How does Trump embody Latter-day Saint values?

I read a comment recently at W&T about Church members in Arizona being split on whether Trump embodies Latter-day Saint values, with most believing he does, and a minority disagreeing. (I’m not linking to the comment because on a quick search, I couldn’t find it.) As you can guess if you’ve read ZD much, I’m very much with the minority.

But it did get me to thinking that clearly there’s some connection that can be drawn between Trumpism and Mormonism that so many Church members are picking up on. After some thought, here are some LDS principles I think Trump follows or exhibits that make him feel so right to so many American Mormons:

  • Patriarchy: Trump clearly has little use for women holding positions of authority. Similarly, the LDS Church gives women very little institutional authority, having all-male leadership both at the general and local level. While Trump and the Church obviously disagree about rules around sex, they agree that women are the attractive objects who are responsible for it. Perhaps Trump’s largest-looming legacy will be appointing judges to get Roe v. Wade overturned so states could restrict or ban abortion. Similarly, while GAs claim to believe in sometimes permissible abortion, the way they talk about the issue makes it pretty clear they expect these to be so rare as to be irrelevant.
  • White supremacy: Trump is a thoroughgoing, unapologetic racist. On the Church side, while it has made some steps in recent years with occasional nice statements about racism being wrong, the racial makeup of the leadership still shouts white supremacy. The unapologized-for and now carefully waved away century plus long priesthood/temple ban still shouts it. The racist justification for the Lamanites’ dark skins in the Book of Mormon still shouts it. It’s no surprise that lots of Church members are happy to embrace Trump’s racism.
  • Prosperity gospel: Trump is wealthy. He may have driven many businesses to bankruptcy, but he at least has the appearance of having a lot of money. He signed into law a tax cut strongly weighted toward him and his wealthy friends. The Church similarly has a problem with worshiping wealth. Men called to be GAs are typically businessmen and lawyers, and typically well-off. Along the same lines, at the local level, bishops and their counselors typically have white collar jobs. The Church spends a lot of money to make temples look fancy in ways that echo Trump’s love of plating things with gold. The Church’s requirement of tithing, which is a disproportionate burden for poorer people, makes it a more comfortable place for better-off people. While the prosperity gospel may not be taught in as many words, there is a lot of coded language that gets passed around like “self reliance” and Ezra Taft Benson’s famous line about people to take the slums out of themselves.
  • Nationalism: Trump is deeply concerned about the United States not being powerful or white enough. (This point is of course connected with white supremacy.) He doesn’t want the country involved in alliances like NATO, and he’s suspicious of trade agreements. He’d rather slap tariffs on imports to show other countries who’s boss. He hates immigrants, legal or not. In the Church, while there have been movements toward becoming more seriously international, the headquarters is still in the US, and the top leadership is still largely American. The influence of Ezra Taft Benson’s paranoid America-firstism may not be as strong as it once was, but it’s far from gone. We also still have things like God saying in our scriptures that he inspired the US Constitution and GAs (and former GAs) who are clearly America worshipers. One disconnect with Trumpism is that many American Mormons have served missions in other countries and tend to be more pro-immigrant than Trumpists in general.
  • Authoritarian control: Trump hates any checks on his power. He openly mused while president about becoming president-for-life, he called for the 2020 election to be postponed, and when it turned out not in his favor, he tried to have it overturned. He hates having reporters check him on his fabrications or publish anything critical of him. In the Church, while we have some nice aspirational statements like Joseph Smith’s “teach them correct principles, and they govern themselves,” we have far more a norm of leaders directing and members following. GAs are so unwilling to accept feedback from the rank-and-file that they periodically send a letter telling us we can raise issues no further than our stake presidents, and we should never contact them directly. Another very telling example is that we’ve turned the sustaining vote from an actual vote as it was at the beginning of the Church to a loyalty test, where anyone voting opposed on any calling is doing nothing but marking themselves as suspect.
  • Revering elders: Trump is an old man. For Latter-day Saints raised to revere the authority of GAs who are old men, he fits right in (not even to mention that he’s white and wealthy).

It’s quite a bit, actually, that Trumpist Latter-day Saints are picking up on. Interestingly, I think it’s more often unspoken than spoken issues. For example, the Church doesn’t come out and say “women are lesser,” it just treats them differently. Or GAs don’t (any longer) say that people of color are lesser than whites, they just try to pretend the priesthood/temple ban never happened.

But I still disagree with Trumpist Mormons. Even if he’s a good example of white Christian nationalism, he utterly fails at any scriptural or other Church righteousness test. Let me give you a few.

In the Beatitudes in Matthew 5, Jesus pronounces blessedness on the following:

Photo by Tim Wildsmith on Unsplash
  • The poor in spirit.
  • They that mourn.
  • The meek.
  • They which do hunger and thirst after righteousness.
  • The merciful.
  • The pure in heart.
  • The peacemakers.
  • They which are persecuted for righteousness’ sake.

