Is there a strong Christian backlash to Trump's sedition?

But that’s not what you wrote. You said that “. . . Christians are sneaky, hypocritical, and dishonest . . .” You didn’t limit it to Christians today, to Christians in the U.S., to members of evangelical churches which are often large churches unaffiliated with denominations, or to white members of such churches. And it’s not clear to me that people who seriously believe in the tenets of Christianity (even within all the distinctions I just made) are more likely to be right-wing than other people. Every denomination and church has a large proportion of members whose beliefs are, at best, very vague. Much about belonging to a church is about being with people whose sociopolitical beliefs you agree with and who you would like to hang out with socially. To defend any statement that Christian beliefs are truly more right-wing than left-wing, you’d have to examine Christian theological and moral beliefs. Perhaps the people who call themselves Christians and who espouse right-wing beliefs are more likely to be the ones who don’t really care about Christian theological and moral beliefs. Perhaps they are more likely to only belong to their churches for social purposes and because they have found in those churches fellow members in agreement with their political beliefs, which in truth they care about much more than theology.