I was shown a meme saying that evangelicals don't pray for the President anymore.
And that is true, but it is because Biden is perceived as being given continuous medical attention and care, as making no decisions whatsoever, and as being responsible only for echoing the lines that he is fed.
I'm not sure that he even has the agency to resign if he wanted to, although I do believe his present state is a result of decisions that he freely made in past years.
Meanwhile, Trump in his CPAC speech stirred up one pot after another.
"That’s too easy. We love doing it the hard way."
https://www.rev.com/blog/transcripts/donald-trump-cpac-2021-speech-transcript-dallas-tx
A boomer apologizes, albeit without much clarity.
"It is not meet to take the children's bread, and to cast it to dogs," Jesus said; Matthew 15:26.
I recently understood that I am spending my life in rebuilding spiritual and practical foundations that had been foolishly undermined by previous generations.
Several months ago I was reading a nonfiction book by Christian author Paul Tournier, and made it about three-quarters of the way through before being drawn away to other things.
When I picked it up this last week and finished reading it, I found references to about a dozen Bible passages that had come up in my daily Bible readings in the interim, mostly obscure Old Testament personages with a variety of afflictions; Tournier was a Swiss doctor famous for connecting his Christianity with his medical practice.
I also read a Christian fiction book this last week: Deadline, by Randy Alcorn. One day, what I read in the book mirrored my morning Bible reading on that same day.
"A work of creation was three-fold, an earthly trinity to match the heavenly; the Creative Idea, timeless and passionate, which is the image of the Father; the Creative Energy, begotten of the idea and working in time, which is the image of the Word; the Creative Power, the meaning of the work and its response in the individual soul, which is the image of the indwelling Spirit."
-- P. D. James, summarizing Dorothy L. Sayers' description