Christianity is by far the largest faith in America, and Christian conservatives have a strong grip on the levers of government.
Critics see the task force initiative as unnecessary and pandering to Trump’s base. But some Christian supporters said it is overdue, claiming the Biden administration had discriminated against them through actions and inactions.
The two-year task force, chaired by Attorney General Pam Bondi and composed of Cabinet and other government representatives, is assigned to review and “identify any unlawful anti-Christian” actions under the Biden administration, change any objectionable policies and recommend steps to rectify any past failures.
Bruce Ledewitz, a law professor at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, criticized the mindset behind the executive order as that of a powerful group claiming victimhood.
The Christian conservative movement — a core Republican constituency — now has significant sway on the Supreme Court and in numerous states, Congress and the presidency, Ledewitz said. And still, they declare, “We are victims,” he said.
There seems to be none left. I keep hearing from people who say they are Christians and against it, but only in back rooms and privately. Where are the Christian orgs that are speaking out? No public outcry or anything.
Something eye-opening I heard from a very devout friend is that a lot of churches preach avoiding evil. Don't watch horror movies, don't read about violence, etc. You don't want those ideas in your thoughts.
Her church teaches that religion and politics should never mix. And because of that....she is ignorant to politics.
This is purely anecdotal and I'm definitely not absolving them for it but it does make some sense
The evangelical bishop was pretty fucking based - but I do agree we need more if people are going to claim they're following a religion of peace and love.
There are some relatively powerful groups. Americans United for the Separation of Church and State was founded by a Christian minister and has always had religious leaders on the board of trustees. Maybe kick them some support if you want to encourage them to do more.
This is how they start meaningfully erroding abortion rights at the federal level, as well a gay rights.
They've long held that preventing a Christian from interfering in someone else's life is an infringement on religious freedom.
They're going to find ways to end Christian persecution by removing rules that say Christians have to fill prescriptions they think might be related to abortion, aren't bound by anti discrimination laws, are institutionally allowed to break rules governing the behavior of hospitals, orphanages and adoption agencies, or any number of other charities.
It's sort of built into their belief system. Early Christian authors wrote prophecies that their followers would be persecuted for their beliefs. So any time they can claim it's happening they get to say "see? Prophecy fulfilled!
But also, when your group has lived in a position of massive privelege for hundreds of years, equality feels like persecution. It's the same reason groups like the proud boys have been so successful in recent years. It's backlash over society heading in a direction where white men are not defacto leaders in control of everything.
"Stop discriminating against me and judging me and saying bad things about me! Also, you're going to burn and suffer for all eternity in hell because of who you're attracted to."
These types of Christians see not being put first and foremost as anti-Christian bias. They’re Christian supremacists and theocrats, and they deserve to be put down.
Once again, the most religious Christians show they’re the least Christ-like.