A clip from the White House Easter lunch in Washington, D.C., on April 1, 2026, is causing a storm online. Trump’s personal spiritual adviser, Paula White-Cain, stood in front of him and over a hundred faith leaders. She told Trump he had been “betrayed, and arrested, and falsely accused,” calling it “a familiar pattern that our Lord and Savior showed us,” drawing a bold comparison between Trump and Jesus Christ.
The event took place in the East Room on April 1, 2026. Over a hundred faith leaders showed up, marking Holy Week with a focus on religious liberty. The video really caught fire after a user posted it on X, and from there it spread everywhere.
The White House put the footage on YouTube, pulled it down soon after, but archived versions stayed up through sites like Roll Call Factbase and other outlets.
So, here’s what happened in the video: White-Cain addressed Trump directly. She praised his sacrifice, thanking both God and Trump for letting her serve people of faith and the American public. Then she made a comparison that really got people talking.
Standing at the podium with Trump watching, she said, “Jesus taught us so many lessons through his death, burial, and resurrection. He showed us great leadership, great transformation requires great sacrifice. And Mr. President, no one has paid the price like you have paid the price. It almost cost you your life. You were betrayed and arrested. And falsely accused. It’s a familiar pattern that our Lord and Savior showed us.”
She kept going. Just as Christ rose and was victorious, she said Trump had risen and would be victorious in whatever he pursued. Trump just smiled and said, “thank you.”
White-Cain is a Christian pastor, and her connection to Trump goes way back. He first reached out after catching one of her sermons. Now, she works as a senior adviser for the White House Faith Office and also pastors at Story Life Church in Orlando.
Internet Reacts to Paula White-Cain Comparing Trump to Jesus in Washington, D.C.
Much of the online response focused on the perceived absurdity of the comparison. “He’s surrounding himself with people who are even more delusional,” one person wrote, while another offered a blunter take: “Complete nutter or blasphemous grifter? You decide.”
Several responses came specifically from people identifying as Christians who felt the remarks crossed a theological line. “Don’t confuse manipulation with conviction. Comparing Jesus to any man is wrong!” one comment read. Another went further: “Comparing Trump to Jesus is not faith — it is straight up blasphemy and shameless garbage. And the fact this is coming from someone on the White House payroll just exposes it for what it really is — a rotten cult now hiding behind government power.”
Others took a broader view of what the moment represents. “When politics weakens, some people resort to religion,” one user wrote.
This clip isn’t shocking because of what she said. White-Cain isn’t an obscure figure. She has been advising Trump for years and played a big role in connecting his campaigns with faith communities, even into his second term.
So when she made those remarks at a government-hosted event in Washington, D.C., several critics saw it as blurring the line between religious faith and political loyalty. Then someone decided to delete the video, and that just made things blow up even more. Soon, way more people were paying attention than probably would’ve otherwise.







