'New Moses' Is the Latest Sign of the Christian Right’s Trump Confusion
Blasphemy, sacrilege, or both? Photo: David Dee Delgado/Getty Images
Back when he first captured the hearts of Republicans generally and 
conservative evangelicals specifically, it became fashionable for 
Christian Right leaders to compare Donald Trump to Cyrus the Great, the 
pagan Persian king who unwittingly served the will of God (according to 
the Hebrew Scriptures) by liberating the Jews from the Babylonian 
Captivity. It was a clever rationalization that enabled these holy 
warriors to dismiss all the evidence of Trump’s heathenish belief system 
and sinful behavior and make him God’s (and their) vehicle for the 
redemption of America. Being King Cyrus also relieved the 45th president 
from any inconvenient obligation to change his evil ways or beg for a 
forgiveness he explicitly didn’t think he needed.
After Trump thrilled many conservative Christian activists by stacking the 
Supreme Court in a way that produced the reversal of Roe v. Wade and the 
expansion of the “religious liberty” to discriminate against the wicked, 
some of his churchy fans began to view him not as a disposable instrument 
of God’s will — and thus as an replaceable ally — but as an indispensable 
leader of their cause. In part that’s because they have internalized his 
fury over the “stolen election” of 2020 and hence the necessity of a Trump 
comeback to prove the divine plan cannot be thwarted. Worse yet, some 
conservative Christians have conflated Trump’s struggle with the eternal 
struggle between the heavenly hosts and their demonic enemies.
We’re witnessing a pop-culture moment exemplifying this confusion of 
religious and secular conservatism. Actor Jim Caviezel, best known for his 
portrayal of Jesus in Mel Gibson’s 2004 movie The Passion of the Christ, 
made it known on Fox News that he regarded Trump as “the new Moses.” He 
made this pronouncement while flogging his latest flick, Sound of Freedom, 
which, much like The Passion of the Christ, has become a counter-Hollywood 
phenomenon heavily promoted by ticket-buying churches and church 
organizations. As Rolling Stone’s Miles Klee explains in his review, the 
new movie is the perfect vehicle for Caviezel, who has been flirting with 
QAnon-ish conspiracy theories for a good while:
    [Caviezel] has become a prominent figure on the conspiracist right, 
giving speeches and interviews in which he hints at an underground holy 
war between patriots and a sinister legion of evildoers who are harvesting 
the blood of children. It’s straight-up QAnon stuff, right down to his use 
of catchphrases like “The storm is upon us.” Here, he gets to act out some 
of that drama by playing a fictionalized version of Tim Ballard, head of 
the anti-sex trafficking nonprofit Operation Underground Railroad 
(O.U.R.), in a feature film that casts the operator as a Batman-style 
savior for kids sold into the sex trade.
Caviezel pulled Trump into his story by asserting that he’d be the leader 
who would “go after the traffickers.” And he also revealed that he had 
provided Trump with a private showing of Sound of Freedom at the former 
president’s Bedminster resort. Trump unsurprisingly responded with a Truth 
Social post vowing to administer the death penalty to human traffickers 
and blaming Joe Biden’s border policies for this terrible danger to 
children.
Now if you are a QAnon believer, this all fits together: America is 
controlled by the pedophile satanists of the Democratic Party. Trump will 
liberate their victims (presumably in chains awaiting their destruction by 
blood-drinking global cabalists) and with them their country. And the 45th 
president has never lifted a finger to disabuse these people of their 
dangerous and psychotic delusions.
But even among the uninitiated, the Trump-trafficking nexus can be 
seductive. Human trafficking has been a major preoccupation of 
conservative evangelicals in recent years, perhaps as an undeniably worthy 
target of those whose all-purpose sexual puritanism is no longer 
fashionable. So Trump’s identification of trafficking with lax Democratic 
policies and promises to save children resonate, making this cruel man a 
liberating “Moses” figure.
Before Trump and his conservative evangelical fans get too comfortable 
with this idea, they might want to read their Bibles (or in Trump’s case, 
have someone read to him from their Bibles) and recall Moses’s ultimate 
fate. After leading the Israelites out of the bondage of Egypt, Moses was 
barred from entering the Promised Land because of his willful defiance of 
an edict from God. Instead a younger successor, Joshua, took over 
leadership of his people. Lord knows Trump is a willful defier of every 
godly law, and right now younger MAGA conservatives (e.g., the 44-year-old 
Ron DeSantis and the 37-year-old Vivek Ramaswamy) are bidding to succeed 
him. Maybe King Cyrus is a safer role model for the former president after 
all.
https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2023/07/new-moses-is-new-sign-of-
christian-rights-trump-confusion.html