Former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene. President Donald Trump. Credit : Annabelle Gordon/Sipa USA via AP Images; Anna Moneymaker/Getty

Marjorie Taylor Greene Urges Trump Advisers to ‘Fall on Their Knees and Beg Forgiveness from God’ After His ‘Evil’ Easter Post

Thomas Smith
3 Min Read

Former Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) launched a blistering critique of President Donald Trump on Sunday, labeling his recent military threats against Iran as “evil” and explicitly questioning his Christian faith.

The public break follows a series of escalatory remarks from the President, including a profanity-laced Easter Sunday message that has sparked international outcry and internal GOP friction.

Greene, once a cornerstone of Trump’s “Make America Great Again” movement, took to X (formerly Twitter) to denounce the President’s rhetoric. Her comments were triggered by a Truth Social post where Trump, 79, warned Iran to “open the f—in’ Strait [of Hormuz]” or “be living in Hell.” The President further threatened to target civilian infrastructure and concluded his message with the phrase, “Praise be to Allah.”

“Our President is not a Christian and his words and actions should not be supported by Christians,” Greene wrote. She urged administration officials to “stop worshipping the President” and intervene in what she described as “Trump’s madness.”

Greene, who resigned from Congress in November citing disagreements over Iran policy and the handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files, argued that the administration’s current path betrays the promises made to voters in 2024.

The conflict, which commenced on February 28, has entered a lethal new phase. At the annual White House Easter Egg Roll on Monday, President Trump defended the military’s actions, describing the strategy as the “obliteration” of Iran.

“If they don’t [say uncle], they’ll have no bridges, they’ll have no power plants,” Trump told reporters, adding that he would “take the oil” if given the choice.

President Donald Trump with trade adviser Jamieson Greer (left) and the Easter Bunny (right) on April 6, 2026. Alex Wong/Getty 

However, the human cost is mounting. The Iranian human rights organization HRANA reports that at least 1,600 civilians have been killed in Iran since the war began. International law experts warn that the targeting of more than 12,300 sites—including an elementary school bombing that killed 168 children—may constitute war crimes.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt maintains that the U.S. armed forces “always act within the confines of the law.”

President Donald Trump greets Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene on March 4, 2025. Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty 

The war has also taken a steady toll on U.S. forces. The military confirms at least 13 service members have been killed, with hundreds more injured. Over the weekend, two fighter jet crew members were rescued after their aircraft was downed inside Iranian territory.

Despite the mounting criticism and casualties, Trump remains defiant. During his prepared remarks on Monday, he bypassed the controversy, stating the country is “doing so well like it has never done before” and citing record-breaking performance in the stock market and military expansion.

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