
Washington, D.C. Newsroom, May 5, 2025 / 14:57 pm
President Donald Trump dismissed the criticism he faced after sharing an AI-generated image of himself as the pope on social media, asserting that the controversy was drummed up by the news media.
“You mean they can’t take a joke?” Trump rhetorically asked a reporter after he was questioned about backlash to the image. “You don’t mean the Catholics; you mean the fake news media.”
Trump said “the Catholics loved it” and noted that his wife, Melania, who is Catholic, “thought it was cute” before commenting that — if he were the pope — “I would not be able to be married though.”
“To the best of my knowledge, popes aren’t big on getting married, are they?” he said. “Not that we know of.”
Trump, who shared the image on Truth Social, said he “had nothing to do with” the picture, adding: “Somebody made up a picture of me dressed like the pope and they put it out on the internet.”
“That’s not me who did it,” the president continued. “I have no idea where it came from. Maybe it was AI, but I know nothing about it. I just saw it last evening.”
Catholic leaders respond to President Trump over AI image of himself as pope

Washington, D.C. Newsroom, May 5, 2025 / 14:57 pm (CNA).
Catholic leaders and some members of the Church hierarchy in the United States have criticized President Donald Trump for sharing an AI-generated image of himself dressed as a pope.
Trump, who frequently shares memes of himself on social media, posted the image to Truth Social on Friday after joking that he would like to be chosen as the next pope. The White House subsequently posted the photo on its official X account.
The social media posts came just days after the president said he would “like to be pope” when a reporter asked him who he hopes is selected for the papacy in the upcoming papal conclave. As part of his response to that same question, he went on to say he actually had “no preference” while also touting Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York as a “very good” candidate.
Trump’s latest joke about the matter received pushback from some Catholic leaders, including Dolan, Bishop Robert Barron, Bishop Thomas Paprocki, and the entire New York Catholic Conference. As of the time of publication, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) had not issued a statement nor responded to a request for comment from CNA.
Dolan, the archbishop of New York City and an appointee to Trump’s recently created Religious Liberty Commission, told a reporter in Rome that he hopes the president “had nothing to do with that” and said “it wasn’t good.”
Responding to general questions before Mass at his titular church this morning in Rome, Cardinal Dolan spoke about President Trump‘s post on social media dressed as a pope. @thegnewsroom pic.twitter.com/sF1zshVTP3
— Mary Shovlain (@maryshovlain) May 4, 2025
Speaking in Italian, Dolan called the stunt “brutta figura,” essentially meaning that it was in bad form.
Barron, the bishop of Winona–Rochester, Minnesota, who was also appointed to the Religious Liberty Commission, told EWTN News that he thinks it was “a bad joke” and a “sophomoric attempt at humor.”
“I don’t think at all it represents some disdain for the Catholic Church or some attack on the Catholic Church,” he said. “President Trump has signaled in all sorts of ways his support for and affection for the Catholic Church. I think it was a bad joke that obviously landed very poorly and was seen as offensive by a lot of Catholics and I wish he hadn’t done it.”
. @WordOnFire‘s @BishopBarron reacted to the viral AI image of US President Donald Trump as the new pope: “I think it was a bad joke that obviously landed very poorly and was seen as offensive by a lot of Catholics, and I wish he hadn’t done it.”#catholic #catholicchurch… pic.twitter.com/fjmsCzmgsU
— EWTN News (@EWTNews) May 5, 2025
Milwaukee Archbishop Jeffrey S. Grob told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that the conclave is “a very serious time” for the Catholic Church and expressed displeasure that “we’ve lost great respect for moments like this.”
Some Catholic leaders who criticized the president took stronger offense to the image.
The New York State Catholic Conference, which represents the state’s bishops, posted on X that “there is nothing clever or funny about this image, Mr. President.”
“We just buried our beloved Pope Francis and the cardinals are about to enter a solemn conclave to elect a new successor of St. Peter,” the post added. “Do not mock us.”
