Candace Cameron Bure sends a political message to her social media followers to ‘vote like Jesus’
With just one day before the 2024 presidential election, Candace Cameron Bure is getting political with her social media followers.
The 48-year-old Full House star hasn’t been shy about expressing her religious beliefs on social media, and now she’s trying to sway undecided voters, which comes just months after the death of her father-in-law.
Bure took to her Instagram Story on Sunday and shared a link to the Lakepointe Church YouTubea 44-minute video titled “How to Vote Like Jesus.”
She also shared a pink sticker that read, “Please Vote,” adding, “Christian… if you’re not sure if you should vote or who to vote for, please check it out!!”
Pastor Josh Howerton’s video suggesting the more recent idea that religious leaders should not comment on politics is “completely unbiblical.”
With just one day before the 2024 presidential election, Candace Cameron Bure is getting political with her social media followers.
The 48-year-old Full House star hasn’t been shy about expressing her religious beliefs on social media, and now she’s trying to sway undecided voters, which comes just months after the death of her father-in-law.
Bure took to her Instagram Story on Sunday and shared a link to the Lakepointe Church YouTube, a 44-minute video titled “How to Vote Like Jesus”
Neither Bure nor Howertown specifically endorsed any specific candidate in her post or his video, but Howerton emphasizes that it is a Christian’s duty to vote.
“30 million Bible-believing Christians abdicated their spiritual responsibility and did not vote in the last presidential election. That last election was decided by a strategically placed 42,000 votes,” Howerton said.
He also wanted everyone there to “walk in as disciples” and do their “God-given job” and vote on Tuesday.
She made headlines this summer by labeling last summer’s Olympic Games tableau as ‘disgusting’.
She emphasized that her faith is a “cornerstone” in her life that she does not deviate from.
“My faith is the cornerstone of who I am. It’s where my worldview comes from,” she shared Parade in October.
“I really value the Bible as the blueprint or guide for my life, and it’s not something I can leave at the door,” she added.
“So that’s been an incredible guiding light in my life, but it’s also permeated every aspect of my life. I’m really proud of it,” Bure insisted.
Neither Bure nor Howertown specifically endorsed any specific candidate in her post or his video, but Howerton emphasizes that it is a Christian’s duty to vote
“30 million Bible-believing Christians abdicated their spiritual responsibility and did not vote in the last presidential election. That last election was decided by a strategically placed 42,000 votes,” Howerton said
He also wanted everyone there to “walk in as disciples” and do their “God-given job” and vote on Tuesday.
She added, “I would say it probably helped me in my career,” before adding a specific example from The View.
“And that was surprising to me, because we often don’t think of Hollywood as a super-loyal place,” she said.
She added, “I would say it probably helped me in my career,” before adding a specific example from The View.
“When I was a co-host on The View [from 2015-16]’, the producer said to me, ‘We hired you as a reflection of a woman who is strong in your faith, and that’s why we’d like to hear your voice on this panel,'” Bure says.
“And that was surprising to me, because we often don’t think of Hollywood as a super-loyal place,” she said.
“So I feel like God opened those doors for me to be able to use my voice, and it was embraced more than there was resistance. That’s not to say I haven’t had adversity,” she added.
“I’ve certainly done that over my career, and it gets a little bit harder today. As our culture progresses, as it does every year, it gets a little harder. And yet it makes me stand firmer and more grounded and understand who I want to be,” she said.