None of these match Trump in the slightest. I imagine his supporters might argue that the last one does, because he’s widely hated for his righteousness in getting Roe v. Wade overturned. I totally disagree, as I don’t believe allowing or enacting abortion bans is righteousness. But even setting that one aside for the sake of argument, can you imagine anyone who fits this list worse? The meek? The merciful? The peacemakers? Trump is full of bluster, anger, and cruelty.

In 1 Corinthians 13, Paul lists some characteristics of charity:

  • Suffereth long
  • Is kind
  • Envieth not
  • Vaunteth not itself
  • Is not puffed up
  • Doth not behave itself unseemly
  • Seeketh not her own
  • Is not easily provoked
  • Thinketh no evil
  • Rejoiceth not in iniquity
  • Rejoiceth in the truth
  • Beareth all things
  • Believeth all things
  • Hopeth all things
  • Endureth all things
  • Never faileth

Again, Trump is such a failure by this list. He’s a walking example of anti-charity. Vaunteth not itself? Is not puffed up? Seeketh not her own? His ego is gigantic. He’s sure he’s the most wonderful and intelligent and powerful and best at everything. He seeks nothing but his own.

Here’s a list of expectations from Alma’s baptismal covenant in Mosiah 18:

  • Desirous to come into the fold of God and be called his people.
  • Are willing to bear one another’s burdens, that they may be light.
  • Are willing to mourn with those that mourn.
  • Are willing to comfort those that stand in need of comfort.
  • Are willing to stand as witnesses of God at all times and in all things and in all places that ye may be in, even until death.

He’s a total miss. I’m okay giving him a pass on the first and last ones because I get that he isn’t a religious person. But how about the middle ones? Bear one another’s burdens? Mourn with those that mourn? To Trump, people who need to be mourned with or who need comfort are just sad suckers. He prefers people who don’t have bad things happen to them and need help. Or more precisely, he seems unconcerned with the fact that any people outside of him actually have needs in the first place.

I won’t bother listing all the temple recommend interview questions. He’d fail many of them again because he’s not religious, let alone Christian or Mormon. But even just the basic behavioral standards he totally fails at. Does he strive to be honest in all that he does? The man is so disconnected from even the idea of truth that I don’t think he even lies in the conventional sense of knowing one thing to be true and saying something else. He just asserts things and figures that whatever he says can be made to be true. Does he strive for moral cleanliness in his thoughts and behavior? The idea is laughable. It would be difficult to argue that he ever considers moral cleanliness even the tiniest bit.

The simplest standard is the Two Great Commandments, for example in Matthew 22:

  • Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind.
  • Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.

Trump obviously doesn’t love God. He’s not a believer. More importantly for those of us having to live with his influence in our lives, he doesn’t love his neighbor. The famous exchange where Jesus gave the parable of the Good Samaritan to show that everyone is our neighbor isn’t even relevant to him because he so clearly doesn’t even acknowledge the importance of other people in general.

In conclusion, I still think it’s quite clear Trump doesn’t embody Latter-day Saint (or Christian) values. I’m not at all persuaded by my co-religionists who put patriarchy and nationalism above charity. I only think it’s damning of their view of what the Church is all about that they see such things as more important.

5 comments / Add your comment below

  1. Trump’s a teetotaler, so probably he’s OK on the Word of Wisdom question (no idea whether he drinks coffee). I would be interested to know whether any Mormon Trump supporters think this is relevant.

  2. Trump also doesn’t have much use for the 10 Commandments, except using the Bible as a photo-op prop or a money-maker. What worries me is that Trump has the Constitution hanging by a thread, and Latter-day Saints are rushing forward, but not to rescue it. They’ve got scissors in their hands.

  3. I am a very old millennial with boomer parents. I’ve found that a number of my peers are having family crises with their parents support of Trump republicanism. One friend put it best when she pointed out that her morals and values make her utterly reject Trump, while at the same time, she sees her parents, the people who taught her those morals and values embrace Trump. It all feels baffling.

  4. I’m a conservative Republican. But, I can’t stand Trump. He is sleazy, mean, loony and utterly unprincipled.

    I have been gratified by how many fellow Republicans I’ve met over the last week or two who are going to do what I am . . .skip the presidential line and vote GOP down ballot. I’m in a heavily red state but it is interesting how many Republicans consider him utterly unfit for public office. And, almost all, are LDS.

  5. Ziff, you left off that both Trump and Mormons support discrimination against LGTB and are terrified of socialism. Both of those are moral issues in their minds and so evil as to be world and soul destroying. The Mormons I know who support Trump put the culture wars at the top of the list of reasons to vote Republican. Then there is the terror of, gasp, socialism, which they cannot tell from Communism or dictatorship. As if public schools, fire and police departments, highways, Medicare, Medicaid, Soical Security, were not all already socialist.

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