Paprocki, who is the bishop of Springfield, Illinois, said on X that the photo “mocks God, the Catholic Church, and the papacy.”
“This is deeply offensive to Catholics especially during this sacred time that we are still mourning the death of Pope Francis and praying for the guidance of the Holy Spirit for the election of our new pope,” Paprocki wrote. “He owes an apology.”
Other Catholic figures did not take such offense, however.
Vice President JD Vance, who is a convert to Catholicism, responded to criticisms of the image from commentator and writer Bill Kristol, who is not Catholic.
“As a general rule,” wrote Vance, “I’m fine with people telling jokes and not fine with people starting stupid wars that kill thousands of my countrymen,” referring to Kristol’s role in support of the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq.
In a news release, Bill Donohue, the president of the Catholic League, called the image “dumb, but not bigoted.”
“What Trump did was silly, but it was hardly an expression of bigotry,” Donohue said. “We deal with real cases of anti-Catholicism at the Catholic League, not junior-league pranks.”
CatholicVote’s vice president Joshua Mercer — whose organization ran advertisements for Trump in the last election — said in a statement that the image is “obviously intended to be humorous.”
“There is no need to imagine that he believes he could be pope, or that he intended to mock the papacy,” Mercer said. “Memes depicting famous people as the new pope have been playfully circulating on social media everywhere for the past week.”
Brian Burch, the president of CatholicVote and Trump’s nominee as the ambassador to the Holy See, declined to comment.
This story was updated May 5, 2025, at 5:14 p.m. ET with Trump’s comments on the image.
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I think JD Vance said he’d rather have someone who enjoys playing jokes than someone who starts wars.
For goodness sakes, people need to stop taking offense at everything. I thought it was funny.
His wife is a “Catholic” who doesn’t practice??? Is she not married outside the Church? Does D. T. have a decree of nullity from his other “marriages”? Was her son not baptized in a Catholic Church, but rather in a protestant denomination? Does she not believe that abortion is a right? How about the destruction of humans who are conceived via IVF? This whole thing to me is so far from amusing, I was sickened by the total disregard and respect for Catholics!! We are at an extremely low point in this country which is not “Christian”, but a “private interpretation nation” where Christ seems to be simply whomever you wish Him to be?
C.H.S.:A very serious case of TDS. Get help…quickly!
Yeah.
Too bad Trump posted that silly picture instead of advocating for legislation that would enable the slaughter of millions of children in unimaginably brutal ways like the Biden administration did.
The bishops were apparently okay with that, since they barely made a peep.
He released/pardoned those folks who got arrested/convicted/jailed for protesting outside abortion clinics during Biden’s term.
Just 2 words, Mr. P, and shirley this is not asking too much, and I know you’re having tons of fun tweaking the democrats but at some point PLEASE
1) Grow
2) Up
I am not a fan of Trump, but it was funny. A little humor can be helpful.
I agree William. Humor can be a sign of humility.
Ditto.
The Church is, in this post-Bergoglian period, in bad shape and CNA is distracting us with this childish nonsense. So much of the Catholic Press deserves to be ignored.
Must everything be trivialized? Call it humor, but yours truly is reminded of Georges Bernanos:
“The modern world will shortly no longer possess sufficient spiritual reserves to commit genuine evil. Already . . . we can witness a lethal slackening of men’s conscience that is attacking not only their moral life, but also their very heart and mind, altering and decomposing even their imagination . . . The menacing crisis is one of INFANTILISM.”
(Interview with Samedi-Soir, Nov. 8, 1947, cited in Hans Urs von Balthasar, “Bernanos: An Ecclesial Existence” [San Francisco: Ignatius, 1996], 457, caps added).
Speaking of comic and tragic things. Images of the REAL (not an AI-generated) person in the previous papal position show who trivialized the Body and the Vicar of Christ.