Former pastor and pure advocate Joshua Harris recently revealed Christian views in favor of President Donald Trump, but they were not in favor of it.
He tells Mike Allen on HBO’s Axios that he believes evangelicals have made a mistake by working with Trump.
“I think it’s incredibly damaging to the gospel and the church,” he says. “…I don’t think it’ll end well, and I think you’ll look back at the Old Testament and the relationship between the prophets and the really bad leaders and kings.
When asked if he believed that Christians supporting Trump were scheduled for judgment, Harris replied. “I think it’s a judgement. It’s part of the judgement.
“…I think having a leader like Trump is part of the indictment of being the leader you want and perhaps the right leader. It represents a lot of who you are.”
Harris will provide this advice to the church just over two months after publicly abandoning his Christian faith.
“I have made a huge difference in my faith in Jesus,” Harris said on July 26th. By all the measurements I have to define Christians, I am not a Christian.
In addition to abandoning his faith in Jesus, he also declared that he had changed previous traditional views on sexuality, marriage and gender.
“For the LGBTQ+ community, I am sorry as a pastor on the opinions and sexuality I have taught in my books,” he says. “I regret against marriage equality, not affirming you and your place in your church, and in the way that my writing and speaking contributed to a culture of exclusion and prejudice.”
A few days ago, he and his ex-wife, Shannon Bonne, announced they would separate after their 19-year marriage.
Harris rose to prominence in conservative Christian circles when I wrote a book where I kissed in 1997, and three years later, in the book Boy Meets Girl: hello hello fay fay say fay say, he encouraged Christians to avoid the dating scene and instead pursue a group-and-family-oriented approach called courtship.
However, in 2015 he resigned as the chief pastor of contract life and became a brand and marketing strategist.
Last year he wrote an official statement apologizing for the book. In 2018, Harris helped create a documentary called I Survived I Kissed Dating Goodbye, directed and produced by Jessica Fan Del Wingard. In the film, Harris interviews people who say the book has hurt so much in analyzing what is called the “purity culture” of conservative evangelical Christians.
About a month after Harris announced he was no longer a Christian, the exploration film stopped distribution.
According to Christian Newswire, Exploration Film spokesman Stephen Penn said Harris was not transparent to the company about his faith while working on the film.
“Unfortunately, Josh didn’t overturn these amazing changes film team partners before his release. This would change the way he promoted the distribution efforts of the company he worked with,” he says.
“We are pleased to announce that we are pleased to announce that we are pleased to announce that we are pleased to announce that we are pleased to announce that we are offering a range of services and services. “The regular interaction between Josh and the film team has resulted in regular interactions with the film team every day to coordinate our efforts as part of the contract.
John L. Cooper, frontman of the Christian Rock Band Frying Pan, provided insights to Christians whose faith relies heavily on Christian influencers. In a Facebook post, he wrote:
“My conclusion to the church (all our Christians): We must stop making worship leaders, ideological leaders, influencers, cool people, or “related” people the most influential people in Christianity (and yes, including people like me!)
“…I beg you. Search for your gospel connections. Don’t find a creative way to shape God’s Word into an image of our culture by suppressing inconvenient truths.
