Hating Charlie Kirk: Killing Reveals a Deep Divide

Hating Charlie Kirk:
Killing Reveals a Deep Divide

By Peter Larson
TE, Midwest Presbytery


Editors note: This is a revised version of the original article with the quotations removed. The original quotations were reported without attribution, which we believe honors confidentiality, but some have objected to using these quotations. To show respect for this opinion, we have revised the article. It was not our purpose to call anyone out or cause embarrassment, but simply to illustrate the great difference of opinion that exists in the EPC over the life and death of Charlie Kirk.  

The assassination of Charlie Kirk has revealed a deep divide among EPC pastors and two conflicting worldviews.

The contrast could not be more stark. In the wake of Kirk’s murder, some EPC pastors honored him as a Christian martyr and evangelist, while others branded him as a racist and Christian nationalist. The exchange on social media became so heated that one Facebook page shut down all further comments related to Kirk.

While there was general agreement that the killing was wrong and tragic, some EPC pastors were quick to disparage and discredit Kirk. Some claimed Kirk had harmed the gospel by blending his faith with Republican politics. Others branded Kirk as a racist, and accused him of being offensive, heartless, and dehumanizing in his words. Some even questioned his faith and salvation. For all of these reasons, Kirk did not deserve to be praised or honored, they claimed.

Responding to the attacks, some EPC pastors defended Kirk for his faith and commitment to the gospel. If Kirk spoke strong words, so did Calvin and Luther, responded one pastor. Another EPC pastor was disturbed that Kirk’s detractors seemed to focus so much on his politics and so little on his work as a Christian evangelist who led thousands of young people to saving faith in Jesus Christ.

Committing the ‘Unforgivable Sin’

As I read the anti-Kirk rhetoric, I began to wonder if these pastors knew anything about Charlie Kirk and his ministry. They cited no facts, evidence, quotes, or video clips to support their claims. Instead, they seemed to be attacking a straw man and caricature created by the liberal media.

How do you explain the contempt for Charlie Kirk? Very simply: Charlie Kirk committed the unforgivable sin of supporting Donald Trump. The fact that he proclaimed the gospel, advocated marriage and family, and defended biblical standards of gender and sexual morality made no difference. If you believe that Donald Trump is the anti-Christ and Republicans are the nexus of evil, then it becomes impossible to praise Charlie Kirk or speak a kind word about him. Of course, this is a now-familiar trope: “How could a Trump supporter possibly be a Christian?”

Some of the anti-Kirk posts contained dire warnings about Christian nationalism. Christians should not be involved in politics, or so we are told. And yet, in their disdain for Charlie Kirk these pastors reveal their own brand of Christian nationalism. Politics has become the idol they worship, to the point where it dominates their worldview. Hatred of Donald Trump is the lens through which they view everything. When their idol is threatened, they react hysterically.

Yes, we are citizens of heaven, and our primary allegiance belongs to Jesus and His Kingdom. And yet, we are also citizens of this world. As such, Christians should be engaged in civic life and the public square. In my personal library I have two lengthy volumes of sermons preached between 1730 and 1805 during the founding era of the American republic. In page after page, these preachers exhorted their congregations to engage in the political sphere. Were they misguided? The truth is Satan would like nothing better than for Christians to withdraw from politics and leave the world completely under his dominion.

For the critics of Charlie Kirk, the real problem was not that he engaged in politics, but that he was not on their side, the party that supports woke ideology, LGBTQ+, abortion, open borders, and DEI. It is a godless, immoral, and anti-biblical agenda. However, none of that mattered to his detractors. The fact that he supported Donald Trump was enough of a reason to demonize him. It explains why, within hours of his tragic death, they could not resist the impulse to vilify him.

Following the death of George Floyd five years ago, the Stated Clerk of the EPC released a lengthy statement declaring a day of lament, prayer, and fasting. When Charlie Kirk was gunned down, the Stated Clerk and Office of the General Assembly did not acknowledge his death or issue any statement whatsoever. The silence was deafening. 

I did not know Charlie Kirk personally or follow him closely. However, I admired his boldness. Most of us preach the gospel in safe places to a friendly audience, in church on Sunday morning. Charlie Kirk took it to college campuses where crowds were often hostile. As a Christian apologist, he was not afraid to confront the woke, leftist, atheistic mindset that pervades many of our modern universities.

And yet, he was not adversarial. He invited people who disagreed with him to come to the front of the line. He didn’t shame or shout them down; he listened to them. Most of all, he made them think — which is so sadly missing in academia today where students are so often brainwashed and indoctrinated. And he relentlessly proclaimed the gospel: that Jesus is Lord and Savior.

