NewsMark Wingfield | December 21, 2021
Donald Trump’s Christmas message to Christians turned out to be more bah-humbug than joy to the world.
The former president was invited to speak at First Baptist Church of Dallas on Sunday, Dec. 19, by the church’s pastor, Robert Jeffress. Trump was in town to hold a rally that afternoon with TV personality Bill O’Reilly. The rally was not open to media coverage, but the morning church service was.
Speaking to an estimated crowd of 3,000 inside the modern sanctuary of First Baptist Church — and an unknown number of others in overflow rooms and watching online — Trump acknowledged he was ditching the prepared Christmas message he was supposed to give and was, instead, speaking “from the heart.”
On the Sunday prior to one of the two highest holy days within Christianity, Trump issued a dire warning that America is “in great trouble” without his leadership.
“There’s a lot of clouds hanging over our country right now — dark clouds — but we will come back bigger and better and stronger than ever before,” he declared.
He gave examples of these problems, including crime and looting, border security, inflation, gas prices and the U.S. military withdrawal from Afghanistan, which he called a “mess” even though it was set in rapid motion by him in his final days as president. Nevertheless, he declared the chaotic withdrawal to be America’s most “embarrassing day.”
Despite all these evils, Trump said he sees “such spirit out there right now, I’ve never seen anything like that.”
“We’re going to make America great again,” he concluded, to raucous cheers and chants of “USA!” across the church sanctuary.
Trump, who rarely attended church while president, declared: “Our country needs a savior right now, and we have a savior — that’s not me, that’s someone much higher up.”
He also aired his grievances about criticism his wife, Melania, got for her different style of decorating the White House at Christmastime. She was not present with him at the service.
“’We’re going to make America great again,’ he concluded, to raucous cheers and chants of “USA!” across the church sanctuary.”
Trump was greeted by the congregation with a standing ovation. Jeffress then introduced him as one of his “closest friends” and added: “I believe … (Trump) is the most consequential president since Abraham Lincoln.”
“He is a great friend to Christians everywhere,” Jeffress said. “I can say this without any dispute at all, he is the most pro-life, pro-religious liberty, pro-Israel president in the history of the United States of America.”
A week earlier, Axios reported on an excerpt of a forthcoming book on Trump and the quest for Middle East peace, written by Israeli journalist Barak Ravid. The author reported on a 90-minute interview with Trump at his Mar-a-Lago resort where the former president dissed on former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — once one of his closest allies — because Netanyahu had the temerity to congratulate Joe Biden on becoming president. That doesn’t square with Trump’s Big Lie that the election was stolen from him.
Then-President Donald Trump and tjen-Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attend the Abraham Accords signing ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House, in Washington, Sept. 15, 2020. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
In that congratulation, “he was very early — like, earlier than most. I haven’t spoken to him since,” Trump said, adding a two-word profanity for emphasis.
Perhaps more importantly, Trump told Ravid that American Jews “no longer love Israel” as much as evangelical voters.
Trump’s exact words as quoted by Ravid are these: “I’ll tell you the evangelical Christians love Israel more than the Jews in this country. It used to be that Israel used to have absolute power over Congress. And today it’s the exact opposite. And I think Obama and Biden did that. And in the election, they still get a lot of votes from Jewish people, which tells you that the Jewish people, and I’ve said this for a long time — the Jewish people in the United States either don’t like Israel or don’t care about Israel.”
Jeffress and First Baptist Dallas represent the prominent strain of evangelical Christianity that is enthralled with U.S. support for Israel as part of their end-times theology. This relationship dates back to Harry Truman, a Baptist who as president was lobbied by evangelicals to support the creation of an Israeli state.
Thus, for Jeffress to declare that Trump is the most “pro-Israel president” in the nation’s history carries a theological endorsement related to the premillennial dispensationalism of the “Left Behind” series.
Speaking to reporters after the Sunday service, Jeffress said he didn’t believe Trump had said “anything overtly political.” And he said the full house is indicative of the nation’s love for Trump.
“We had a full house today, people were here very early, lining up to get in because they love this president and they love his policies, especially the moral and spiritual principles on which he stands,” Jeffress said.
Related articles:
Trump will visit First Baptist Dallas this Sunday while on ‘History Tour’ with Bill O’Reilly
Dear Robert Jeffress: You’ve called the wrong U.S. president ‘ungodly’ | Opinion by Rodney Kennedy
From 2016 to 2020, Trump grew in support from white evangelicals
News
News
News
Opinion
AnalysisRick Pidcock
OpinionCharles Qualls
OpinionKnox Thames
AnalysisErich Bridges
NewsJeff Brumley
NewsMark Wingfield
NewsMark Wingfield
OpinionL.A “Tony” Kovach
AnalysisRodney Kennedy
OpinionWendell Griffen
OpinionSusan M. Shaw, Senior Columnist
NewsJeff Brumley
AnalysisRick Pidcock
NewsMark Wingfield
OpinionDan Day
NewsJeff Brumley
OpinionDavid Gushee, Senior Columnist
OpinionJon Singletary
OpinionGreg Garrett, Senior Columnist
NewsMark Wingfield
OpinionGreg Jarrell
NewsJeff Brumley
OpinionGavril Andreicut
NewsMark Wingfield
NewsBarbara Francis
OpinionPaula Mangum Sheridan
NewsJeff Brumley
NewsMark Wingfield
NewsMark Wingfield
NewsJeff Brumley
NewsMark Wingfield
NewsJeff Brumley
NewsMark Wingfield
NewsJeff Brumley
NewsMark Wingfield
NewsBarbara Francis
NewsMark Wingfield
NewsJeff Hampton
NewsJeff Brumley
NewsMark Wingfield
NewsBarbara Francis
NewsJeff Brumley
NewsMark Wingfield
NewsMark Wingfield
NewsBNG staff
NewsJeff Brumley
NewsJeff Brumley
NewsMark Wingfield
NewsMaina Mwaura
NewsJeff Brumley
NewsAnthony Akaeze
OpinionCharles Qualls
OpinionKnox Thames
OpinionL.A “Tony” Kovach
OpinionWendell Griffen
OpinionSusan M. Shaw, Senior Columnist
OpinionDan Day
OpinionDavid Gushee, Senior Columnist
OpinionJon Singletary
OpinionGreg Garrett, Senior Columnist
OpinionGreg Jarrell
OpinionGavril Andreicut
OpinionPaula Mangum Sheridan
OpinionDavid Ramsey
OpinionRosa Lee Harden
OpinionJason Koon
OpinionJenna Sullivan
OpinionDanilo Zak
OpinionDarrell Hamilton II
OpinionLydia Joy Launderville
OpinionRobert P. Jones
OpinionRuss Dean
OpinionDavid Gushee, Senior Columnist
OpinionRick Pidcock
OpinionBill Leonard, Senior Columnist
OpinionAmy Hayes
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
Curated
Exclude from home pageBNG staff
© 2021 Baptist News Global. All rights reserved.
Want to share a story? We hope you will! Read our republishing, terms of use and privacy policies here.
COVID-19
Surviving The 2nd Wave of Corona
‘This too shall pass away’ this famous Persian adage seems to be defeating us again and again in the case of COVID-19. Despite every effort