You say a link between Evangelical Christianity and DJT is inexplicable and your study of the subject matter has not produced a clear connection. Why would that lead you to ask how many Trump voters read the Bible? From who or what source does the "link" narrative originate?Since evangelical (and what does that term even mean anymore?) Christianity and Trump have become inexplicably woven together, I’m curious how many Trump voters truly read and study the Bible. I’m not being judgmental at all if you don’t. Mine has collected dust for many years at a time through the years. There are great Muslims, great Jews, great atheists, etc… so this is not a proselytizing post. But I’ve read and studied a lot the past few years and I truly don’t see how there is a connection with Trump and Christianity. The words and teachings of Jesus, regardless of what your religious and philosophical thinking in, are in general mostly diametrically opposed to everything Trump says and stands for. I’m sure if anyone answers this will likely turn into a sh!t show like most every other thread, but I’m truly curious and trying to get some clarification so don’t say I don’t try
The link, while serving no real purpose other than useful equivocation, is established somewhere in the self-serving US political squabble between left-right, us-against-them, educated-uneducated, and blue-versus-red Tower of Babel discourse that boards like this enjoy. At the most basic level, evangelicals are are a large portion of the Republican voting population and, by extension of straight ticket voting mentality, are probably more likely to have voted for Trump.