‘Political stunt’: Critics slam Trump’s reading of a Bible passage one week after posting AI image of himself as Jesus | The Independent

Donald Trump participated in a Bible-reading marathon on Tuesday, reciting a passage from 2 Chronicles 7:11-22 in a pre-recorded video from the Oval Office as part of the “America Reads the Bible” event. The passage, frequently cited by those claiming the U.S. was founded as a Christian nation, featured Trump seated at the Resolute Desk delivering a roughly three-minute recitation. Critics immediately labeled the reading a “political stunt,” while supporters praised the Republican president for publicly affirming Christian values and American identity.

The scripture reading follows Trump’s posting of an AI-generated image depicting himself as Jesus Christ one week earlier, which he later claimed showed him as a doctor rather than a religious figure. Trump deleted the Jesus image after backlash, falsely claiming it represented medical healing, and the incident sparked criticism from Christian commentators and former Republican allies including Marjorie Taylor Greene, who denounced the post as an inappropriate replacement of Jesus imagery.

The Bible reading occurs within Trump’s broader campaign to integrate Evangelical Christianity into federal governance. Since returning to office, Trump established the White House Faith Office headed by televangelist Paula White-Cain, who has compared him to Jesus, and authorized federal workers to encourage religious expressions in government workplaces. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has explicitly invoked Christian language in military contexts, praying that rounds “find their mark against the enemies of righteousness” during Iran war operations, demonstrating how Trump’s administration has weaponized religious rhetoric to justify military action.

Trump’s emphasis on Christianity has intensified his conflict with Pope Leo, the first U.S.-born pontiff, who has repeatedly condemned the Iran war and rejected the use of faith to justify violence. Trump attacked the pope in a 334-word Truth Social post, branding him “terrible” on foreign policy and falsely suggesting the pontiff accepts Iran possessing nuclear weapons. Pope Leo has refused to remain silent, stating he will continue speaking against war and promoting dialogue to end suffering.

Brian Kaylor, author of “The Bible According to Christian Nationalists: Exploiting Scripture for Political Power,” rejected Trump’s interpretation of the selected passage, telling the Associated Press that the verse represents “a promise made to one particular person in one particular moment” and cannot legitimately be applied to modern U.S. political purposes through decontextualization. Social media responses divided sharply, with supporters viewing the reading as moral leadership while critics questioned whether Trump has ever genuinely engaged with scripture.

(Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/trump-bible-passage-reading-white-house-b2962262.html)