“We thank you for the upcoming election, Lord — or caucus, as we call it in Iowa,” said Hundley, speaking from the sanctuary of his evangelical Christian church in his slight Texas drawl as his parishioners bowed their heads.

“It doesn’t matter what our opinion is,” he went on. “It’s really what’s your opinion that matters. But you’ve given us the privilege of being able to exercise a beautiful gift. The gift of vote. We thank you for that.”

While Hundley stops short of suggesting to his parishioners which candidate divine guidance should lead them to support, he is among more than 300 pastors and other faith leaders who’ve been described as supporters by former President Donald Trump’s campaign. It’s a message that some members of Hundley’s First Church of God have taken to heart, saying their faith informs their intention to caucus for Trump.

Ron Betts, a 72-year-old Republican who said he plans to caucus for “Trump all the way,” said he felt the former president “exemplified what Jesus would do.”

  • Moira_Mayhem@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    As a theistic Christian, if Jesus were to come back right now he would slap the shit out of trump on national television.

    There is no excuse for anyone calling themselves followers of Christ to think anything but pity and regret for the life cheetolini has led.

    • Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      If Jesus were to come back right now, his own followers would be the first to crucify him a second time.

    • ikidd@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Oh, but you probably don’t know about Supply Side Jesus, the new Jesus. He’d be right up there with the fat walrus.

      • Moira_Mayhem@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Al Franken is a gem and him stepping down lessened all of congress.

        That said, I sincerely with zero irony or humor want to start a reformation that reminds conservatives what Jesus was really about.

      • DarthBueller@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        He probably wouldn’t even know the word Christos. Since he was from the sticks and almost certainly monolingual.

        • Moira_Mayhem@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I beg to differ, it’s certain he spoke both Hebrew and Aramaic. Additionally, the label of ‘the annointed one’ was given to several false messiahs contemporary to Jesus’s time.

          Additionally, romans were already using the sobriquet ‘Little Christs’ to mock his followers before the Crucifixion.

          • DarthBueller@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            He certainly did not speak Hebrew as it was a dead language ant that point. Aramaic descended from Hebrew and was the spoken language. It’s like saying Italians speak Latin because they’re catholic and their language derives from Latin. We even have him speaking Aramaic on the cross. And if the false messiahs were as provincial as jesus they were illiterate. What is your source for “little Christs”? Edit: and it goes without saying that christos is Greek, and while evangelicals like to say that jbird spoke koine, it’s wishful thinking intended to wave away textual inconsistencies.

            • Moira_Mayhem@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Hebrew did not become a dead language until a century and a half after Jesus’s Crucifixion. It was still the scholarly and prayer language contemporary to his time and as he has been directly titled ‘Rabboni’, an exemplar of ‘Rabbi’ and only used with highly respected priestly scholarship, it is ridiculous to claim he did not speak Hebrew.

              What is your source for “little Christs”

              The concept of being anointed was near universal in both cultures.

              Hebrew: המשׁיה Hamashiach means ‘The anointed one’ and was a title of reverence reserved for the coming Messiah, in fact the word messiah has its root and origin in Hamashiach.

              Greek: Χριστός Christos ‘The one (lit) rubbed with oil’, the same root can be found in christen, which is named after the act of daubing the child’s head with oil, known as Chrism also takes its name from the act of applying oil (also known as myrrh)

              Before Christianity, Greeks used the root when referring to anointing ceremonies for contest victors and assuming high office, so there was already a connotation with ‘someone special getting oil poured/rubbed onto them’.

              Since both cultures had existing concepts for ‘putting oil on someone special’ it was only natural that the sobriquet arise contemporary to the time that he was ALREADY being called Hamashiach. And in fact was part of the reason he was brought before Pilate as claiming to be a king, as his anointing by John the Baptist was almost deliberately misconstrued as a claim for kingship by the Roman occupiers.

      • girlfreddyOP
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        1 year ago

        Ofc he was theistic … he was a Jew.

        And ofc he wasn’t a Christian because that religion only developed because of his death.