Evangelical Christian leader Russell Moore revealed this week that many evangelical pastors have become alarmed that their Trump-loving congregants have become so militant that they are even rejecting the teachings of Jesus Christ.In an interview with NPR, Moore said that multiple pastors had told h…
Good question. On the other hand, many things considered to be “Christian” in the US are detrimental to what Jesus has taught humanity. I know that and I’m not even a Christian.
https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew 4:23-25&version=NIV
versus
https://www.tpr.org/border-immigration/2023-08-06/up-close-look-at-gov-greg-abbotts-floating-wall-in-the-rio-grande
They call themselves Christian but practically do the opposite of what Jesus has said.
Well them not even knowing what their religion teaches would certainly make it plausible for them to act in direct contradiction to what their supposed beliefs are.
For a lot of christians it’s however the dissociation of the “person in the news” from the rest of humanity. People in the news are often only seen as a prop within the story, not an actual living, shitting, eating, sexual human being with a biological ancestry. This phenomenon is obvious in celebrity news or how people react very harshly when they feel The Person In The News is bad. I think this dissociation hinders a lot of people of making the connection with their values of “loving, caring, compassionate” to The Person In The News.
So they don’t see the contradiction between Mat 25:36-40
and “Fortress Europe! Enforce our borders by any means necessary!”
Which is why representation of minorities is so crucial. It humanifies them to people who only read about them in the news.
That least of these verse is a guaranteed treasure trove of hateful, sometimes violent responses if you throw it out on something like yahoo comments.
I find it both hilarious in its predictability and disheartening in the human nature those responses illustrate.