Franklin Graham Urges Trump to Trust Jesus This Palm Sunday

Trump Shared Palm Sunday Letter From Franklin Graham

On Palm Sunday President Donald Trump made public a letter he had received in October from evangelist Franklin Graham. The message was simple and urgent: accept Jesus Christ as your Savior and stop trusting in your own works if you want to go to Heaven. This moment has stirred both faith conversations and political chatter, but at its heart it’s a spiritual appeal.

In the letter dated Oct. 15, 2025, Graham congratulated Trump for securing a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas and the return of remaining Israeli hostages, which he praised as “incredible accomplishments” and “an answer to prayer” amid Trump’s “historic” leadership. He also praised Trump for being a peacemaker, noting that Jesus promised blessing for such figures.

The Letter And Its Message

The letter calls people to face a basic biblical truth: salvation rests on grace through faith, not human effort. Franklin Graham urged Trump to turn from reliance on accomplishments, titles, and reputation, and to lean wholly on Christ. That call echoes the core of the Gospel, the same message the apostles preached to kings and crowds alike.

For believers this is not news; Scripture repeatedly warns against trusting in works as the ticket to Heaven. The Book of Romans tells us righteousness comes through faith, not our deeds, and that applies to everyone, regardless of status. When a public figure gets a private nudge toward repentance, the church should respond with prayer and clear teaching.

It’s easy to reduce a spiritual invitation to politics, but that misses the point entirely. A letter like this is about eternity, not polling numbers. If the recipient and the public treat it purely as theater, they lose sight of the soul-level stakes the writer emphasized.

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Graham went on to exhort the president to remember that, despite his many accomplishments and apparent blessings, neither he nor anyone else can earn favor before God and salvation from Hell apart from trusting in the righteousness and atoning death of Jesus Christ, performed on their behalf.

Why This Matters

When a prominent evangelist reaches out to a prominent leader, it underscores the church’s call to speak truth plainly. The church cannot be silent when it sees a soul wandering from the Gospel, and it must not confuse cultural influence with spiritual security. Evangelism is messy and bold, and this letter is a case in point.

Accepting Christ means admitting you cannot save yourself, a hard truth for anyone who has been lifted by success. The response required is repentance and trust in Jesus alone, not a patchwork of good works to buy favor. That is the uncomfortable but freeing center of biblical faith.

For Christians watching, this is a teaching moment: model gentleness with firmness. We can pray earnestly and speak truth unapologetically while remembering our own need for grace. The aim is not to shame but to point to the only hope beyond the grave.

For nonbelievers, the exchange can be a prompt to ask honest questions: What does it mean to be saved? Why would a spiritual leader press a political figure so directly? Those questions deserve clear answers rooted in Scripture rather than spin or slogans.

The wider culture will interpret this through many lenses, but believers must keep the Gospel front and center. The debate about motives or timing should not drown out the real issue, which is where a person stands before God. The church’s responsibility is to call people to Christ, regardless of applause or criticism.

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This episode also highlights a biblical pattern: prophets and pastors often confront kings. The Old Testament is full of examples where spiritual leaders risked reputation to speak God’s truth to power. That kind of courage remains necessary in every age when souls are at stake.

In practical terms, the faithful respond with prayer, Scripture, and patient witness. Pray for the one who received the letter and for those who will influence his heart. Share the Gospel plainly, live it visibly, and trust the Holy Spirit to work where human words cannot.

At the end of the day, the message is timeless and urgent: we are all sinners in need of a Savior, and only Jesus saves. Public gestures can start conversations, but salvation is a personal turning to Christ. If this letter moves even one heart toward true repentance, the risk taken to send it was worth it.