While Most White Evangelicals Support Trump's Travel Ban, Most Black Protestants And Catholics Oppose It

Some 76 per cent of US white evangelicals are in favour of Donald Trump's controversial travel ban, new surveys suggest.

Polling studies by the Pew Research Centre suggest that while most Americans disapprove of President Trump's executive order banning refugees from several Muslim majority countries, three quarters of white evangelical protestants (74 per cent) support then ban.

In sharp contrast, the majority of black Protestants (84 per cent) disapprove of the ban, alongside most Catholics (62 per cent).

Trump's executive order banned any immigrants travelling from seven majority Muslim countries to the US. It has been a source of intense criticism abroad and at home, and has been caught in legal turmoil after being blocked by federal judges. Some 89 per cent of Democrats oppose the ban, while most Republicans (81 per cent) support it.

Most of the religiously unaffiliated, also known as 'nones', oppose the executive order (74 per cent).

The study also showed that three-quarters of white evangelical protestants are 'very concerned' about Islamic extremism across the world, and 69 per cent said they were 'very concerned' about radical Islam in the US.

Only 32 per cent of religious 'nones' said they were concerned about Islamic extremism abroad, and just 27 per cent were concerned about the threat in the US.

Fifty-one per cent of white evangelicals said that there was a 'great deal' or 'fair amount' of support for extremism among US Muslims.

The support for Trump's order from white evangelicals is in line with the group's traditional conservative affiliation. Donald Trump won the presidency with the overwhelming support (81 per cent) of white evangelicals.

News
Pastor says police officer warned him Bible verse could be seen as hate speech
Pastor says police officer warned him Bible verse could be seen as hate speech

A church leader was apparently warned by a police officer that a Bible verse displayed on the back of his campervan could be considered "hate speech" in certain contexts.

Younger generations lead surprising revival in Bible reading
Younger generations lead surprising revival in Bible reading

After years of steady decline, Americans are rediscovering the Bible — and young adults are leading the way.

A Christian response to Andrew Mountbatten Windsor's fall from grace
A Christian response to Andrew Mountbatten Windsor's fall from grace

The danger we run into when we read the public reports of the misdeeds of some person who has become the object of public disgrace is that we become tempted to entertain the idea that we are somehow better in the eyes of God than that person

Anglicans meet in India to tackle modern slavery
Anglicans meet in India to tackle modern slavery

More than a fifth of the world's currently enslaved population are believed to live in India.