How many of us are as bold as Charlie Kirk? The disciples of Jesus were marked by their boldness, testifying fearlessly in the public square.

“… for God gave us a spirit not of fear but of power and love and self-control.” (2 Timothy 1:7).

“To that end, keep alert with all perseverance, making supplication for all the saints, and also for me, that words may be given to me in opening my mouth boldly to proclaim the mystery of the gospel, for which I am an ambassador in chains, that I may declare it boldly, as I ought to speak.” (Ephesians 6:18b-20).

It is this spirit of boldness that is missing in the church today. We are fearful of offending anyone, and eager to please the world and conform to its values. We call it meekness, but in truth it is cowardice. We think we can win the world to Christ by blending into the culture and being winsome and “missional.” However, this is a fallacy. I pray the death of Charlie Kirk will make us more bold in sharing our faith.

The death of Charlie Kirk has been called a watershed moment in our nation. Will it lead to spiritual revival, or perhaps a new era of political violence? What it means for the EPC is uncertain. It will be increasingly difficult to hold the EPC together when we hold such conflicting worldviews. Jesus calls us to be light in the darkness, but how is that possible when we cannot agree on what is darkness and what is light?

20 responses

  1. Joan Richwine Avatar
    Joan Richwine

    I am an older female member of a solid EPC congregation. Until three weeks ago, I had never heard of Charlie Kirk. While I deplore his brutal assassination, I have to wonder at the way Satan is using all of this to sow disunity and discord among us. I am in no position to judge Charlie Kirk’s heart. However, if he was the great Christian man his followers claim, he would probably be appalled at all the ways he is being venerated. Let’s keep our attention focused on Jesus Christ, the head of the church. While it is appropriate to honor people who die for the cause of Christ, I think its important to remember something John Newton wrote in his letter “Man in His Fallen Estate.” He reminds us there of the ” sorry state of our fallen condition, not merely before our conversion but after it, and not merely in the worst of people but in the very best.”

  2. Melissa Hodges Avatar
    Melissa Hodges

    Well said! Thank you for this thoughtful piece about what has surprisingly united and divided people along unexpected lines.

    1. KEVIN R MCDONALD Avatar
      KEVIN R MCDONALD

      Thank you Peter Larson TE for speaking the truth in love (Ephesians 4:15) in confronting the issues we are facing in the EPC.
      But can we bring the EPC together if half of the Pastors, Ruling Elders, and churches have such disdain for our current President and his Administration in the USA where we have been called to carry out the Great Commission (Matthew 28:18-20)? I Pray this can end in the EPC and that we can still recognize the difference between good and evil. If not we will implode as a denomination as we are already fracturing. Can we even in the EPC identify “Peacemakers” on the world scene as Jesus has called us to strive for in His Christian Counterculture in the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5:9). And can we remember the Apostle Paul’s instructions in Romans 13:1-7? I think our problems in the EPC run deeper than we think but Praying for renewal and revival to come to the church and in the USA.
      Kevin McDonald
      TE, Pastor Emeritus
      1 Corinthians 15:58

  3. Chris Cardiff Avatar
    Chris Cardiff

    “Politics has become the idol they worship, to the point where it dominates their worldview; it is the lens through which they view everything.” This stinging indictment is at the heart of this insightful essay.

    What would Charlie Kirk do in this situation? With the love of Jesus Christ, he would reach across this yawning chasm of political disagreement. Using scripture, logic, and facts he would boldly and respectfully engage with his detractors.

    Can we do less?

    Charlie Kirk’s assassination has sparked a Christian revival in America and around the world. As a denomination, we need to be part of this revival. We need to be reaching out and welcoming to our churches the generation Charlie Kirk brought to Christ. As Pastor Larson says, we need to be as bold as Charlie in preaching the gospel in the public square. And we need to respectfully confront our brethren within the EPC with the truth about Charlie Kirk and dispel Satan’s lies about this Christian martyr.

    Blessings,
    Chris Cardiff,
    RE, Faith Church Kingstowne

  4. Larry Hopkins Avatar
    Larry Hopkins

    I think Peter Larson has written one of the best articles I have read concerning the Charlie Kirk controversy. As far as the confidentiality of the private page for EPC TE’s, I would expect that God is privy to that page!

  5. Robert Blevins Avatar
    Robert Blevins

    Due to retirement and relocation, I am 4 years new to the EPC. As I sit here today, I am trying to discern if Satan is only on the prowl in our denomination or does he have us in a firm grip.

