Sunday, February 22, 2026

FAITH WAS NEVER MEANT TO BE A BRANDING STRATEGY

I can’t help but think about Matthew 21 whenever I hear that Donald Trump is selling Bibles. The image is jarring — faith being packaged and marketed like a product, tied to political identity. In that moment, I imagine Jesus walking into the temple courts during Passover, where pilgrims were crowded around money changers and animal sellers, trying to navigate the transactional demands of worship. The place meant for prayer and connection with God had become a marketplace. Jesus’ response was immediate and uncompromising: he overturned the tables and declared, “My house will be called a house of prayer, but you are making it a den of robbers.” Worship was never meant to be commodified, and faith was never meant to be leveraged for personal gain or political branding.

This idea is reinforced in John 13:35, where Jesus told his disciples that everyone would know them by their love. Not by what they sold, promoted, or posed with, but by the tangible, active love they extended to others. Faith is not a symbol to display. It is an action to live.

This truth becomes even more vivid in Matthew 25:35–40, where Jesus describes what faithfulness looks like in the real world. He talks about hunger, thirst, strangers needing welcome, people lacking clothing, those who are sick, and those imprisoned. These were immediate, life-or-death realities in first-century Judea. Hunger was constant. Water was precious and scarce. Travelers relied on hospitality to survive. Clothing was not guaranteed, illness often led to social isolation, and imprisonment stripped people of almost everything. To follow Jesus meant entering into these realities, seeing the suffering, and acting to alleviate it.

Modern leaders give us concrete examples of what this looks like when faith is lived. George W. Bush launched PEPFAR in 2003, saving over 25 million lives by funding HIV/AIDS treatment around the globe. Jimmy Carter has spent decades building homes with Habitat for Humanity, restoring dignity and stability for thousands of families. Barack Obama expanded health coverage for over 20 million Americans through the Affordable Care Act and strengthened nutrition programs that fed millions during economic downturns. Even infrastructure projects like federal clean water and lead pipe removal reflect the same principle: meeting human need in practical, measurable ways. This is faith expressed through action, not slogans.

Then consider the contrast. In 2025 and 2026, policies implemented by Trump and many MAGA-aligned leaders show the consequences when faith is treated as a marketing tool rather than lived as mercy. Asylum hearings are being canceled or fast-tracked for denials, leaving vulnerable people without due process. Refugees with pending court cases face detention, and some are deported to third countries without notice. Hundreds of thousands are stuck in legal limbo, and ICE agents have made arrests of people who are already under active protections. Policies like these actively hinder the ability of people to survive and thrive. They stand in stark contrast to the call to “welcome the stranger” and “care for the least of these.”

At the same time, Trump’s sale of “God Bless the USA” Bibles demonstrates a clear shift from substance to brand. Faith becomes a commodity, and loyalty to a political identity is elevated above the tangible care of those in need. Even criminal convictions, admissions of sexual assault, avoidance of taxes, and other transgressions have not diminished the political influence of this brand. Faith is no longer about living mercifully; it is about signaling allegiance, performing identity, and selling an image.

Scripture repeatedly draws this distinction. Matthew 21 warns against turning sacred things into profit. John 13 tells us love is the defining marker of discipleship. Matthew 25 measures faithfulness by how we feed, clothe, welcome, heal, and visit. Jesus did not measure devotion by who held a Bible or who waved a flag. He measured it by how deeply people entered into the lives of those in need and alleviated suffering.

Holding a Bible in your hand does not make you a disciple. Selling one does not make you righteous. Living faith means extending mercy even when it is inconvenient, difficult, or costly. It means feeding the hungry, welcoming the stranger, caring for the sick, and standing with the imprisoned. It means turning our actions toward others rather than turning sacred things into products.

As Jesus said, “Whatever you did for one of the least of these… you did for Me.” The question is not who is holding a Bible. The question is who is living it.



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