NEED TO KNOW
The White House deleted a 64-minute Easter lunch video after it circulated widely online
Pastor Paula White-Cain told Trump he’d been “betrayed, arrested, and falsely accused” like Jesus
Trump himself drew parallels to Christ during remarks, saying “they call me king now”
WASHINGTON, DC (TDR) — The White House deleted footage of an hour-long Easter lunch with national faith leaders Tuesday after the event produced a viral moment: Pastor Paula White-Cain, Trump’s personal spiritual adviser, directly compared the president’s experiences to those of Jesus Christ.
The big picture: The deleted footage is the latest instance of the White House posting and pulling video that creates public controversy — but the Easter lunch goes further, blurring the line between political loyalty and religious devotion in a setting designed to court the Christian conservative base.
The event, held April 1 at the White House, brought together national faith leaders to commemorate Holy Week — with Pastor Jentezen Franklin, Ralph Reed, and White-Cain among the attendees
The 64-minute video had already been archived and redistributed before the White House removed it, and continued circulating widely
Why it matters: When a sitting president’s spiritual adviser uses a White House podium to draw parallels between her patron and the central figure of Christianity, the separation between political movement and religious institution narrows in ways that affect both.
Christian critics — including self-identified Trump supporters — called the comparison “blasphemy” and said it does not represent the faith
The White House Faith Office, led by White-Cain and Jennifer Korn, organized the event — meaning the comparison wasn’t an accident of an open mic but a product of an official White House operation
Faith-based political organizing has been central to Trump’s coalition, and events like this one are partly designed to deepen that bond ahead of the 2026 midterms
Driving the news: The comparison landed harder because Trump himself set the tone — drawing his own parallels to Christ before White-Cain formalized them.
White-Cain addressed Trump directly, telling him: “You were betrayed and arrested and falsely accused” — language lifted directly from the Gospel narrative of Jesus’s final days
Trump, narrating the Palm Sunday story to the room, said: “They call me king now. Do you believe it? No king. I’m such a king. I can’t get a ballroom approved.”
Describing Jesus’s betrayal by disciples, Trump added: “He was really betrayed. We know the feeling. Many of the people in this room went through hell.”
The White House uploaded the footage to YouTube, then removed it — though archived copies remained publicly accessible via Roll Call Factbase and other outlets
What they’re saying: The reaction split along predictable lines — but notably, some of the sharpest criticism came from within the Christian community, not from secular opponents.
Paula White-Cain, Director of the White House Faith Office, addressing Trump directly at the lunch — “You were betrayed and arrested and falsely accused.”
A commenter on USA Today’s video post identifying as Christian — “I am a Christian and this is shameful; it does not represent us and it is not what Jesus preaches.”
A second commenter on the same post — “Thou shall have no other gods before me.”
Pastor Jentezen Franklin, also present at the lunch, called for a national return to Biblical principles — framing the event as a genuine faith gathering rather than political theater
Yes, but: Trump has invoked Christ in politically useful ways before — and the evangelical base has consistently rewarded rather than punished him for it.
In March, Trump told Republican senators to skip Easter to pass his SAVE America Act, saying: “In fact, make this one for Jesus, OK?” — drawing little backlash from faith leaders who attended Tuesday’s lunch
The White House Faith Office has framed Trump’s presidency in explicitly theological terms since its founding — Tuesday’s comparison was a degree of intensity, not a departure from established practice
Between the lines: The deletion is the tell. If the White House believed the event reflected well on the president, the footage would still be up — the removal signals internal recognition that the comparison crossed a line even the administration’s own communications team wasn’t comfortable defending publicly.
No White House spokesperson has explained why the video was removed or offered comment on White-Cain’s remarks
The same pattern played out in March when the White House posted and deleted two cryptic videos without explanation — suggesting a communications operation comfortable with post-publication damage control rather than editorial discipline
What’s next:
The White House has not responded to requests for comment on the deletion or White-Cain’s remarks
Pastor White-Cain remains director of the White House Faith Office with no indication of a change in role
Easter Sunday falls on April 5 — further White House faith events are expected and likely to draw renewed scrutiny
The archived full video remains publicly accessible via Roll Call Factbase
When a president’s spiritual adviser compares him to Christ at a government-hosted event, what’s the right standard for deciding where faith leadership ends and political performance begins — and who should enforce it?*
Sources
This report was compiled using information from USA Today, Roll Call Factbase via YouTube, Fox News, Instagram / USA Today, People Magazine
Freedom-Loving Beachwear by Red Beach Nation - Save 10% With Code RVM10
Join the Discussion
COMMENTS POLICY: We have no tolerance for messages of violence, racism, vulgarity, obscenity or other such discourteous behavior. Thank you for contributing to a respectful and useful online dialogue.