Trump’s ‘Shabbat 250’ proclamation divides America’s Jews ahead of National Mall prayer rally
Some are embracing the boost for Judaism's central practice. Others say it's an avatar of Christian nationalism. --
0 LEFT · 2 CENTER · 0 RIGHT · 9h ago
Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA) and Times of Israel frame the same story with noticeably different headline language.

IN 30 SECONDS
MAIN REPORTED CLAIM
WHAT CHANGED
The headlines are mostly aligned. The differences are small wording choices, not a major framing split.
Low scores are useful too: they show when coverage is broadly aligned instead of forcing a bias angle where there may not be one.
Some are embracing the boost for Judaism's central practice. Others say it's an avatar of Christian nationalism. --.
How this could be misread: Low Wording Gap does not mean the story is unimportant. It means the headlines mostly agree on the first impression.
SOURCE MAP CHANGES
May 15, 1:03 PM: Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA) joined the source map.
May 15, 4:38 PM: Times of Israel joined the source map.
Now: Wording Gap is 16/99 and story health is developing · 2 sources · 1 bucket.
WHAT EACH SIDE EMPHASIZES
Optics keeps watching for pickup.
Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA) · Center · News report
Optics keeps watching for pickup.
VISIBLE SOURCES
Some are embracing the boost for Judaism's central practice. Others say it's an avatar of Christian nationalism. --
Call marks first time a US president has urged marking of Shabbat; some Orthodox rabbis have embraced it, while those on Jewish left warn of blurring between religion and state