Trump
deletes post with AI image of himself as Jesus-like figure after outcry
The US
president’s conservative, Christian supporters decried the Truth Social post,
calling it ‘disgusting’
Joseph
Gedeon in Washington
Tue 14
Apr 2026 01.26 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/apr/13/trump-ai-image-christ-like-figure-backlash
Less than
a year after signing legislation that will pull nearly 12 million Americans off
health insurance by gutting Medicaid, Donald Trump posted an AI-generated image
of himself to Truth Social on Sunday depicting him as a Jesus-like figure, with
divine light emanating from his hands as he heals a stricken man in a hospital
bed with a demon from hell floating in the background.
The
president has since deleted the post, which also followed a lengthy tirade
about Pope Leo XIV on the site the same day in which he called him “weak on
crime” and blamed the head of the Catholic church for being influenced by
Barack Obama strategist David Axelrod. Trump refused to apologize to the pope,
saying: “He went public. I’m just responding to Pope Leo.”
Trump
faced the wrath of some of his most high-profile and loyal Christian
supporters, many of whom have stood by the president through multiple other
indiscretions and were unable to contain their righteous fury.
Riley
Gaines, a Fox News podcast host and conservative commentator, wrote on X she
“cannot understand why he’d post this”.
She
continued: “Is he looking for a response? Does he actually think this? Either
way, two things are true. 1) a little humility would serve him well 2) God
shall not be mocked.”
Megan
Basham, a writer at the conservative Daily Wire, called the post “OUTRAGEOUS
blasphemy”.
“I don’t
know if the President thought he was being funny or if he is under the
influence of some substance or what possible explanation he could have for
this,” she wrote. She demanded Trump “take this down immediately and ask for
forgiveness from the American people and then from God”.
Isabel
Brown, a host on the same outlet, said the image was “disgusting and
unacceptable”.
“Nothing
matters more than Jesus,” she wrote. “This post is, frankly, disgusting and
unacceptable, but also a profound misreading of the American people
experiencing a true and beautiful revival of faith in Christ.”
Steve
Deace, a host at the rightwing BlazeTV, posted a single word: “No.”
When
reporters asked Trump whether he posted a picture depicting himself as Jesus
Christ, Trump said “it wasn’t a depiction, it was me”, though he insisted:
“It’s supposed to be me as a doctor making people better.”
He added:
“And I do make people better. I make people a lot better.”
Marjorie
Taylor Greene, the former Republican member of congress from Georgia, captured
a screenshot of the Truth Social post before it was deleted, and said: “I
completely denounce this and I’m praying against it!!!”
The
AI-generated image Trump shared, portraying him as the son of God, was not the
original. The picture first appeared in early February, posted to X by Nick
Adams, a conservative commentator with a history of sharing AI-generated,
biblically themed Trump content. In Adams’s version, a silhouette of a US
soldier stands in the background. In Trump’s version, that soldier has been
photoshopped into a demonic figure with horns looming behind the president as
he performs his miracle.
But the
outrage was not just among high-profile media figures. Users on Truth Social –
Trump’s social platform where devoted supporters almost never dissent – have
also turned on the president over the image.
JD Vance,
the vice-president, played down the Jesus-like image as “a joke” in an
interview on Fox News on Monday.
“Of
course, he took it down because he realized a lot of people weren’t
understanding his humor,” Vance said of the post. Vance added it was sometimes
better for the “Vatican to stick to matters of morality”.
Trump is
engaged in a war of words with Pope Leo, the first US-born pope in Catholic
history, after Leo suggested, without naming the president, that a “delusion of
omnipotence” was driving US foreign policy, particularly surrounding the war
with Iran.
Trump
responded by calling the pontiff “WEAK on Crime”, and saying he was “not a fan
of Pope Leo” and suggesting the leader of the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics was
“catering to the radical left”. Leo, who was also outspoken about the carnage
and catastrophes in Gaza, told reporters on the papal flight to Algeria that he
did not fear the Trump administration and would continue to speak out against
war.
“I’m not
afraid of the Trump administration or speaking out loudly of the message of the
gospel, which is what I believe I am here to do, what the church is here to
do,” the pope said.
US
bishops have also rallied behind him, describing Leo not as a political
opponent but as a “vicar of Christ who speaks from the truth of the gospel”.
The
condemnation of Trump’s attacks on the pope spread further: Italian politicians
across the spectrum, including Matteo Salvini – the hard-right deputy prime
minister and a longtime Trump admirer – said attacking the pope was neither
useful nor intelligent. The Iranian president, Masoud Pezeshkian, also
condemned Trump’s “insult”, saying that depicting Jesus Christ as a vessel for
political vanity was “unacceptable to any free person” and is a “desecration of
Jesus”.
Trump’s
AI post not only comes after that spat, but one week after Easter Sunday for
Catholics, and the morning after Easter Sunday for Orthodox Christians.
The
Gospel of Mark records Jesus healing the sick, feeding the hungry and casting
out demons. Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed into law in 2025, will
cut federal Medicaid spending by about $900bn over a decade with children’s
hospitals warning the cuts will directly harm their most vulnerable patients.
One user
on X, Mandy Arthur, captured the mood: “God, we might have made a mistake and
accidentally elected the Antichrist. Send help.”

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