Earlier this week, several dozen evangelical leaders gathered in Illinois “to discuss the future of evangelicalism amid concerns their movement has become too closely associated with President Trump’s polarizing politics,” according to the Religion News Service.

Ever since word of the meeting got out, some of Trump’s most vocal evangelical supporters have been trying to discredit it, saying that the people involved are not actually Christian leaders and that real leaders such as themselves were not invited.

Robert Jeffress, a top evangelical ally of Trump’s, told One News Now on Monday that he was displeased by the potential of such a meeting to criticize Trump, who “is, without a doubt, the most faith-friendly president we’ve ever had.”

On Tuesday, a CBN story co-authored by Trump enthusiast David Brody reported that unnamed people had walked out of the event after it turned into “crazy Trump bashing.”

Brody and his CBN colleague Jenna Browder interviewed a few members of Trump’s faith advisory board, none of whom, they say it’s “important to note,” were “present or ever officialy invited,” including Jeffress and former Southern Baptist Convention official Richard Land, who dismissed the meeting participants as nobodies, and Trump faith advisory council spokesman Johnnie Moore, who said he was praying for the participants and respects their religious liberty rights “even when they are unkind”: