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Trump Joins the Consecration of the USA to the Sacred Heart of Jesus

Above: the Sacred Heart Flag available from the Remnant.

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Trump Joins the Consecration of the USA to the Sacred Heart of Jesus
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In a welcome gesture of unity between the spiritual and temporal swords, His Excellency President Donald J. Trump “join[ed] in prayer” the historic consecration of these United States to the Sacred Heart of Jesus last Thursday. This consecration was historic for many reasons, and took place on the 127th anniversary of Pope Leo XIII’s consecration of the world to the Sacred Heart on June 11, 1899. Here we will read President Trump’s message in its entirety and then provide a few comments.

Presidential Message on U.S. Catholic Bishops Honoring the 250th Anniversary of American Independence

The White House

June 11, 2026

Today, Melania and I join in prayer with Catholic Bishops gathered in Orlando, Florida, as they consecrate the United States of America to the Sacred Heart of Jesus on the occasion of our 250th year of American Independence—a powerful moment in our national story and a poignant reminder that America has always been guided by the loving hand of God.

Even in the centuries before the United States was conceived in nationhood, America was a land of prayer, a place of miracles, and home to some of the most faithful and devoted Christians to ever live.  From the heroic bands of Christian missionaries, settlers, and explorers who tamed the unknown to spread the Gospel to the priests, chaplains, and churchgoers who forged our spirit in every generation since, the love of Jesus Christ has stood at the center of our identity and way of life.

Inspired by this proud birthright of faith, just years after the end of the Revolutionary War, Bishop John Carroll—the first Catholic bishop in the United States and cousin of Catholic Founding Father Charles Carroll—consecrated our young Republic to Mary, the Mother of God.  Today, this grand legacy of faith in America reaches yet another historic milestone as America’s Catholic Bishops consecrate our Nation to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, during which they will prayerfully “celebrate the abundant gifts” that God has “given this nation, founded on the self-evident truths that our Creator has endowed all people with the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”  And following today’s consecration, on June 12, Christians in the United States and around the world will celebrate the Feast of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus, a joyful celebration of God’s boundless love for all His creation.

This year’s Feast of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus also fittingly marks the anniversary of one of the most momentous days in Western civilization’s long twilight struggle against atheistic communism.  On June 12, 1987, President Ronald Reagan delivered his historic address at Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany, in which he famously implored Soviet General Secretary Mikhail Gorbachev to “tear down this wall.”

Toward the end of his remarks, President Reagan identified what he called “the most fundamental distinction of all between East and West:  The totalitarian world produces backwardness because it does such violence to the spirit, thwarting the human impulse to create, to enjoy, to worship.”

President Reagan recounted the construction by the communist East German government of a mighty television tower in the 1960s.  “Virtually ever since,” Reagan said, “the authorities have been working to correct what they view as the tower’s one major flaw, treating the glass sphere at the top with paints and chemicals of every kind.  Yet even today when the sun strikes that sphere, that sphere that towers over all Berlin, the light makes the sign of the cross.  There in Berlin, like the city itself, symbols of love, symbols of worship, cannot be suppressed.”

On that very day, just over 200 miles away, Pope Saint John Paul II, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church, was speaking in his native Poland.  On the Westerplatte peninsula, the place where, in an extraordinary display of heroic virtue, an isolated force of around 200 Polish warriors held out for 7 days against approximately 4,000 German troops attacking from sea, land, and air in the opening days of World War II, the Pope challenged a gathering of Polish youth:  “Each of you, young friends, also finds your own ‘Westerplatte’ in life.  A set of tasks that must be undertaken and fulfilled.  A just cause that you cannot simply fail to fight for.  A duty, an obligation, from which you cannot shirk.  You cannot ‘desert.’  Finally—a certain order of truths and values that must be ‘upheld’ and ‘defended,’ just as at Westerplatte, within oneself and around oneself.  Yes, defended—for oneself and for others.”

Pope Saint John Paul II closed by quoting the words of a Polish martyr.  “More horrifying than a defeat of arms is the defeat of the human spirit.”

Thanks to the moral leadership of President Reagan and Pope Saint John Paul II, the tireless work and determination of free men and women around the world, and the moral witness of millions who endured prolonged suffering within the Captive Nations, the godless forces of Soviet communism were vanquished—and the human spirit triumphed.

Today, nearly four decades later, our Nation and our culture confront a new set of menacing ideologies seeking once again to cast God out from our society.  But today, as Catholic Bishops consecrate the United States of America to the Sacred Heart of Jesus in this 250th year of our Independence, we recommit ourselves, like President Reagan and Pope Saint John Paul II, to defending our spiritual identity and great civilizational inheritance.  Above all, we pray that America will continue for the next 250 years, and beyond, to be a land of faith, a country of miracles, and a light and glory to all nations.

Thus His Excellency, President Donald Trump. There is much to be praised and grateful for in this declaration by President Trump. Indeed it reminds me of the amicable letter to these United States by Pope Leo XIII in which he praised George Washington:

The names newly given to so many of your towns and rivers and mountains and lakes teach and clearly witness how deeply your beginnings were marked with the footprints of the Catholic Church. Nor, perchance did the fact which We now recall take place without some design of divine Providence. Precisely at the epoch when the American colonies, having, with Catholic aid, achieved liberty and independence, coalesced into a constitutional Republic the ecclesiastical hierarchy was happily established amongst you; and at the very time when the popular suffrage placed the great Washington at the helm of the Republic, the first bishop was set by apostolic authority over the American Church. The well-known friendship and familiar intercourse which subsisted between these two men seems to be an evidence that the United States ought to be conjoined in concord and amity with the Catholic Church. And not without cause; for without morality the State cannot endure-a truth which that illustrious citizen of yours, whom We have just mentioned, with a keenness of insight worthy of his genius and statesmanship perceived and proclaimed. 

President Trump makes a similar statement in viewing the close relationship between Christianity and America from its very foundations. President Trump’s address does not exlude, however, the anti-Christian spirit in the founding of these same United States, shown in the condemnation of Canadian Catholic culture contained in the Declaration of Independence:

1776 Condemned Catholic Culture by The Meaning of Catholic

…Yet God Brought Good out of this Evil Through Mary

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Nor does His Excellency admit that the errors of Russia have been swallowed by the United States, to such a degree that it could be said that on the ideological plane, America lost the cold war:

America Lost the Cold War: the Basic Hypothesis by The Meaning of Catholic

The First Fruits of Fatima You’ve Never Heard Of: the Saga of the Russian Catholic Church of the Byzantine Rite 1917-Present.

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Nevertheless even though President Trump does not exclude these things, neither does he exclude their opposite. Indeed, what is excluded in his address is what Vatican II called “that ominous doctrine which attempts to build a society with no regard whatever for religion, and which attacks and destroys the religious liberty of its citizens[.]”[1] It is what the president calls “a new set of menacing ideologies seeking once again to cast God out from our society.” For every believer, this is our common enemy. Although we can lament the lack of an ideal, we can also be grateful for the existence of this great good – the President, the Name of Jesus Christ, renewing the crusade against that fundamental error of Russia – Atheism.  

Thus I think this declaration is a very happy historical event where the most powerful man in the world invoked the Holy Name of the King of Kings over his nation. The Holy Name intrinsically sanctifies the public sphere. Therefore I rejoice at the union of the spiritual and temporal swords in this, and look forward to celebrating America 250 with all my friends and family, in just a few short weeks.  

VIVA CRISTO REY!

T. S. Flanders
Editor
Ss. Vitus, Modestus & Crescentia
Monday in the Octave of the Sacred Heart


[1] Lumen Gentium (1965), 36.

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