Trump will learn a Bible passage on humility from the Oval Office amid ongoing feud with Pope Leo

President Donald Trump will take a turn reading a Bible verse as part of a nationwide effort on the heels of his high-profile spat with Pope Leo.

During the 6 p.m. ET hour on Tuesday, the President will take part in ‘America Reads the Bible,’ being coordinated to mark the country’s 250th birthday. 

CNN reported Monday that in a pre-taped appearance, Trump is expected to read a passage from 2 Chronicles 7:11-22, which includes a frequently cited verse on humility. 

‘If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land,’ verse 14 reads.  

Trump’s participation comes as he’s lambasted Pope Leo over comments the pontiff made about the Iran war. 

In a long-winded Truth Social post last week, Trump berated Pope Leo for being ‘WEAK on Crime‘ and blasted the Chicago-born Pope for meeting with President Barack Obama‘s political adviser, David Axelrod, ‘a LOSER from the Left.’ 

Obama, Axelrod and the Pope all have Chicago ties. 

Trump also took heat for posting an AI-created image where he appeared to be Jesus. 

President Donald Trump stands outside St. John’s Church in a controversial photo-op in which he held the Bible upside-down amid the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests. On Tuesday night, he’ll read a verse from the Bible to mark the country’s 250th birthday 

The President told reporters that he thought the image depicted him as a doctor. 

On Thursday, before departing for Las Vegas, Trump claimed that Pope Leo said, ‘Iran can have a nuclear weapon.’ 

Pope Leo hasn’t made such a claim, and the Catholic Church has been more broadly opposed to nuclear weapons. 

Trump also said it wasn’t necessary for him to meet with the Pope and work things out. 

The President was raised Presbyterian, but in politics has been more aligned with evangelical Christian leaders. 

In the past, he’s had several gaffes related to the Bible. 

In 2020, amid the Black Lives Matter protests, Trump walked a block north of the White House to St. John’s Church – after protesters were cleared out using tear gas – and posed for a highly controversial photo-op, in which the Bible was upside-down. 

In January 2016, when Trump was running for President for the first time, he misspoke during an appearance at Liberty University, an evangelical college, calling Second Corinthians, ‘Two Corinthians.’ 

President Donald Trump is prayed over by evangelical Christian leaders in the Oval Office last month. He’s aligned himself with evangelicals since entering politics and captured 81 percent of the evangelical vote in the 2024 election 

When asked by journalist Mark Halperin in August 2015 – two months after Trump launched his initial presidential bid – to name his favorite Bible verse, the GOP candidate demurred. 

‘I wouldn’t want to get into it because to me that’s very personal. You know, when I talk about the Bible, it’s very personal,’ the real estate developer and reality TV star said at the time. ‘The Bible means a lot to me, but I don’t want to get into specifics.’ 

When journalist John Heilemann followed up and asked Trump if he was an Old Testament guy or a New Testament guy, the candidate didn’t answer that either. 

‘Probably equal,’ Trump replied. 

Those missteps haven’t stopped the President from getting broad support politically from American Christians. 

During the 2024 election, Trump captured the white evangelical Protestant vote by a whopping 81 percent over Democratic nominee, Vice President Kamala Harris, according to the Public Religion Research Institute

Sixty percent of white Catholics also supported Trump.   

Polling from late March showed that Trump was already losing ground with Catholics – even before his spat with Pope Leo. 

The Catholic vote is considered a critical swing vote in US elections.