn't been crossed yet. I don't want to put words in your mouth. I think what I would say is the Bible says God hates unequal scales. So if we're going to hold Robinson to this standard...

That's fine. And again, I'm not trying to be the national inquirer, but okay, was the Willie Brown relationship a leg up?

to ascend in the political realm. It's a critique many conservatives have made, though there's no clear evidence it's true. At an early relationship with San Francisco's then mayor, while he was separated from his wife, launched Vice President Kamala Harris' political career. As for Robinson? Okay, yeah, he messed up. If that's your standard, I can't vote for Robinson because he messed up. I'm not saying that he did. But if that's the standard, that's fine.

But now I'm going to ask you to hold every other candidate that you potentially would support to that standard. Now, I would not bring him probably on staff as my pastor or co-pastor here until we get these issues situated. So we're now talking about...

him as a political candidate, not as a spiritual leader, because he did speak at our church. And I think some people see that and say, well, no, do you view him as a spiritual leader? Well, no, I don't. He's still a political candidate. Harris and Democrats have been trying to reach out to religious voters as well, highlighting Trump's actions and statements. Where I was raised, and I know many of us were, understanding that our God is a loving God,

that our faith propels us to act in a way that is about kindness and justice and mercy.

that is about lifting one another up? And let's talk about the contrast here. Donald Trump and his followers spend full time trying to suggest that the measure of the strength of a leader is based on who you beat down. We asked Pastor Chad Harvey about that comment and its direct reference to Scripture, which Harris made in a recent interview on iHeartRadio's The Breakfast Club. Look, Micah 6-8, what does the Lord require of you? To do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.

He's not doing justly. He's not loving mercy. And he's not walking humbly with his God. So how can you support a man like this? And I think probably I would say we might be redefining justice and mercy. And by that, I would say Donald Trump, with some of his positions on life, is showing more justice and mercy to the unborn or the post-born than the left is. We've talked about this before.

In pieces here and there, but I want to give you a chance just to directly talk about it in one swoop. What do you think more secular listeners, listeners of other religious persuasions, listeners who live in other parts of the country, what do you think it is that they misunderstand the most about congregations like yours? Wow, that's a great question. I would say, again, kind of putting my ear to the ground and seeing what's being said about the evangelical Pentecostal voting bloc.

I think one of the biggest misperceptions is that this is what is dominating our mind. This is what's really driving us. I keep hearing this term Christian nationalism. That's been the big buzzword in 2024. I've not heard of that until this year that we're just trying to impose our Christian beliefs on this nation and make us a Christian nation. That may be true for other congregations. I don't know that that's true for a large segment of evangelical Pentecostal Christians.

You know, the Bible says, make it your goal to live a peaceful and quiet life. I think a lot of us just want to have a peaceful and quiet life, be able to share the good news of Jesus Christ. I don't think we're driven by this desire to make America a Christian nation. And I don't think politics really occupies as big a part of our brain as people think it does. Well, Pastor Chad Harvey, thank you. Despite that, coming to talk politics with us. Yeah, that's right. Enjoy it, man. Thank you so much, Scott. Yes, sir.

This episode was produced by Tyler Bartlam and Catherine Fink. It was edited by Ashley Brown. Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan. And one more thing before you go, you can now enjoy the Consider This newsletter. We still help you break down a major story of the day, but you'll also get to know our producers and hosts and some moments of joy from the All Things Considered team. You can sign up at npr.org slash consider this newsletter. It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Scott Detrow.

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