Disinformation Fuels A White Evangelical Movement. It Led 1 Virginia Pastor To Quit – By Rachel Martin, Dalia Mortada & Bo Hamby (NPR) / Feb 21 2021
Jared Stacy is still processing his decision to leave Spotswood Baptist Church in Fredericksburg, Va., last year. Until November, he was ministering to young parishioners in their 20s and 30s.
But in the four years since he joined the church as a pastor, Stacy found himself increasingly up against an invisible, powerful force taking hold of members of his congregation: conspiracy theories, disinformation and lies.
Stacy has seen the real consequences of these lies build up over the years; he says it’s tainted the name of his faith.
“If Christians in America are serious about helping people see Jesus and what he’s about and what he claims, then the label ‘evangelical’ is a distraction because it bears, unfortunately, the weight of a violence,” he told NPR. “I would not use that term because of its association with Jan. 6.”
That’s the day a violent mob attacked and invaded the U.S. Capitol, driven by what’s commonly known as “the big lie:” that President Biden wasn’t legitimately elected. The rioters moved toward the Capitol following a rally held by former President Donald Trump, where he repeated that big lie. Rioters say they were compelled to stop the certification of Biden’s election.