  6. Nate Atwood Avatar
    Nate Atwood

    Peter, thanks for weighing in. I agree with your points regarding worldview and division in the EPC. Our adults kids loved him and his message, and they are strong believers attending Biblical churches. I loved what one person said at Charlie Kirk’s memorial service, “By inviting others to row in the stream of liberty he believed they would, perhaps, meet the Author of liberty”. I too have read extensively the sermons of the Founding Era (I even lectured at Oxford in England on this). From what I can tell, Charlie Kirk would have been very much at home with them … and they with him.

  7. Kevin McDonald Avatar
    Kevin McDonald

    I heard Charlie Kirk in person when he came to Omaha, Nebraska twice before I retired in January of 2025 invited by Ruling Elders and members of the EPC Church I was serving. Charlie was loved by students and adults alike in both of my encounters. I witnessed him in action with respect for how he treated people and saw that he had dignity and respect for all. I would characterize him as an authentic Christian and gifted apologist. I heard him on a university campus and in a large church sanctuary in Omaha , Nebraska. Both of the venues had standing room only crowds. Also, Charlie Kirk was a very gifted communicator who had compassion for all with a gift for communicating the Great Commission (Matthew 28:18-20) of Jesus and a vision and heart for reaching the lost. Anyone who is characterizing Charlie Kirk as a Christian Nationalist is misguided not knowing that Christian Nationalism is being used by the left theologically and politically to disrupt the Christian Church in America. From the perspective of many who are labeling people like Charlie Kirk as Christian Nationalist, to include those of us in the EPC, it seems that they are trying to disrupt the peace, purity, and unity of the Christ’s Church especially in here in America. They have lost their way. From my experiences with those who have, I think they should not be in any leadership position or holding any of the church offices within the EPC. We are called to serve and be representatives, ambassadors, for Christ and His Kingdom as Charlie Kirk was to the very end of his life even as a Christian martyr to the glory of God!
    Sincerely in Christ,
    Rev. Dr. Kevin McDonald
    1 Corinthians 15:58
    Pastor Emeritus Teaching Elder
    Covenant Presbyterian Church
    Omaha, Nebraska

  8. John Paul Harmon Avatar

    It troubles me that Teaching Elders feel a need to interact privately, separating their thoughts from Ruling Elders. Shall we RE’s do the same? I think that question answers itself. The silence of the EPC church on Charlie’s assassination is scandalous.

    Transparency is fundamental to a Presbyterian polity. RE’s might point out, for instance, that the concern about Christian Nationalism should be dwarfed by a concern for the rise in calls for Sharia Law and Islamic control (a faith certainly not lacking in the spirit of boldness that is missing in the church today, a faith that abhors meekness). We need to learn to be more bold in sharing our faith, like Crusaders.

    1. Nate Atwood Avatar

      Ruling elders, we desperately need you … your Biblical, common sense conservatism in the face of the woke madness. We have 2-1 parity (ruling elders to teaching elders) in order that, from time to time, the RE’s can save us TE’s from ourselves. John, thank-you for weighing in.

  9. David Earl Hardwick Avatar
    David Earl Hardwick

    Religion inevitably is in conflict with Christianity. Truth can always stand up to reexamination, it’s only error that refuses to be questioned. It’s so ironic to me that if we question a non-biblical perspective, our character is attacked.

  10. G Carl Moore Avatar
    G Carl Moore

    You would have a point if Peter brought up names. But he didn’t. You’re point is pointless.

    1. Heidi Ann Hammons Avatar

      That comment seems to be the pot calling the kettle black.

    2. Heidi Ann Hammons Avatar

      The pot, calling the kettle black.

  11. John Crimmins Avatar
    John Crimmins

    Thank you for a thoughtful article and a good tribute to Charlie Kirk. This except from your article says everything one needs to know about trends in the EPC.
    “Following the death of George Floyd five years ago, the Stated Clerk of the EPC released a lengthy statement declaring a day of lament, prayer, and fasting. When Charlie Kirk was gunned down, the Stated Clerk and Office of the General Assembly did not acknowledge his death or issue any statement whatsoever. The silence was deafening.”
    I presume the silence continues and will remain so. Woke ideology is alive and well in our poor denomination.

  12. Glen Massey Avatar
    Glen Massey

    Peter, I want to raise a concern in a spirit of collegiality. The EPC Pastors’ Facebook Group is a closed forum with a stated purpose: “for pastors who are serving in the Evangelical Presbyterian Church (EPC)… networking, exchanging best practices, discussing theology and culture, and supporting one another in gospel ministry.”

    If you are drawing from public Facebook profiles, that’s one thing. But if material from our private group is being quoted here, that troubles me. The integrity of that space matters . . . it’s where EPC pastors share candidly and work out difficult ministry scenarios in real time. If comments made in that setting become content here, it risks eroding the safety and trust that make the group valuable. Perhaps you can give me reassurance that nothing from the private group is being used in this way?

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