In mid-April 2026, a screenshot circulated online purportedly showing a Truth Social post by President Donald Trump, in which he claimed to have "access to information" and "Vatican files" that "could bring down the Papacy, the Vatican and the entire Catholic Church overnight."
Social media users posted examples of the screengrab on platforms like Bluesky and Threads (archived, archived), and Snopes readers emailed us to ask if the post was authentic. The full text of Trump's alleged post read:
As President of the United States, I have access to information that could bring down the Papacy, the Vatican and the entire Catholic Church overnight! These are called the Vatican files, which I won't release, out of respect for the BILLION catholics worldwide, but, the weak Pope Leo of Vatican would do well to remember who he has to answer to, if he continues to interfere in politics on behalf of the Terrorist Regime of Iran, the misinformation Pope spreads regarding the special combat operation is extremely dangerous! JESUS would have wanted PEACE THROUGH STRENGTH, just like I do! Iran will never have a nuclear weapon, and we will use our OVERWHELMING STRENGTH to make sure they never do! This the PATH TO PEACE! Thank you for your attention to this matter! -President DJT
The alleged post spread amid mounting perceived tensions between Washington and the Vatican, and speculation that comments Pope Leo XIV made earlier in April about peace through dialogue, not force, referred to the U.S. and Trump's war with Iran.
In short, there is no proof Trump ever posted to Truth Social the comments seen in the screenshot.
Proof post is fake
The fabricated post, dated April 16, 2026, was not visible on Trump's Truth social feed or on Trump's Truth, a website that archives all of Trump's Truth Social posts, on or around that date.
A
Additionally, National Catholic Reporter, a nonprofit Catholic-oriented news media source, published no articles about Trump making a threat to bring down the Catholic church. For example, no such comments appear in the outlet's April 17 and April 20 articles about Leo and Trump exchanging remarks throughout that month.
Further, the fake Trump Truth Social post does not match the typical appearance of a post on that platform.
For example, the fake screenshot is missing Trump's Truth+ Premium icon that follows his name in authentic posts. The fake post also features a timestamp that is too detailed or in the wrong location, depending on how the post is viewed. The fake post is too long to be fully visible without clicking a "show more" button, which changes the appearance of the icons at the bottom. Finally, the font does not match the one used in authentic Truth Social posts.
The screenshot of the fake post is to the left. The middle is a real post as viewed from Trump's Truth timeline. The right is the same post when viewed in full. The blue box highlights the difference in icons next to Trump's name, the pink box highlights the different styles of timestamps, the green box highlights the post running long without a "show more" button and the purple box shows the difference in the appearance of the icons at the bottom of the post. (Snopes illustration)
Real "Vatican files" do exist, but they are far different than those described in the fake post.
For example, the Vatican stores historical documents related to the papacy called the Vatican Apostolic Archive, formerly referred to as the "Vatican Secret Archive." The former name was based on the Latin word secretum, which can translate to "to separate," "to distinguish" or "to reserve." In fact, the archived documents are available to researchers and the archive is open to visitors.
Another "Vatican Files" is an evangelical project to "identify, unite, equip, and resource evangelical leaders to understand Roman Catholic theology and practice."
While open to the public, neither collection of files has brought down the entire Catholic church, as of yet.
