TrumpP Sparks Chants of ‘Jesus!’ at Rally with Faith-Filled Message to Supporters
Trump Sparks Chants of ‘Jesus!’ at Rally with Faith-Filled Message to Supporters

At a recent rally in North Carolina, former President Donald Trump stirred the crowd with an impassioned message about faith, intertwining his political narrative with references to Jesus and Christian values. The rally, a part of his ongoing campaign tour, demonstrated Trump’s continued alignment with religious themes to resonate with the evangelical base of his supporters.

Standing before a crowd of thousands, Trump recounted an incident involving Vice President Kamala Harris at a recent rally, where a group of anti-abortion protesters had shouted, “Jesus is Lord.” Trump described how Harris had responded by telling the group, “You’re at the wrong rally.” This reaction from Harris, Trump suggested, showed a lack of respect for Christian beliefs and an unwillingness to embrace faith in the public arena.

“When I hear ‘Jesus is Lord,’ I don’t hear the wrong rally,” Trump said, his voice rising as he looked out at the crowd. “I hear the right rally, the right message.”
Trump’s words ignited a powerful reaction from his supporters, many of whom began chanting “Jesus! Jesus!” The crowd’s response underscored the deep religious undertone of the event, as attendees cheered Trump’s direct appeal to Christian values.
Defender of Faith and Religious Freedom
Donald Trump's 'Jesus' Meme 'Isn't an Isolated Gaffe,' Expert Insists: 'It's a Pattern'
Donald Trump said his viral ‘Jesus’ image was meant to depict a doctor.Jimmy Kimmel Live/YOUTUBE; MEGA
President Donald Trump’s attempt to explain away a viral image appearing to depict him as Jesus Christ has only deepened the conversation he may have been trying to shut down.
After posting, then deleting, an AI-generated image that showed him in flowing robes with a glowing hand extended in what many interpreted as a Christ-like pose, the president insisted the image had been misunderstood.
The explanation sparked scrutiny after the post was deleted.Jimmy Kimmel Live/YOUTUBE
“I did post it, and I thought it was me as a doctor,” Trump told reporters, adding that it was “supposed to be me as a doctor, making people better.” He later said the image was removed because he “didn’t want to have anybody be confused.”
The Explanation That Became the Story
The controversy escalated following his remarks about Pope Leo XIV.MEGA
If the goal was to quiet backlash, it didn’t exactly work.
Instead, the explanation became the new focal point. The original post had already drawn criticism, including from Trump supporters who viewed it as sacrilegious, particularly given its timing around Easter and his ongoing public clash with Pope Leo XIV.
But the idea that the image was meant to depict a doctor — despite the religious imagery, including robes, a red sash, and a glowing aura — added another layer of disbelief.
'A Self-Own of the Worst Magnitude'
Critics questioned the claim as religious imagery dominated the image.MEGA
For communications strategist Evan Siegfried, President of Somm Consulting, the issue isn’t just the post or the explanation, it’s the pattern.
“What we’re seeing isn’t an isolated gaffe — it’s a pattern, and when a pattern emerges over eight days, the pattern itself becomes the story,” Siegfried says.
“It started on Easter Sunday and culminated a week later with an attack on Pope Leo — the only American pope in history — and an AI-generated image depicting himself as Jesus that he subsequently deleted after claiming he thought it was him as a doctor,” he explains.
“Every new development throws gas on what should be a dying fire. What should have been embers by now is now a roaring bonfire,” Siegfried adds. “This is a self-own of the worst magnitude.”
When Clarification Backfires
His response prolonged the backlash instead of containing it.MEGA
In typical crisis management, a clarification is meant to narrow interpretation and restore control over the narrative. Here, it arguably did the opposite.
By offering an explanation that many found implausible, the response invited further analysis, parody, and skepticism.
The episode also underscores how quickly a single post can spiral in today’s media ecosystem, especially when it intersects with religion, politics, and spectacle.
Trump’s decision to delete the image—something he rarely does—suggested the backlash had reached an unusual level. But by then, the narrative had already shifted from the image to the explanation behind it.
And in that shift, the question changed from what the post meant to whether the response made things worse.
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BREAKING: Bret Baier cuts into live broadcast with urgent update on Trump ..2
Fox News’ Bret Baier Caught on Video Getting Ticketed in D.C. amid Trump’s Police Takeover
"I didn't know there was paparazzi," Baier said after footage of him getting pulled over was shared to X
Fox News anchor Bret Baier was ticketed in Washington, D.C., amid President Donald Trump's overhaul of the city's police.
One week after the president seized control of the Metropolitan Police Department — a move he claimed would help to fight crime and target the city's homeless population — Baier, 55, was seen getting a ticket for distracted driving by an MPD officer.

bret baier
Fox News' Bret Baier gets a ticket in Washington, D.C.
Roy Rochlin/Getty; Mollaan Babbington Group of COMPASS via Storyful
The Special Report host explained in a post on X that he picked up his phone as he drove past an officer in Georgetown, resulting in the ticket. As in much of the rest of the United States, it is illegal to use a cellphone while simultaneously driving in Washington, unless hands-free technology is being used.
"I didn't know there was paparazzi," Baier added at the end of his message.
national guard DC

Members of the National Guard patrol at Union Station in Washington, D.C., on Aug. 14, 2025.
JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty
After the president announced his administration's takeover of Washington, D.C., law enforcement on Aug. 11, the Metropolitan Police Department fell under federal control. Attorney General Pam Bondi was put in charge of the D.C. police, and Trump warned he was ready to deploy other military forces "if needed."
The capital takeover prompted widespread protests, confrontations at ICE checkpoints and further curfews. Although the citizen response is largely negative, the Trump administration has expressed satisfaction with how the takeover is unfolding.Trump claimed the move was in response to a "public safety emergency," despite local crime data showing otherwise. The president has accused city officials of falsifying data.
The Washington, D.C., takeover was initially planned to be 30 days long, though Trump has expressed desire to extend the period — and apply the same methods in other U.S. cities.
"Our whole country is going to be so different and so great," Trump said on Aug. 13. "It's going to be clean and safe and beautiful, and people are going to love our flag more than they've ever loved it. And we're going to do a great job."