According to the Book of Acts, the Bible’s account of the first days of the church, Herod Agrippa I, king of Judea, gave a public address that prompted those listening to say, “This is the voice of a god, not of a man.” And because the king didn’t reject that blasphemous praise, “an angel of the Lord struck him down, and he was eaten by worms and died.”
It’s doubtful that President Donald Trump, who has seemed far more interested in putting his name on the Bible than reading it, knows of that biblical cautionary tale. If Trump knew the story and believed it had meaning, then he wouldn’t have dared share a meme Sunday night appearing to portray him as Jesus Christ.
Trump has seemed far more interested in putting his name on the Bible than reading it.
In the AI-generated image, Trump as Jesus appears to be providing a healing touch to a man in a hospital bed, with eagles and fighter jets flying overhead and fireworks bursting in the sky as an American flag ripples behind him. It’s not just blasphemy. It’s tacky, jingoistic blasphemy.
Trump’s decision to share the meme finally provoked outraged from prominent members of the white evangelical community that helped put him in power. Because that community has stuck with him through so many potentially career-ending scandals, it has long appeared there was nothing Trump could do to warrant its condemnation. But being asked to think of Trump as God’s anointed is one thing — (albeit a deeply problematic thing.) Being asked to think of Trump as Jesus is something that even some of those who have been singing in the Trump choir can’t abide.
Sean Feucht, the Christian songwriter and musician who held mass “worship protest” concerts in 2020 and 2021 in defiance of pandemic restrictions, posted on X, “This should be deleted immediately. There’s no context where this is acceptable.”
The post was deleted from Trump’s social media platform Monday, but the president made a preposterous attempt to put his post in context.
Asked by a reporter if he posted “the picture of yourself as Jesus Christ,” Trump said, “I did post it, and I thought it was me as a doctor. And had to do with Red Cross as a Red Cross worker, which we support. And only the fake news could come up with that one.”
And to think, there were some people on X defending the meme by saying it doesn’t depict Trump as Jesus, but rather it depicts him as having the power to heal that Jesus left his followers.
But, to repeat a point above, it’s not likely that a president who read the title of one of the epistles as two Corinthians and not Second Corinthians knows enough New Testament to make such an argument. That’s why he has feigned an understanding that the meme shows him as being in the Red Cross. (Because Red Cross workers are, in Trump’s version of reality, widely known to have divine light emanating from their palms.)
I did post it, and I thought it was me as a doctor. And had to do with Red Cross as a Red Cross worker, which we support.
president donald trump on sharing a meme that appears to liken him to jesus
Among other conservatives to call out Trump’s post was former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., who wrote on X, “I completely denounce this and I’m praying against it!!!” Megan Basham, a well-known conservative Christian commentator, called the meme Trump “OUTRAGEOUS blasphemy” and said the president should “ask for forgiveness from the American people and then from God.” Brilyn Hollhand, the former co-chair of the Republican National Committee Youth Advisory, also posted to X, “This is gross blasphemy. Faith is not a prop.”








