Polling only works correctly if people are honest. I think a lot of republicans are (very) uncomfortable saying they support Trump so they lie to pollsters and pick somebody else from the GOP clown car. In that poll Ramaswamy is at 7.2%. I simply can’t believe that’s accurate. If he breaches 10% maybe Trump will say “Ramas-whaty? He’s not… you know… like us.” Trump touches the white skin of his cheek. “He’s not even Christian. He’s an Indian religion from India,” and Ramaswamy’s numbers will fall by about half in a couple weeks.
By rejecting Jesus as god - it makes it simple for evangelicals to ignore what Jesus said and believed. He said “This is my command. Love each other as I have loved you.” In my opinion “evangelical” in the US is basically life-style branding.
Yeah but right-wing business owners don’t want to get bogged down in annoying Jesus stuff like his love command. They’re too busy hating minority groups of all kinds, discriminating against them, and then saying “As a Christian I can’t do business with [insert minority group name here]. It goes against my religious beliefs.” The GOP justices on the Supreme Court are far more important to them than Jesus.
Everything old is eventually new again. For example - 100 years from now their spawn could be lynching people - Christians and non-Christians - for not accepting Jesus as god.
Tbf, traditionally, the church wasn’t going around doing polls or quizzes about what the congregation believed. For most of history, church services were conducted in Latin to illiterate audiences, while the theological debates they were executing people over were often about highly nuanced and esoteric topics. For the average lay person, it wasn’t expected that they understand everything, so long as they were willing to defer to whatever the church told them if they said something wrong. Some would say that this shows the church has always cared more about obedience and authority than teaching about the faith (I’m Some )
That said, “Jesus is God” is like, it’s basically right there in the name “Christianity.”
Weird to me that Pence is at 5%. I figured he was a 10th of that.
Polling only works correctly if people are honest. I think a lot of republicans are (very) uncomfortable saying they support Trump so they lie to pollsters and pick somebody else from the GOP clown car. In that poll Ramaswamy is at 7.2%. I simply can’t believe that’s accurate. If he breaches 10% maybe Trump will say “Ramas-whaty? He’s not… you know… like us.” Trump touches the white skin of his cheek. “He’s not even Christian. He’s an Indian religion from India,” and Ramaswamy’s numbers will fall by about half in a couple weeks.
Particularly with Pence, I imagine he’s mostly getting evangelicals who will inevitably vote for Trump.
I was very surprised (and then entirely unsurprised) by the 30% number - More than half of US adults, 30% of evangelicals believe Jesus isn’t God: study.
By rejecting Jesus as god - it makes it simple for evangelicals to ignore what Jesus said and believed. He said “This is my command. Love each other as I have loved you.” In my opinion “evangelical” in the US is basically life-style branding.
Council of Nicaea: “Am I a joke to you?”
wait, isn’t that one of the centerpieces of Christian theology?
Yeah but right-wing business owners don’t want to get bogged down in annoying Jesus stuff like his love command. They’re too busy hating minority groups of all kinds, discriminating against them, and then saying “As a Christian I can’t do business with
[insert minority group name here]
. It goes against my religious beliefs.” The GOP justices on the Supreme Court are far more important to them than Jesus.I’m just surprised that 30% of evangelicals are committing extremely old school the church will lynch you heresies.
Everything old is eventually new again. For example - 100 years from now their spawn could be lynching people - Christians and non-Christians - for not accepting Jesus as god.
Wish they’d just skip to the part were they murder each other over disagreements about when and how often you should be baptized
Tbf, traditionally, the church wasn’t going around doing polls or quizzes about what the congregation believed. For most of history, church services were conducted in Latin to illiterate audiences, while the theological debates they were executing people over were often about highly nuanced and esoteric topics. For the average lay person, it wasn’t expected that they understand everything, so long as they were willing to defer to whatever the church told them if they said something wrong. Some would say that this shows the church has always cared more about obedience and authority than teaching about the faith (I’m Some )
That said, “Jesus is God” is like, it’s basically right there in the name “Christianity.”
Considering that polls skew older I could see that semi-accurately representing the never-Trumpers.