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Compare that to Biden’s own Easter messages from 2021 through 2024, which barely scraped the surface of Christian doctrine. Despite referencing “hope,” “renewal,” and even “sacrifice,” Biden never once used the word “sin” — a term central to understanding the entire purpose of Christ’s sacrifice. The omission is not only glaring but theologically significant.
It’s worth noting that Biden’s Easter remarks have grown shorter each year, becoming more generic and, critics argue, spiritually hollow. But it was his 2021 teleconference message that stood out — and not for the right reasons.
“Jill and I, we’re looking forward to our Easter celebration, where we get to — get to get together with our family,” Biden said. “And because we’ve had the great honor of being vaccinated, we may be able to get together with some of them this Easter.”
The message went on to promote vaccines, quoting a nurse calling them “shots of hope.” Religious or not, many Americans were left wondering: since when did a sacred Christian holiday become a platform for pharmaceutical cheerleading?
These kinds of empty platitudes are not just off-putting to believers — they reveal a deeper issue. While Trump spoke of mankind’s broken nature and need for redemption, Biden glossed over the reason Easter exists in the first place.
Liberalism tends to resist the idea of inherent sin. Instead, it clings to the belief that humanity is basically good — noble, even perfectible. This belief, in turn, justifies why so many on the Left are eager to impose authoritarian solutions. If they believe they’re morally right, why not force others to comply?
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Conservatives see things differently. They understand mankind as fallen, flawed, and in need of grace — not control. That perspective explains why conservatives embrace limited government, constitutional rights, and individual liberty: not because they think people are perfect, but because they know no one is.
In that light, Trump’s use of the word “sin” wasn’t just a nod to Christian doctrine — it was a bold, theological statement. It highlighted the ideological divide between a worldview that acknowledges human weakness and one that pretends it doesn’t exist.
And that one word — three letters long — tells us everything about the difference between these two men, their messages, and the moral compass that guides them.