Trump
Posted a Picture of Himself as Jesus. Now He’s Trying to Explain It Away.
The image
showed President Trump bathed in divine light and clad in religious robes. His
interpretation was that the image depicted him as a doctor, not Jesus Christ.
Katie
Rogers
By Katie
Rogers
Katie
Rogers is a White House correspondent who has covered President Trump since his
first term. She reported from Washington.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/13/us/politics/trump-jesus-picture-pope-leo.html
April 13,
2026
The image
showed President Trump in a white and red robe, commonly used in renderings of
Jesus Christ and in Scripture prophesying his return. Bright golden light,
which is used to depict divine intervention in religious imagery, radiated from
Mr. Trump’s hand as he touched the forehead of a sick man. A woman observed the
scene with her hands steepled in prayer.
As he
received two bags of a McDonald’s food delivery to the Oval Office on Monday
morning, Mr. Trump told reporters that he did not catch all that religious
imagery. He said he had thought the image he had posted to his Truth Social
account had depicted him not as Jesus — but as a physician.
“I
thought it was me as a doctor,” Mr. Trump said of the social media post, which
he deleted after an outcry. “Only the fake news could come up with that.”
He added,
“I make people better.”
The
post’s removal was a rare retreat for Mr. Trump, who had posted the apparently
A.I.-generated image shortly after using the same platform to attack the
American-born Pope Leo XIV, a vocal critic of the U.S. war in Iran. The
appearance of the image had sparked an evening’s worth of backlash from
religious leaders and Christian supporters who were hurt and shocked that Mr.
Trump had appeared to depict himself as a Jesus-like figure.
Later in
the day, in an interview with CBS News, Mr. Trump repeated his explanation that
he believed the image, which he said he thought was made by “a very beautiful,
talented artist,” had depicted him as a doctor.
“I viewed
that as a picture of me being a doctor in fixing — you had the Red Cross right
there, you had, you know, medical people surrounding me,” he said. “And I was
like the doctor, you know, as a little fun playing the doctor and making people
better. So that’s what it was viewed as. That’s what most people thought.”
He said
he had taken the image down because “I didn’t want to have anybody be confused.
People were confused.”
Mr. Trump
did not apologize for either post, just as he did not apologize for threatening
to wipe out the Iranian civilization last week. (“I’m fine with it,” he said of
the threat on Fox News on Sunday, because it had brought Tehran to the
negotiating table.) The post attacking Pope Leo XIV as “weak on crime” remains
online, and so do countless posts from legions of critics who believe Mr.
Trump’s mental fitness for office should be evaluated.
As a
rule, Mr. Trump does not apologize for doing and saying things that hurt or
offend people, and officials in his White House characterize his behavior as
radically refreshing and transparent. Outrage from people representing powerful
constituencies that helped elect him to a second term has only rarely prompted
him to backtrack or retreat.
In
February, Mr. Trump deleted a racist video depicting former President Barack
Obama and Michelle Obama, the former first lady, as apes after several members
of the Republican Party — including Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina, the
Senate’s only Black Republican — called on him to remove it. Mr. Trump took the
post down, blamed a staff member and never apologized.
“I just
looked at the first part — it was about voter fraud in some place, Georgia,”
Mr. Trump told reporters of that video in February. “I didn’t see the whole
thing.”
A little
over two months later, Mr. Trump was again in a position of explaining the
thought process behind something inflammatory he posted to his social media
account. (Other posts sent on Sunday night included a rendering of a Trump
office building on the moon and a meme mocking the long careers of Democratic
politicians.)
Mr. Trump
was talking to reporters in the first place because White House officials had
staged a fast food delivery to the Oval Office to promote a Trump
administration-led policy that has removed taxes on overtime and tips. A woman
named Sharon Simmons delivered the bags of burgers and avoided the president’s
questions about whether she opposed “men playing in women’s sports.” Ms.
Simmons stayed on message: “I’m here about no tax on tips.”
Standing
next to Ms. Simmons, who wore a red shirt that said “DoorDash Grandma,” Mr.
Trump refused to apologize for his post attacking the American-born pope. “I’m
just responding to Pope Leo,” Mr. Trump said. “There’s nothing to apologize
for. He’s wrong.”
Leo is
one of the world’s most powerful critics of the U.S. war with Iran. In recent
days, he has condemned the worship of mortals and money, the pitfalls of
arrogance and the “absurd and inhuman violence” unleashed by fighting that has
further destabilized the Middle East.
“Leo
should be thankful because, as everyone knows, he was a shocking surprise,” Mr.
Trump wrote in a lengthy social media post on Sunday night. “He wasn’t on any
list to be Pope, and was only put there by the Church because he was an
American, and they thought that would be the best way to deal with President
Donald J. Trump. If I wasn’t in the White House, Leo wouldn’t be in the
Vatican.”
On Monday
morning, Leo told reporters he had “no fear” of the Trump administration. He
added that he was not afraid of “speaking out loudly about the message of the
Gospel, which is what I believe I am here to do.”
Later on
Monday, Vice President JD Vance, the highest-ranking Catholic in the federal
government, was asked to respond to the president’s criticism of the pope in an
interview on Fox News.
Mr. Vance
said that he would advise the Vatican to “to stick to matters of morality, to
stick to matters of, you know, what’s going on in the Catholic Church, and let
the President United States stick to dictating American public policy.”
Other
prominent conservatives, and not only Catholics, quickly expressed outrage at
the image that Mr. Trump posted of himself as a Jesus-like figure.
“Does he
actually think this?” Riley Gaines, the anti-transgender rights activist,
posted on social media. “God shall not be mocked.”
David
Brody, an evangelical journalist with the Christian Broadcasting Network,
called on Mr. Trump to take it down.
Last
year, after the death of Pope Francis, Mr. Trump posted a photo of himself as
pope and joked that he would like to be the next pope.
Elizabeth
Dias contributed reporting.
Katie
Rogers is a White House correspondent for The Times, reporting on President
Trump.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário