He believed it showed him as a doctor. Critics saw something else entirely.
The image lasted only a few hours on Truth Social before it disappeared — but not before it had already traveled far enough to ignite a fire on both sides of the political divide. An AI-generated picture posted by President Donald Trump showed him standing in a white robe, one glowing hand pressed to the forehead of a sick man lying in a hospital bed. Behind him: the Statue of Liberty, a billowing American flag, fighter jets, an eagle, a nurse, a woman in prayer, and what appeared to be a soldier. Critics immediately noted the resemblance to classical religious paintings depicting Jesus healing the sick.
Trump, speaking to reporters after the post had already been removed, said he saw nothing provocative in it. He believed it showed him as a doctor standing next to a Red Cross worker. "It's supposed to be as a doctor making people better," he told reporters. "And I do make people better. I make people a lot better."
What made the backlash unusual — and politically significant — was where it came from. This was not primarily a chorus of liberal critics or opposition voices. The loudest objections arrived from within Trump's own orbit. Sean Feucht, a Christian activist currently organizing a series of faith-based events to mark the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, was direct: "This should be deleted immediately. There's no context where this is acceptable." Riley Gaines, a prominent conservative activist, invoked scripture: "God shall not be mocked." David Brody, a journalist with the Christian Broadcasting Network — an outlet that has generally been sympathetic to Trump — wrote that the image crossed a line. "A supporter can back the mission and reject this," he said.
The timing added another layer of complexity. The AI image was posted less than an hour after Trump had published a lengthy attack on Pope Leo XIV, the first American pope, calling him "weak on crime" and "terrible for foreign policy." Pope Leo had been a vocal critic of the joint US-Israeli military operation in Iran, condemning what he described as "absurd and inhuman violence." The pope, for his part, did not back down. Speaking on Monday, he said he had "no fear" of the Trump administration and intended to keep "speaking out loudly" on the message of the Gospel.
Trump, asked at the White House whether he owed the pope an apology, declined. "Pope Leo said things that are wrong," he said, defending the Iran operation and suggesting the pope would ultimately come to accept the outcome.
The episode fits a pattern that has become familiar in this administration. In February, a clip depicting Barack and Michelle Obama as apes was posted to Trump's Truth Social account and later removed. The White House initially called it an "internet meme video" and told critics to "stop the fake outrage." After Republican senators joined the criticism, the post came down, and a White House official attributed it to a staffer who had "erroneously" made the post.
No such explanation has been offered for the AI Jesus image. Trump acknowledged posting it himself. The deletion, and his subsequent framing of it as a simple medical scene, suggests the White House recognized the political cost without being willing to fully concede the point.
What the episode reveals, more than anything, is the particular sensitivity of the evangelical and faith-based coalition that has been central to Trump's political coalition. When that constituency speaks in one voice — and when figures like Feucht and Gaines, who have been reliable allies, use words like "unacceptable" — the post comes down. The question the pattern raises is a structural one: who, if anyone, is reviewing what goes out under the president's name before it goes out.
Notable Quotes
There's no context where this is acceptable.— Sean Feucht, Christian activist and Trump ally
It's supposed to be as a doctor making people better. And I do make people better. I make people a lot better.— President Donald Trump, speaking to reporters
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
What's the actual significance here — a post got deleted, that happens all the time.
It matters because of who demanded the deletion. This wasn't the opposition. It was his own base — Christian activists, conservative commentators, faith-based media.
Why would that coalition be more alarmed than anyone else?
Because the image touched something they consider sacred. Depicting a political figure as a Christ-like healer isn't just bad optics to them — it's theologically offensive.
And Trump's explanation — that he thought it was just a doctor image — does that hold up?
The white robe, the glowing hand, the praying woman in the background — it's hard to look at that composition and not see the reference. Whether he saw it or not is a separate question.
The timing with the Pope Leo attack is striking. What do you make of that sequence?
Within the span of an hour, he attacked the first American pope and posted an image comparing himself to Jesus. For a faith community that takes both figures seriously, that's a lot to absorb at once.
The pope didn't back down either.
No. He said he had no fear of the administration and would keep speaking. That's a fairly direct response from someone who doesn't hold a press conference every day.
This is the second major Truth Social deletion in a few months. Is there a pattern?
The Obama clip in February followed the same arc — post, backlash, deletion, deflection. The difference there was they blamed a staffer. This time Trump said he posted it himself.
So what does that tell us about how the account is managed?
That there may not be much of a filter between impulse and publication. And that the correction mechanism is external — it takes public pressure to trigger a removal.