Google Caught Flagging Jesus on the Cross as Inappropriate for Children for One Bad Reason

Photo by Pixabay via Pexels

Texas just forced Google's partner Roblox to pull a school shooting game with a satanic pentagram on the floor.

Google had no problem with that game running on its platform – but it did have a problem with something else.

A Christian kids app just learned what Google considers too dangerous for children to see.

Google Banning Christian Ads While Approving a School Shooting Simulator on Its Platform

TruPlay is a Christian gaming platform for children.

Its games carry titles like "King David's Battles" and "Chirp Song: Words of Praise."

There is no violence, no sexual content, and no objectionable material.

Last week, Google blocked TruPlay's app update from going live on the Play Store, flagging it as "inappropriate for children" under its policy against "violence, gore, or shocking content."

The offending image Google provided as evidence was a cartoon of Jesus Christ on the cross.

"So what they're saying is, they don't want children to see Jesus on the cross," TruPlay CEO Brent Dusing told Breitbart News.

Google only reversed course after a reporter called to ask why.

A Google spokesperson called the block an "error" and confirmed the appeal had been approved – the same day Breitbart contacted the company for comment.

That was the second rejection in two weeks. TruPlay's first appeal went unanswered entirely.

Big Tech Censorship of Christians Has Been Documented Since 2023

What happened last week didn't come out of nowhere.

Google has been blocking TruPlay's advertising since 2023 – dozens of rejected campaigns targeting parents and mobile game users, not religious audiences.

Google killed ads with phrases like "Turn Game Time Into God Time" and "Safe Bible Games for Kids" – campaigns the American Center for Law and Justice says were directed at general audiences interested in family entertainment and children's education, not audiences selected based on religious belief.

TruPlay stripped out the words "Christian" and "Bible." Google kept rejecting them anyway.

In January 2026, the ACLJ sent a five-page letter to House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan documenting the pattern and calling for a congressional investigation.

"TruPlay's ads do not target audiences based on religious belief," ACLJ Executive Director Jordan Sekulow wrote. "They advertise Christian gaming content to general audiences interested in family entertainment, children's education, and mobile gaming."

Congress has not responded.

Roblox Child Safety Crisis Ignored While Google Blocks Bible Games for Kids

While Google was killing ads for Christian children's content, Roblox was running freely on the same platform.

That matters – because Roblox is not safe for kids.

Five states have active lawsuits against Roblox over child safety failures – Florida, Texas, Kentucky, Louisiana, and California among them.

Hindenburg Research, a financial forensics firm, created minor-age accounts and explored what children could access on the platform.

Their conclusion: Roblox was "an X-rated pedophile hellscape, exposing children to grooming, pornography, violent content and extremely abusive speech."

A Roblox game modeled on a real school shooting – featuring satanic imagery and a pentagram on the floor – ran on the platform until Texas lawmakers forced its removal in April 2026.

"Google allowed that to be approved, but they won't allow us to show Jesus on the cross," Dusing said.

"These decisions aren't being made by a person on the phone," Google told Fox Business. "They're being made by automated systems."

An automated system that flags Jesus as dangerous – and waves through a school shooting simulator with satanic imagery.

Google AI Bias Against Christians Could Get Worse as Automated Systems Gain Power

Google's AI has flagged Christian content consistently since 2023 – and the company has never once offered a coherent explanation.

The University of Dallas, a Catholic university in Texas, ran into the same wall.

Google blocked its graduate program ads for using the words "Catholic faith" and "Christ," even when the ads contained no religious targeting whatsoever.

Dusing's warning is worth taking seriously.

"If you're willing to stop a kids' game," he said, "what's Google going to do in five years when Google's AI model is only more powerful and more sophisticated, and has more authority to make more decisions?"

Only 31 percent of American children believe in God today.

Two percent hold a Biblical worldview.

Google's automated systems decided a cartoon of Jesus on a cross was too dangerous for children to see – while the platform hosting school shooting simulators and satanic grooming cults kept its approved status.

Google knows exactly what it's doing.


Sources:

  • Alana Mastrangelo, "Google Blocked Christian 'TruPlay' App for 'Inappropriate' Imagery of Jesus Christ, then Backtracked When Breitbart Asked Why," Breitbart, May 13, 2026.
  • Landon Mion, "Christian kids app claims Google, TikTok blocked ads as Congress is pressed to act: 'It's devastating'," Fox Business, January 22, 2026.
  • "ACLJ Calls on Congress To Confront Google and TikTok's Systematic Censorship of Christian Content," American Center for Law and Justice, January 21, 2026.
  • Ian M. Giatti, "Satanic imagery featured in now-banned Roblox game inspired by Texas school shooting," Christian Post, April 22, 2026.

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

FBI Agents Walked Into CIA Headquarters and John Brennan Has Good Reason to Be Terrified

Next Article

Trump Just Found a Way to Compensate Every January 6 Patriot Biden Threw in Prison

Related Posts