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Evangelical Gathering A Sign Conservative Christians Slow To Embrace Trump

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks to the Value Voters Summit on Friday, Sept. 9, in Washington, DC.
Evan Vucci AP
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks to the Value Voters Summit on Friday, Sept. 9, in Washington, DC.

A young girl listens to Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump address the Values Voter Summit on September 9 in Washington, DC.
Chip Somodevilla Getty Images
A young girl listens to Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump address the Values Voter Summit on September 9 in Washington, DC.

Evangelical Gathering A Sign Conservative Christians Slow To Embrace Trump

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump addressed the annual evangelical gathering known as the Values Voter Summit Friday in Washington, where in promised in part to give churches "their voices back."

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The bombastic, at times crude, thrice-married GOP standard bearer does not exactly fit the mold of a nominee that religious conservatives typically champion.

Many evangelical activists were slow to embrace Trump early in the primary season. But a steadily growing number on the religious right now view a potential Trump presidency as their only chance at reasserting conservative influence at the Supreme Court where many key social issues will be decided.

"Our Christian heritage will be cherished, protected, defended, like you've never seen before," Trump told a packed ballroom and the Omni Shoreham hotel in downtown Washington.

Evangelical voters are an important voting bloc for any Republican seeking the White House.

And Donald Trump has been focused on winning them over.

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He promised to repeal a ban to the 1950s-era legislation which prohibits tax-exempt organizations, like churches, from endorsing political candidates.

"The Johnson Amendment has blocked our pastors and ministers and others from speaking their minds from their own pulpits," Trump said. "If they want to talk about politics they're unable to do so. If they want to do it, they take a tremendous risk that they lose their tax-exempt status."

Trump later joked that by getting behind such action, his soul may be saved.

"I figure it's the only way I'm getting to heaven. The only way," Trump said to a smattering of chuckles from the crowd.

It was not all laughs at the event though.

One of the speakers to address the summit, Gary Bauer president of the conservative group American Values, struck a somber tone when he recalled vivid memories of the Sept. 11 attacks.

He compared the November election to the choice that was faced by the people aboard the plane that crashed in a Pennsylvania field in 2001.

"Ladies and gentlemen, this is a Flight 93 election. This may be our last shot. It's time to roll. It's time to run down the aisle and save western civilization." Bauer said.

On that flight the passengers fought back against their terrorist hijackers. Many consider those passengers heroes for downing the aircraft and thwarting what was intended to be the fourth plane in a coordinated suicide mission.

Bauer carried on the metaphor, saying the country is headed to calamity if evangelicals don't regain their power to influence.

"This country is the equivalent of that hijacked plane right now. We're headed to a disaster, unless we can get control of the cockpit again," Bauer said.

Oklahoma Senator James Lankford is a Republican and former Baptist youth camp director. He did not mention Trump by name but he did bring up the Supreme Court.

"Can I remind us again what happens at the Supreme court in the days ahead will matter for a generation," Lankford said.

He then reminded the crowd the last time a Clinton was in the White House.

Under former president Bill Clinton, Lankford said "the most reliable liberals" were added to the Court.

"Does anyone believe the next two Supreme Court Justices that are appointed won't be the next two most reliable liberal justices on the Supreme Court if the next President Clinton gets a shot? I believe they will," Lankford added.

Just outside the ballroom where the main speeches were taking place, Dexter Sanders, an evangelist from Orlando, admits Trump was not his first choice to lead the Republican ticket.

After considering Dr. Ben Carson, Texas Senator Ted Cruz and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, he finally came around to Trump. Like many at the summit, Sanders says he is concerned about the future makeup of the Supreme Court.

And faced between the option of Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton and Trump, the choice couldn't be more clear.

"God has used different people throughout the course of history, especially during Biblical times. The strangest people do the most enormous things in our world." Sanders said.

"And so the fact that [God] might choose a Donald Trump in this country that other presidents and other politicians have not been able to step up and do, would not be surprising to me at all."

Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.