The Free Press
Shop Our Limited Edition America at 250 Hats!
ForumNewslettersSign InSubscribe
Allie Beth Stuckey: Trump’s Jesus Meme Was Dumb—Not Blasphemous
Critics rushed to call the AI meme depicting Trump as Jesus sacrilege. But the more likely explanation is simpler—and says more about online outrage than theology.
By Allie Beth Stuckey
04.15.26 — U.S. Politics
No description available.
Initially, I assumed the post was a combination of Trump’s ego and the bad influence of spiritual advisers. (AI-generated image of Trump on Truth Social)
--:--
--:--
Upgrade to Listen
Produced by ElevenLabs using AI narration
330
125
READ IN APP

On Sunday night, President Donald Trump ignited a firestorm when he posted an image on Truth Social depicting himself as a divine figure, leaning over a sick man and appearing to heal him. The image, which drew swift backlash, was widely reported as the president blasphemously “portraying himself as Jesus Christ.”

My immediate reaction was dismay. Initially, I assumed the post was a combination of Trump’s ego and the bad influence of spiritual advisers like Paula White, who likes to compare Trump to Christ, something that I’ve repeatedly criticized. Many of my fellow Christians agreed, and in an apparent reaction to the backlash, Trump deleted the meme. When asked about it, he responded that he didn’t intend it to be a picture of Jesus, but rather a depiction of himself healing America, noting the Red Cross worker in the picture.


Read
Inside the White House’s Shock-and-Awe Meme Machine

Is that an excuse? No. But it is an explanation, and a plausible one, given what we know of Trump’s general inattention to matters of religion. In response, I wrote, “I do believe that he didn’t think of this as a depiction of Jesus when posting. Still, there has to be more care and discernment here.”

My post provoked a flood of criticism. Some people claimed I was simply lying: that I didn’t really believe Trump’s explanation, that I was just a MAGA sycophant blindly running a defense campaign. Many even accused me of being paid to say it. That’s a strange accusation to level at someone who has spent the better part of a decade publicly critiquing Trump—especially since, as I wrote on X, many of the people angry at me had only in the last few months left the Trump Can Do No Wrong Club.

Continue Reading The Free Press
To support our journalism, and unlock all of our investigative stories and provocative commentary about the world as it actually is, subscribe below.
Annual
$8.33/month
Billed as $100 yearly
Save $20!
Monthly
$10/month
Billed as $10 monthly
Already have an account?
Sign In
To read this article, sign in or subscribe
Allie Beth Stuckey
Allie Beth Stuckey is a Christian conservative commentator and host of the podcast, Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey.
Tags:
Donald Trump
Faith
Religion
Comments
Comments are closed. The conversation isn’t. Keep it going in The Free Press Forum.
Join the conversation
Share your thoughts and connect with other readers by becoming a paid subscriber!
Already a paid subscriber? Sign in

No posts

For Free People.
LatestSearchAboutCareersForumShopPodcastsVideoEvents
Download the app
Download on the Google Play Store
©2026 The Free Press. All Rights Reserved.Powered by Substack.
Privacy∙Terms∙Collection notice