Trump, who has been married three times and uses the f-word in public speeches, has also said he’s never asked for God’s forgiveness. He told a panel at the Family Leadership Summit that when it comes to what he’s done wrong, “I don’t bring God into that picture.”

Mike Ford, chairman of the Tulsa County Republican Party, said he found it odd that some evangelicals support Trump.

Evangelicals were turned off when he said he never asks for forgiveness and sees no need to, he said.

“At the end of the day, it’s hard to tell where his support is coming from,” Ford said.

He said Trump is not an ideal candidate for evangelicals, which figured into his losing in Iowa.

“There’s a lot of cynicism and skepticism, even among evangelicals,” he said. “They feel disenfranchised by politicians who campaign one way and then govern another.”

Most of the pre-caucus polls had Trump ahead in Iowa, polls that proved wrong.

Ford said that polling in Iowa may have been skewed because it was largely conducted on telephone landlines while many young people have only cellphones, and because some 60 percent of caucusgoers made up their mind in the last week.