The political gap between US evangelicals and Catholics is widening. And Trump won't tolerate authority outside his own
"Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest?" Henry II was reputed to have muttered. His knights heard his pointed remark as an order. They rode to confront Thomas Becket, the archbishop of Canterbury, who spoke too freely and critically about the king. When they failed to intimidate him into silence, they murdered him. Absolute rule demanded absolute fealty.
The representative of the holy trinity could not be allowed to stand above the unitary executive in 1170.
Donald Trump believed that the conclave of the college of cardinals elected Robert Prevost as Pope Leo XIV on 8 May 2025 for the gratification and exaltation of Donald Trump. "He wasn't on any list to be Pope," Trump posted on 12 April this year, "and was only put there by the Church because he was an American, and they thought that would be the best way to deal with President Donald J Trump. If I wasn't in the White House, Leo wouldn't be in the Vatican."
Leo wears the shoes of the fisherman, not the black Florsheim models that Trump insists his underlings wear. As the Iran war continued, the pope called for peace. Trump felt betrayed, aggrieved and victimized that the pope would not kneel at his throne. To his horror, Trump could not stop the moral censure of his policies from mass deportations to the Iran war. As Trump floundered in the strait of Hormuz, the pope's condemnation was especially damning and humiliating.
"Enough of the idolatry of self and money! Enough of the display of power! Enough of war!" said Leo on 11 April. "True strength is shown in serving life."
Leo's condemnations fell upon Trump harder than courtroom verdicts. There was no higher appeal. Trump could not wield the pardon power on his own behalf. The threatened withdrawal of federal contracts or security clearances could not make Leo cower as if he were a law firm or university. Trump's cancellation of a grant to a Catholic charity in Miami ministering to immigrant children only highlighted his cruelty. No tariff could leverage Leo. Unlike his predecessor Francis, he could not be dismissed as an out-of-touch alien. Leo, who holds a doctor of canon law degree from the Pontifical University of St Thomas Aquinas in Rome, is also Bob from the south side of Chicago, a White Sox fan.
The most despised American in the world cannot bear the judgments of the most admired American in the world. Trump's wounded pride has festered from envy into malice. Trump's expectation of submission dashed, he flew into a fury, but his rage could not overawe Leo. He treated the pope like a politician who would crumble before his bluster. "Pope Leo is WEAK on Crime, and terrible for Foreign Policy," he tweeted. Trump exposed his own irreparable fragility: "I don't want a Pope who criticizes the President of the United States because I'm doing exactly what I was elected, IN A LANDSLIDE, to do, setting Record Low Numbers in Crime, and creating the Greatest Stock Market in History. Leo should be thankful because, as everyone knows, he was a shocking surprise." Was the pope's election rigged? Does he use an auto-pen? "I have no fear," said Leo in a matter-of-fact tone that evoked Psalm 23: "I will fear no evil; for thou art with me."
On 12 April, Trump posted an image of himself as a Christlike figure in a white robe healing a sick man. He soon deleted the post. Excoriated for blasphemy and silliness, Trump tried to explain that he was not pictured as Christ but a doctor - surrounded by angels, a devil and a jet fighter perhaps to reference his stated intention to bomb "a whole civilization", no less than "back to the Stone Ages".
"Trump is far too lightweight a figure to be the Antichrist foretold in the Bible. But what Trump is unambiguously doing is manifesting the spirit of Antichrist," wrote Rod Dreher, a conservative writer who was instrumental in his religious conversion. Like Lucifer, the protagonist of John Milton's Paradise Lost, refusing to accept his status below God, Trump rebels against Heaven itself. But as Dreher observes, Trump lacks the self-consciousness of Lucifer while inhabiting his destructive ire: "Which way I fly is Hell; myself am Hell," says Lucifer. Or, as Dreher put it: "Batshit crazy."
Though notoriously illiterate about religion - Trump once cited "Two Corinthians" - he is keenly aware that he is venerated by white evangelical Christian nationalists. Despite his tribulations, white evangelicals remain among his strongest devotees. Christian nationalists pray at the altar of the church of Trump. Their relationship to Trump long ago melded partisan politics with a cult of personality to form a revised religious identity.
In this theology, Trump is both king and Christ. At a White House prayer breakfast on 1 April, he told an assemblage of preachers: "On Palm Sunday, Jesus entered Jerusalem as crowds welcomed him with praise honoring him as king. They call me king now. Can you believe it?" Paula White-Cain, the chair of the White House faith office, likened Trump to the Maga Jesus: "You were betrayed and arrested and falsely accused. It's a familiar pattern that our lord and savior showed us." She had delivered the opening prayer at the January 6 rally at the White House to the mob carrying Christian nationalist banners before the attack on the Capitol, calling for "holy boldness".
