Newsletter
Ross
Douthat
Opinion
Trump’s
Blasphemy Is a Warning
April 14,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/14/opinion/trump-pope.html
Ross
Douthat
By Ross
Douthat
Opinion
Columnist
Let’s
analyze the world’s latest church-and-empire fracas, the open conflict between
President Trump and Pope Leo XIV, in terms of three concentric circles,
bringing us from the general realities of Catholic politics to the intense
specifics of this case.
At the
general level, there is nothing about a conflict between a secular authority
and the Roman pontiff that should have Catholics reaching for the smelling
salts. Nothing in Catholic teaching says that popes are free from error about
public policy, and the historical record offers copious proof that they make
profound mistakes. As such, when popes engage in politicking, it’s not impious
for politicians to disagree with them, and such beefs are not inherently
liberal and secular and modern. If anything, they’re medieval and extremely
“trad.”
In the
current zone of controversy — the arguments pitting the pope or the Vatican or
leading cardinals against nationalist conservatism — the conservatives often
have reasonable complaints. Catholic social teaching in its ideal form
challenges right and left alike, but that tightrope is hard to walk, and the
church’s leaders often tend to challenge one side more sharply while offering
“accompaniment” to the other. Under Pope John Paul II, more politically liberal
Catholics reasonably felt that the Vatican was accompanying the right more than
the left, but under Pope Francis the dynamic was reversed. Even though Francis
was against abortion and euthanasia and other progressive shibboleths, he
clearly prioritized economic and environmental issues and even more clearly
just personally disliked conservatives, especially American conservatives,
relative to liberals.
Leo has
brought greater stability to the church in part by simply showing conservatives
a more paternal face and taking their concerns about ritual and doctrinal
clarity more seriously, even as he still sounds like Francis when he’s talking
about issues like immigration or climate change. In response, you’ve seen a
clear separation between very-online right-wing Catholics who want to be angry
about the papacy all the time and a broader conservative constituency that’s
content to have a pope who sounds left-leaning notes as long as he doesn’t seem
intent on doctrinal disruption.
But the
Vatican’s leftward tilt in today’s political debates can still show failures of
charity or clarity. The charitable failing shows up especially when church
leaders talk about immigration: It should be possible to defend migrants from
mistreatment while also recognizing the legitimate reasons American Catholics
might regard Joe Biden’s border policy as a travesty, or why European Catholics
might worry about the religious transformation of their nations by Muslim
immigration. The Vatican clearly feels more comfortable working with Joe Biden
or Emmanuel Macron than with Mr. Trump or Marine Le Pen. But it lacks a spirit
of understanding when it comes to why much of its own flock prefers the
populists.
The
failing of clarity, meanwhile, is a consistent problem for church rhetoric on
issues from wealth and poverty to war and peace. There is an understandable
clerical hesitance to be too concrete on these kinds of questions, lest the
pope or bishops seem to be dictating tax rates or treaty details. But the
result is that just as papal commentary on economic policy can sound not just
left-wing but vaporous, its position on foreign policy can drift toward a
blithe pacifism that isn’t true to the Catholic tradition. And if you are,
let’s say, a Catholic appointee in the Pentagon, it could be entirely
reasonable to press the Vatican to acknowledge that military power sometimes
has an entirely moral role to play.
These are
the general points that might be made in defense of conservative-Catholic
disagreement with Rome. They begin to break down, however, as we move into the
second circle, the specific debate about the Iran war, which is the issue that
has brought the conflict between the church and the Trump administration to a
boil.
Here it’s
not the papacy that struggles with the concrete question; it’s the
administration’s arguments that waver and wobble and evaporate. You’ll find
Trump supporters complaining that the papal condemnation of the war is too
sweeping, or that the messengers — like the three liberal-leaning American
cardinals who appeared on “60 Minutes” over the weekend — are too partisan, or
that we don’t hear enough from the Vatican about the evils of the Iranian
regime. But these complaints are secondary to the core question: Is the war
just or is it not? And the administration simply has not made a coherent and
consistent case for the justice of the conflict.
For
instance, one could argue that the war is just because it’s trying to remove a
wicked government. Except that at present Mr. Trump wants to say that it isn’t
a war for regime change, that he’s happy to cut a deal that wouldn’t require
the clerical elite to give up power, let alone face justice for their crimes.
Or one
could say that the war is just because it’s a limited intervention focused on
forestalling an Iranian military threat. But Mr. Trump and his secretary of
defense have repeatedly threatened a more sweeping campaign, with
back-to-the-stone-age bombing and civilizational destruction, which no just war
theory could countenance.
Or one
could say that the American war is just because it’s focused on military
targets, which is separate from the more morally questionable Israeli campaign
of assassination. But come on — they’re the same war!
Right now
the best reporting we have suggests that the administration entered into this
war without a clear strategic objective or a consistent moral justification,
without sufficient regard for the traps that might be sprung — and despite the
opposition of the president’s (Catholic) vice president and the doubts of his
(Catholic) secretary of state. That doesn’t mean that a decent outcome can’t be
salvaged. But it’s a situation in which the leader of the Catholic Church has
every reason to say, This seems like an unjust war.
And the
president’s response to that critique — and here we reach the innermost circle
of the story — emphatically does not belong to a normal push and pull between
church and state, pope and empire. Nor is it even a normal kind of Trumpian
abnormality. Instead we have outright profanation and sacrilege, in a pattern
that began with his social media post on Easter Sunday, cursing and threatening
violence and sarcastically praising Allah, and then escalated through a post
attacking Leo and finally a post of A.I. slop depicting himself as Jesus
Christ.
To the
extent that Mr. Trump has Christian defenders, they tend to separate the final
outrage from its predecessors, suggesting that it’s OK for the president to be
profane about Islamist theocrats, acceptable for him to argue angrily with the
bishop of Rome (who hath no authority in this realm of America …), leaving the
Trump-as-Christ meme as the only real offense.
But the
core issue from a religious perspective isn’t whether Muslims or Catholics or
evangelicals should be personally offended by the specifics of any given
presidential foray. It’s that there’s a consistent thread linking profane
Easter Sunday threats, a rant against the world’s most famous Christian leader
and the depiction of yourself as the Second Person of the Trinity. The
compounding offense isn’t against religious identity or papal dignity. It’s a
violation of the first and second commandments, where the offended party is
Almighty God.
If you
are a secular observer who assumes that blasphemy is a sin without a real
object, that escalation matters mostly as a window into the president’s
second-term state of mind.
If you’re
a believer, though, then Mr. Trump’s entire political career — his catalyzing
role in liberalism’s crisis, his movement from power to exile to power once
again — exists under providential power. In which case a turn to presidential
blasphemy is a warning for his religious supporters about potential conclusions
to the story, and the spiritual peril of simply sticking with him till the end.


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