Strategy = Idolatry: Christianity Today Comes Out Against Evangelical Support for Donald Trump

Donald Trump has inexplicably enjoyed tremendous support from evangelicals and evangelical leaders, but in the wake of recently surfaced video footage of Trump making glaringly lewd and misogynistic comments many are starting to reassess.  Andy Crouch at Christianity Today has published an editorial challenging evangelical Trump supporters to “speak truth to Trump“.  Crouch contends that most evangelicals who support Trump do so reluctantly in light of the president’s power to shape the balance of the Supreme Court in such a way as to support our Christian values.  Such voters have made an idol of political strategy:

Most Christians who support Trump have done so with reluctant strategic calculation, largely based on the president’s power to appoint members of the Supreme Court. Important issues are indeed at stake, including the right of Christians and adherents of other religions to uphold their vision of sexual integrity and marriage even if they are in the cultural minority.

But there is a point at which strategy becomes its own form of idolatry—an attempt to manipulate the levers of history in favor of the causes we support. Strategy becomes idolatry, for ancient Israel and for us today, when we make alliances with those who seem to offer strength—the chariots of Egypt, the vassal kings of Rome—at the expense of our dependence on God who judges all nations, and in defiance of God’s manifest concern for the stranger, the widow, the orphan, and the oppressed. Strategy becomes idolatry when we betray our deepest values in pursuit of earthly influence. And because such strategy requires capitulating to idols and princes and denying the true God, it ultimately always fails.

Enthusiasm for a candidate like Trump gives our neighbors ample reason to doubt that we believe Jesus is Lord. They see that some of us are so self-interested, and so self-protective, that we will ally ourselves with someone who violates all that is sacred to us—in hope, almost certainly a vain hope given his mendacity and record of betrayal, that his rule will save us.