Taylor Swift remains a devoted Christian as seen in her recent Netflix documentary, Miss Americana. It proved that Elisabeth Moss or anyone else did not recruit her to join the Church of Scientology. 

Gossip Cop recalled an article of RadarOnline a year ago that claimed Moss was eyeing to recruit Swift on Scientology. The speculations that the "Lover" singer will be joining the organization or Moss was trying to recruit her started when the Handmaid's Tale actress revealed that she is a fan of the singer. 

Moss revealed, during the 2018 Emmys, that she and her Handmaid's Tale co-stars listened to Taylor's music on their filming set. In return, the "Bad Blood" singer responded to the compliment and said she was also a "huge fan" of the dystopian drama series. 

Taylor added that she would want to meet Moss in the future. The actress responded by saying she would also love to meet and hang out with the pop superstar.

Moss has been a longtime member of Scientology. She was raised as a Scientologist. 

This made many to speculate that the Emmy-winning actress would try to enlist Swift in the star-studded organization. Aside from Moss, the other famous celebrities who are members of Scientology are Tom Cruise, John Travolta, and Orange Is the New Black actress Laura Prepon.

Soon after RadarOnline made an assumption, Gossip Cop checked in its source close to Moss, who assured that the report was false. The outlet also noted that since the speculation about Moss and Swift was made a year ago, there were no reports that the two have already met. They both attended the Sundance Film Festival last month, but there's no indication they ever crossed paths. 

The most recent evidence that Taylor is still a Christian was her statement in Miss Americana. In the Netflix documentary, the "Shake It Off" singer mentioned her religion while talking about a politician's view on same-sex marriage.

"Those aren't Tennessee Christian values. I live in Tennessee. I'm a Christian. That's not what we stand for," she said.

In the scene, Swift was speaking to her management team about expressing her views on social issues and not thinking about her image or what people would think about her. The documentary showed why Taylor, for the first time in her career, endorsed a political candidate in Tennessee for the midterm elections in 2018. 

In addition, Swift also used religious phrases in her latest album, Lover. On the track "Soon You'll Get Better" which is about her mother's cancer diagnosis, Taylor sings, "Holy orange bottles, each night, I pray to you / Desperate people find faith, so now I pray to Jesus, too."