Since the Reagan presidency, the alliance between evangelical Christians and conservative Catholics has been the essential coalition of the reframed Republican party. They were fastened tightly together by the abortion issue, the key element of the culture war. Their fusion was a carefully engineered political operation.
Anti-Catholicism has always been at the center of American nativism. The Know Nothing party of the 1850s pledged to bar Catholics from holding public office. In 1960, John F Kennedy, under harsh attack as an unpatriotic papist, went into the lion's den to address the Greater Houston Ministerial Association of Protestant pastors to assure them: "I believe in an America where the separation of church and state is absolute" and "where no public official either requests or accepts instructions on public policy from the Pope".
In 1982, religious right operatives overturned the fundamental theology of the Southern Baptist Convention, the largest evangelical group, on abortion to align it with conservative Catholicism. Previously, the SBC had approved resolutions upholding the right to abortion and against prayer in schools. Ed McAteer, a former Colgate Palmolive sales manager who founded the Religious Roundtable, explained to me for an article I wrote in The New Republic in 1984 how he closely coordinated with the Reagan White House to pack the SBC convention and pass the anti-abortion resolution.
In 2022, the conservative majority on the supreme court, mostly conservative Catholics installed since Reagan, overturned Roe v Wade, eliminating the right to abortion at the federal level. The removal of abortion on the right as a national issue also had the effect of loosening the political adhesiveness behind the evangelical/Catholic fusion despite the growth of a rightwing Catholic infrastructure financed by reactionary billionaires. The ultimate fruition of the Reagan era project paradoxically set the stage for Trump's war on Leo.
Trump has pursued a nativist crusade to mass-deport immigrants, most of them Catholic. Since the first wave of immigration in the 19th century, the church in America has been an immigrant body. Trump's deployment of ICE was an attack on the larger congregation. ICE, not abortion, became the crisis for the Catholic church.
On 12 November 2025, the US Conference of Catholic Bishops issued a "Special Message", its first in 12 years since it had criticized the Obama administration for providing women's reproductive services. "We oppose the indiscriminate mass deportation of people," read its statement. The bishops denounced "a climate of fear and anxiety around questions of profiling and immigration enforcement" and "the vilification of immigrants".
On 9 January of this year, Leo delivered a speech in the wake of Trump's military operation in Venezuela and Russia's continuing war on Ukraine. "A diplomacy that promotes dialogue and seeks consensus among all parties is being replaced by a diplomacy based on force," he said. "War is back in vogue and a zeal for war is spreading. The principle established after the second world war which prohibited nations from using force to violate borders of others has been completely undermined."
On 22 January, Elbridge Colby, undersecretary of war for policy, who is Catholic, summoned cardinal Christophe Pierre, then Vatican's ambassador to United States, to Pentagon where according to report he lectured him on strength of US armed forces and instructed him “had better take its side”. Colby reportedly reminded Leo’s emissary of fate of Avignon papacy when Philip IV France kidnapped Pope Boniface VIII Rome 1309 taking him Avignon where promptly died apparently abuse.(The administration Vatican challenged reporting meeting’s details.)
But Colby did not silence Pope. Once Iran war launched, Trump’s threats could not stifle him either. On 15 April, US bishops’ chair Bishop James Massa issued a “Clarification on Just War Theory”: “That is, to be a just war it must be a defense against another who actively wages war, which is what the Holy Father actually said: ‘He does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war.’”
Trump assigned a new knight to joust against the Pope. JD Vance, who converted to Catholicism in 2019 but is nonetheless a leading apostle of the conservative faction that Leo is isolating, warned: “I think it’s very, very important for the pope to be careful when he talks about matters of theology.” Vance explained on: “It would be best for the Vatican to stick to matters of morality, to stick to matters of what’s going on in the Catholic church and let the president of the United States stick to dictating American public policy.”
The novitiate sermonizing to the Pope was indulging in more than spiritual presumption. The vice-president confused his own administration's policy. The day before he admonished the Pope, at a hearing of Trump's Religious Liberty Commission, its chair, Dan Patrick, the lieutenant governor of Texas, declared that every school and business should post "that the separation of church and state is the biggest lie that's been told in America since our founding".
But in seeking to undermine the Pope, Vance was performing his duty as defender of the faith for his master, who, like Milton's Lucifer, is intolerant of any authority other than his own: “Better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven.”