When you have INFORMATION that reveals Trump is AGAINST GOD...bring it on.
If you heard a person speak the following quotes:
-"I am not sure I have," ... when asked if he'd ever asked God for forgiveness. "I just go on and try to do a better job from there. I don't think so," he said. "I think if I do something wrong, I think, I just try and make it right. I don't bring God into that picture. I don't."
-"Why do I have to repent or ask for forgiveness, if I am not making mistakes?" .... "I work hard, I'm an honorable person."
would you say they are a Christian? And if they are not a Christian, they are a satanist.
Matthew 12:30 "He that is not with me is against me; and he that gathereth not with me scatterth abroad".
Trump QUOTE.
..."faith is more powerful than government, and nothing is more powerful than God."
I'll address this:
I found the video of the speech in which Trump spoke this, in this article:
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news...mp-signs-order-national-day-prayer/577171002/
When someone says the word "God", do you automatically think that that person believes as you do? When someone says that "magic" word ("God"), it must mean as you think it does, correct? All other possibilities are thrown out the window once that keyword ("God") is said, correct?
Do you agree that the word "God" has a different meaning to different people? Christians, when they say "God", mean God-the-Father (YHWH) and God-the-Son (Yeshua, Jesus Christ); Jews, when they "God", mean God-the-Father only. Muslims, when they say "God" mean Allah. Et cetera.
Do you also agree that the word "God" is used generically - to mean whichever "God"/"god" you believe in when they are speaking with/to you? Is it a possibility, that when Trump said "g" "o" "d", this was his intent?
Let's go a little darker. Jesus called satan/the devil, the "god of this world" in 2 Corinthians 4:4 "In whom the god of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine unto them". Here we see both "god" and "God" being used and meaning two very different beings. If someone is only speaking, and not writing, how would you know if they use "g" "o" "d" with a capital "G"? Isn't it possible that when speaking, they mean it as "god"? When someone speaks, they don't specify capitalization, agreed? It is assumed by the English language rules, that the beginning of sentences, names of people, and titles are capitalized. However, with the word "God"/"god", this can be confusing, because the letters "g", "o", "d", has different meanings depending on whether the first letter is capitalized. When someone is speaking, unless you stop that person from speaking and ask him/her what/who they mean, the listener assumes what the speaker meant, and capitalization is also assumed. Do you agree?
In the speech in the article, when Trump spoke the letters "g" "o" "d", did anyone stop to ask him if he capitalized "g" "o" "d"? No, they didn't, yet the journalist who wrote the article and quoted Trump assumed he meant "God", and not "god". Is it possible Trump meant "god" and not "God"? How would you know? The journalist quoting Trump doesn't know either - it is an assumption.
Furthermore, I'm sure you are aware, that non-Christians believe that there are many paths to "God", and their meaning is generic in nature, even though Jesus said "no man comes to the Father but by me". So these people (non-Christians) believe in "God", yet deny God-the-Son in their beliefs, agreed? How could that be, that they use the word "God" yet deny Jesus Christ as God? Is it possible that when Trump spoke "g" "o" "d", that this is as he meant it?
Finally, let's look at who he was speaking to in this speech: in attendance, per the article, there were "With a gospel choir and invocations from Protestant, Catholic, Jewish, Muslim, Mormon and Hindu faith leaders", in addition to the people in their homes across the U.S. watching the speech or reading this article, which include Christians, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, new agers, etc. Is it a possibility then, that since Trump didn't directly say Jesus Christ, he was using the generic "g" "o" "d" for his audience of believers of many faiths? And if he includes all faiths, isn't that anti-Christian, thus anti-christ (anti-christ is generic here, not "the Antichrist")?
One other thing, per the article, "Vice President Pence declared that 'believers of every background have a champion in President Donald Trump.'" Hmm, so here we see that Trump, according to Catholic Pence, is for believers of every background. That doesn't sound to Christian to me, in fact, it sounds like those who use the word "God" to mean "god" or "all paths lead to g o d" types.