Trump defends religious liberty at home and abroad at National Prayer Breakfast

President Donald Trump makes remarks at the National Prayer Breakfast.

"When Americans are able to live by their convictions to speak openly of their faith and to teach their children what is right, our families thrive, our communities flourish, and our nation can achieve anything at all," Trump said.

Trump’s solemn speech also focused on Hurricanes Harvey and Irma, the wildfires out West, the Las Vegas shooting and the opioid epidemic — highlighting a story from a family he invited to attend his State of the Union address.

“When catastrophic hurricanes struck, first responders and everyday citizens dove into rushing waters to save stranded families from danger and they saved them by the thousands,” Trump said. “Neighbors opened their homes to those in need of food, clothes, shelter — firefighters braved blinding smoke and flames to rescue children from devastating wildfires”

And on Las Vegas, the president heralded strangers shielding strangers and police officers who ran into a “hail of bullets to save the lives of their fellow Americans.”

He also told the story of a 9-year-old girl named Sophia Marie Campa Peters. She suffers from a rare disease that caused multiple strokes, Trump said, and at one point was told she may not walk again.

“If you are only going to talk about what I can't do, then I don't want to hear it. Just let me try to walk,” the president said Sophia told the doctors. Before going into a recent surgery, she asked for the world to pray for her. Her request reached millions, the president said.

“And I have to say this, Sophia, you may only be nine years old but you are already a hero to all of us in this room and all over the world,” Trump said.

This year's breakfast attracted thousands of people from inside Washington — and around the world — to network and gather "in the spirit of Jesus." But the event has been criticized for not separating church and state.

The National Prayer Breakfast, hosted by the Fellowship Foundation, has been held annually in Washington since its first gathering in 1953 with President Dwight D. Eisenhower. This year's bipartisan event is co-chaired by Democrat Rep. Charlie Christ of Florida, and Republican Rep. Randy Hultgren of Illinois.

"We are so glad to have you with us today. Your presence reminds us of Jesus' words the book of Matthew, "with God, all things are possible. You are fantastic. You really are," said Trump to Scalise.

"This year, the annual National Prayer Breakfast will be attended by more than 3,800 individuals representing over 130 countries and territories around the world," said A. Larry Ross, a spokesman for the Fellowship Foundation. "Approximately 55 are coming from Russia, including a group of 35 young professionals – millennial doctors, lawyers and business leaders in their 20s and 30s – invited out of a context of relationship and faith."

Trump has held strong approval ratings among people who identify as evangelical Christian. In January, Trump delivered the keynote address at the annual anti-abortion March for Life in Washington, D.C.

Sixty-eight percent of evangelical white Protestants approved of Trump's job during his first year in office, according to a January 21 ABC News/Washington Post poll. Overall, 38 percent of Americans approved of Trump's job in office after the first year.