Jesus Take the Wheel
"Jesus Take the Wheel" is a catchphrase and image macro meme drawn from Carrie Underwood's chart-topping 2005 country single of the same name. Starting around 2009, internet users turned the song's central plea into comedy through rage comics and image macros where Jesus physically grabs a car's steering wheel, usually to absurd effect2. The phrase also works as general internet slang for surrendering control when a situation spirals out of anyone's hands3.
TL;DR
"Jesus Take the Wheel" is a catchphrase and image macro meme drawn from Carrie Underwood's chart-topping 2005 country single of the same name.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The phrase works in two common formats:
Image Macro / Rage Comic: A character faces a driving crisis, yells "Jesus take the wheel!", and Jesus shows up to literally take the wheel. The comedy typically comes from treating a spiritual metaphor as a physical request, with Jesus often failing at the task.
Reaction Catchphrase: Drop "Jesus take the wheel" as a comment or caption when sharing any chaotic or hopeless situation. It signals throwing your hands up and hoping someone, anyone, intervenes.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
"Jesus, Take the Wheel" was the first of Carrie Underwood's record-setting 15 number-one singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart.
The September 2013 Vine by Nick Pasquale produced one of the meme's biggest single viral moments, with its Reddit GIF conversion earning nearly 15,000 upvotes in a week.
The satirical "Jesus Take the Wheel Day" Facebook page asked Christians to literally drive hands-free as a test of faith.
The song's mastertone was certified Platinum in July 2008, making Underwood the first country artist with two songs at that digital milestone.
Frequently Asked Questions
References (4)
- 1Jesus Take the Wheel - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 2New Urbanist Memes for Transit-Oriented Teensencyclopedia
- 3Jesus Take the Wheel - Urban Dictionarydictionary
- 4Jesus, Take the Wheelencyclopedia