Evangelicalism

White evangelicals are an exception, according to a new survey from the Public Religion Research Institute.
“After all that he has done for our country, you would turn your back and betray him so quickly?” Franklin Graham wrote, saying Trump wasn't "a perfect person."
"Could you please step down and let our country heal?” tweeted Russell Moore, who heads the Southern Baptist Convention's public policy arm.
The president's most loyal evangelical advisers have condemned the insurrection -- but some are still carefully avoiding pinning blame on Trump.
"I don’t want to be a superspreader," says Rick Warren, pastor of California's giant Saddleback Church.
Rev. Ianther Mills hopes for more widespread condemnation of the protesters who burned Asbury United Methodist Church's Black Lives Matter sign.
The ex-president of the evangelical Christian university stepped down in August amid reports of a sex scandal.
“Believe in the blood of Jesus. Believe in divine immunity,” King Jesus International Ministry's Guillermo Maldonado said in a sermon.
It's more than just loyalty to the Republican Party, experts say. A "parallel culture" and prophecies play into evangelicals' not accepting Joe Biden's win.
After prayer and deep introspection, these white evangelical Christians have decided they can no longer support Trump.