The creation and sale of this Bible version has drawn criticism from various quarters due to its incorporation of documents specific to a single country, and assertions it is an effort to profit from a religious text.
Baptist minister and
YouTube Bible reviewer Tim Wildsmith's review of the Trump Bible amassed over 500,000 views, as he called it "overpriced", "a money grab", and "a really cheap[ly made] Bible that did not cost them very much money to make." Wildsmith found sticky pages that ripped when he tried to separate these, while the
letter spacing was too tight to be legible. In June 2024, Oklahoma State
Superintendent of Schools Ryan Walters issued a memo announcing that all public schools in
Oklahoma would be required to teach the
Bible, including the
Ten Commandments, directing that "every teacher, every classroom in the state will have a Bible in the classroom and will be teaching from the Bible in the classroom." In September 2024, Walters opened bids to supply the
Oklahoma State Department of Education with 55,000 Bibles. The bid documents required that "Bibles
must be the King James Version; must contain the
Old and
New Testaments; must include copies of the Pledge of Allegiance, Declaration of Independence, U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights; and must be bound in leather or leather-like material." Under these conditions, the only eligible versions are Greenwood's Bible and another also endorsed by
Donald Trump Jr. The two versions are sold for $60 and $90 despite far cheaper or free versions of the Bible being readily accessible. Multiple state legislators and a state school board member criticized Walters' proposal on both legal and constitutional grounds. Former
Oklahoma Attorney General Drew Edmondson said that the request for proposals was not genuinely
competitive and thus might violate state law. The
Associated Press reported in October 2024 that nearly 120,000 copies of the Bible were printed in
Hangzhou, China, and shipped to the United States earlier in the year, at a cost of less than $3 per Bible.
CBS News reported that, along with Trump's other ventures during his campaign, the Bible raises potential
conflicts of interest as they could be considered a campaign contribution. ==Notes==