Apparently so, at least according to her spokeswoman Stephanie Grisham, who confirmed that she is Catholic. The first lady shared her faith with the world while at the Vatican. She asked Pope Francis to bless a rosary for her upon meeting him at the Vatican.
But Mrs. Trump did more than show up for the papal audience. She spent time in prayer at the Vatican-affiliated Bambino Gesù (Baby Jesus) Hospital, and laid flowers at the feet of a statue of the Madonna and prayed in the hospital chapel. After her Papal audience, she tweeted ‘blessings to all’.
Melania is the first Catholic to live in the White House since John F. and Jackie Kennedy. Melania and her son Barron will move to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue over the summer.
It is not clear when Mrs. Trump became a Catholic. The president is a life-long Presbyterian, and they were married in a Florida Episcopal church.
Growing up as the daughter of a Communist Party member in rural Slovenia, her family maintained the outward appearances of being atheists, according to people in her childhood village of Sevnica.
Melania and her sister were not baptized and did not make their “First Holy Communion” with other children their age. It’s still not clear when Mrs. Trump was baptized into the Catholic faith.
The president and Mrs. Trump were in a reflective religious mood after their visit to Saudi Arabia. While in Jerusalem, Mr. Trump visited the famed Western Wall, slipping a written prayer between the centuries-old stones as custom permits. He ‘marveled at the monument to God’s presence and man’s perseverance,’ he said Tuesday in a speech at the Israel Museum.
‘I was humbled to place my hand upon the wall and to pray in that holy space for wisdom from God,’ Trump told an audience of Jewish officials.
“Even the Trumps wonder after…” See Revelation 13:3
Comments
Don Ludgate
Tuesday June 6th, 2017 at 06:34 PMAnd leadership in the S
D A church also has given a gold gift to the already fabulously wealthy Vatican
When will our leadership learn to acknowledge our Savior as the Supreme Lord of each of us as well as our church ? As a whole. Do we have to individually and collectively follow popular humans as tin gods like the Israelite of old testament times. ? Isn’the time to follow the example of Daniel and his three friends ? As Joshua 1 v. 9 says I for one will serve the Lord
.