Many who came to hear former President Donald J. Trump speak in Concord, New Hampshire, on Jan. 19 waited for hours beforehand in the cold parking lots outside. Some had traveled from hours away in nearby states—for instance, Kim Keafer, who had driven all the way from St. Johnsbury, Vermont.
But the Rev. Joel Tenney had most of the crowd beat.
“I came from Iowa—drove 18 hours immediately after the caucus was finished to work here and campaign here—knock doors, make phone calls to ensure Nikki Haley does not win here in New Hampshire primary,” the energetic Iowa evangelist told The Epoch Times in the last few minutes before President Trump took the stage.
In Iowa, religious leaders like Mr. Tenney diverged from some other high-profile Christian faith leaders there who endorsed Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis. Bob Vander Plaats, the CEO of the Family Leader, was one such pro-DeSantis voice in the Hawkeye State.
“I love Bob. He’s an amazing guy … We’re friends on Facebook,” Mr. Tenney said.
“But I’ll tell you what—I was very disappointed with that, [and] I think a lot of Iowans were, that he did not stand behind the greatest president of our lifetimes,” he added.
Mr. DeSantis accused the president of having flip-flopped on the issue during his debate with former United Nations ambassador Haley that same night.
“He was the only president to ever do that. He saved millions of babies’ lives just from that alone,” Mr. Tenney said.
At a time when mainline Protestant churches often display rainbow flags and other signifiers of left-liberal causes dear to many modern Democrats, Mr. Tenney staked out a comparably staunch position on the other side of a partisan divide that extends to Americans’ Sunday mornings.
“If you vote for a Democrat, you cannot be a Christian. In my estimation as a pastor, when I examine the Word of God, it’s not possible,” he said.
Laments Loss of Armenian Christian Enclave
Mr. Tenney’s zeal has led him to spread the Word abroad, including among Armenian Christians. He lamented the recent flight of ethnic Armenians from the Republic of Artsakh, or Nagorno-Karabakh, following an attack from Azerbaijan on the largely unrecognized state, which first split from Azerbaijan amid the collapse of the Soviet Union. The enclave formally ceased to exist on the first day of this year.Mr. Tenney, who, like many evangelical Christians, is a strong defender of Israel and the Jewish people, argued that the United States was complicit in that, thanks to its aid.
Defends Trump’s Character
President Trump’s character is one of the most hotly disputed matters in all American politics—and that extends to the Granite State ahead of its caucus.Some New Hampshirites cite it as a reason for their opposition to his candidacy, up to and including a willingness to vote tactically against him.
Lucas, a young man at a coffee shop in Keene who would not share his last name, said he might participate in the Republican primary with the specific aim of thwarting the former president.
“Trump, specifically, is a malignant narcissist,” the man said.
But at the rally in Concord, President Trump’s supporters, including Mr. Tenney, had a very different perspective.
Mr. Tenney credited him with personal decency behind the scenes—in his recounting, through a moment of sympathy with Iowa state lawmaker Brad Sherman, whose daughter had recently died.
The evangelist also likened the former president to King David and Cyrus the Great. The Bible records that the latter man ended the Babylonian captivity of the ancient Judeans.
“King Cyrus does not have a perfect moral track record, but he was God’s anointed man for the time, and that’s what I see with President Donald J. Trump,” he said.