Donald, who is perpetually pondering aloud whether he will make it to Heaven, shared some advice and assurance he received about his odds when “IT” finally happens.
While President Donald Trump, the oldest person ever elected President, has suggested a number of times he probably won’t make it past the pearly gates, he shared a note from evangelist Franklin Graham on Sunday that assured him that he has secured his place in Heaven when he dies.
Trump posted Graham’s letter, dated Oct. 15, 2025, to his Truth Social page, which was filled with guarantees from the MAGA Pastor that Trump is not facing any eternal damnation.
“This week you commented to the media that you might not be heaven bound,” Graham wrote. “Maybe you responded in jest, but it is an important issue to know for certain that your soul is secure and will spend eternity in the presence of God.”
Trump’s fixation on the afterlife is not inspiring confidence among his critics. Many of them have speculated about the elderly commander-in-chief’s health following his comments.
After Trump brought up the topic of going to Heaven last August, The Lincoln Project, an anti-Trump Republican Super PAC, posted that Trump’s “health can’t be right if this is top of mind for him.”
Meanwhile, Trump continues to brag about his cognitive state, recently saying, “I’m the only president that ever took a cognitive test. I took it 3 times. It’s actually a very hard test for a lot of people. It wasn’t hard for me.”
Dr. Jonathan Reiner, who served as former Vice President Dick Cheney’s cardiologist during the George W. Bush administration, offered the advice after the 79-year-old once again boasted about having “aced” the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), a test used to detect cognitive impairment or early signs of Alzheimer’s.
While sharing a clip of Trump’s remarks, Reiner suggested a president boasting about passing a 10-minute test, which can involve drawing the hands on a clock to indicate a certain time and identifying animals, is not the best look.
“If I were one of the president’s advisers, I would beg him to stop bragging about doing well on a dementia screening tool which requires the patient to identify a camel and subtract 7 from 100,” Reiner posted on Twitter.
I think we all can all agree we can’t wait for “IT” to happen.
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