President of Iran ‘Condemns Insult' to Pope Leo
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian publicly condemned remarks and imagery shared by U.S. president Donald Trump that he described as offensive toward Pope Leo XIV, inserting Tehran into a rapidly escalating dispute between Trump and the head of the Catholic Church.
In a Monday X post, Pezeshkian said he was speaking "on behalf of the great nation of Iran" to denounce what he called an insult directed at the pontiff and a broader desecration of Christian belief. Referring to Jesus as a "prophet of peace and brotherhood," the Iranian president said such actions were "unacceptable to any free person."
The statement followed sharp criticism of Pope Leo by Trump, who has accused the pontiff of undermining U.S. policy amid the ongoing war with Iran. Pezeshkian's intervention adds an unusual interfaith and diplomatic dimension to an already volatile standoff involving global religious and political leaders.
Why It Matters
The comments mark a rare moment in which Iran's president publicly aligns himself with the defense of a Christian religious figure during a geopolitical conflict. While Tehran and the Vatican have no formal alliance, Pezeshkian's statement positions Iran as drawing a line between political disagreement and religious insult-an argument aimed at a global audience beyond the Middle East.
The episode also underscores how religion has become entangled in the rhetoric surrounding the Iran war. Pope Leo has repeatedly urged restraint, criticized threats against civilians, and warned against what he described as a "delusion of omnipotence" fueling the conflict. Those remarks drew unusually direct rebukes from Trump, who accused the pope of interfering in U.S. foreign policy and aligning with political opponents.
Pezeshkian's response highlights how the dispute has expanded beyond diplomacy and military strategy into questions of faith, symbolism, and moral authority. Inserting Iran into a debate involving the Vatican and Washington complicates efforts by international and religious actors to serve as neutral voices for de‑escalation.
What to Know
Pope Leo XIV, the first U.S.-born pontiff, has emerged as one of the most prominent religious critics of the conflict between the United States, Israel, and Iran. In recent addresses, he has condemned Trump's threats to destroy civilian infrastructure and warned that rhetoric promising the eradication of an "entire civilization" violates both moral and international norms.
Trump responded by launching personal attacks on the pope, calling him "weak on crime" and "terrible for foreign policy" in a series of social media posts. The president also suggested the Vatican was acting politically rather than spiritually, echoing long‑standing tensions between Trump and Catholic leadership that date back to previous papacies.
The dispute intensified amid a separate controversy involving religious imagery and language associated with Trump, which has drawn strong backlash from Christian leaders and even some conservative allies. On Sunday night, Trump shared an AI‑generated image portraying himself in a Jesus‑like role, appearing to heal a sick man while surrounded by religious and patriotic symbolism. The image circulated widely online and was condemned by critics as blasphemous, with several prominent Christian commentators calling it inappropriate or sacrilegious and warning that political leaders should not depict themselves as divine figures.
Some conservative figures described the image as crossing a theological red line, arguing that equating a political leader with Jesus Christ-central to Christian belief-was offensive regardless of intent. Others cited biblical warnings against mocking God or elevating oneself spiritually, framing the image as a misuse of religious symbolism rather than satire or political messaging.
Pezeshkian's reference to the "desecration of Jesus" appears to allude to that controversy, linking the insult he says was directed at Pope Leo to broader concerns over the treatment of Christian faith and doctrine. By invoking Jesus specifically, the Iranian president echoed language used by Christian critics of the image, positioning his condemnation as a defense of religious respect rather than a purely political rebuke.
Iran, where Jesus is recognized as a prophet in Islam, frequently emphasizes respect for religious figures across faiths as part of its international messaging. Pezeshkian's statement fits within that framework while also serving a diplomatic purpose: portraying Iran as aligned with moral restraint at a time when it faces military pressure and economic strain.
The Vatican has not issued a specific response to Pezeshkian's remarks. Catholic officials have instead focused on reiterating calls for peace, dialogue, and humanitarian protections as fighting and political tensions continue to mount.
What Happens Next
Pope Leo is expected to continue using upcoming religious addresses and international appearances to call for de‑escalation and negotiations, particularly as diplomatic channels between Washington and Tehran remain fragile. Vatican officials have signaled that appeals for peace will remain central to the pontiff's global outreach.
Pezeshkian's intervention suggests future statements from Iran may increasingly target moral and symbolic aspects of the conflict as well as military developments.
Newsweek's reporters and editors used Martyn, our Al assistant, to help produce this story. Learn more about Martyn.
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This story was originally published April 13, 2026 at 10:21 AM.