Welcome to Theology.
Speaker BThrowdown.
Speaker BWe, the Christian podcast community of podcasters, gather to discuss our theological differences with love and charity.
Speaker AThis is a ministry of striving for eternity.
Speaker BWell, welcome to another edition of Theology Throwdown.
Speaker BThis is where the different podcasters from the Christian podcast community, we get together, take a topic once a month, hash it up, see where we agree, disagree ultimately, so we could display how we could disagree with love and charity.
Speaker BTonight's topic is going to be about Charlie Kirk, which I know no one has heard any podcast whatsoever on this subject.
Speaker BYeah, there's been a lot of discussion and maybe there's things that we, we're going to hash through that you've already heard, maybe not.
Speaker BBut we will discuss things like whether he is, should be considered a Christian martyr or not.
Speaker BWhether, you know, like how, how should churches respond to the fact that he, you know, his death deal with the memorial and the reaction.
Speaker BAnd, and I think that it's, I think might be more helpful now that we're, well, you know, beyond a month from the memorial, we get to see there was lots of hope, I think, early on with it.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BBut how should we be viewing it as believers?
Speaker BThere's been lots of reaction, both good and bad, and we're going to discuss that tonight or today to whenever you're listening on this episode.
Speaker BBut so that you will get to hear the voices.
Speaker BMy name is Andrew Rapaport.
Speaker BI am the host of Andrew Rapaport's Rap Report and Apologetics Live.
Speaker BThose are the two podcasts that I do, other than this one that I host.
Speaker BAnd I want you to get to hear everyone else's voices so you, when they speak, you know who they are.
Speaker BSo we will start with Eve Franklin, if you wouldn't mind introducing yourself and your podcast.
Speaker CHi, yes, I'm Eve Franklin and I'm the co host of the podcast Are you just watching in which we discuss, well, movies, entertainment from a Christian worldview.
Speaker CAnd we try to keep it positive, try not to review stuff we don't like.
Speaker CIt happens occasionally.
Speaker CBut we are hoping to release our episode on the new movie Tron Aries here in the next few days.
Speaker CSo that is coming up.
Speaker CHope you can join us for that.
Speaker BMr. Spencer, you are next.
Speaker AThank you again for having me, Andrew.
Speaker AAnd yeah, my name is Spencer Tosi.
Speaker AI'm the host of the Religionless Christianity podcast.
Speaker AWe sort of discuss everything.
Speaker AI try to keep my episodes fairly recent so we just look at news from around the country, around the world.
Speaker AIf it has anything to do with the Christian Faith.
Speaker AWe try to discuss it, whether it's, you know, talking about why it looks like the PCA took a payoff to go soft on Jesus calling.
Speaker AWe talk about the faith of Cardi B.
Speaker AAnd Kendrick Lamar, you know, all sorts of things.
Speaker AChurch history, other faiths, whatever it happens to be.
Speaker AWe try to wrestle with it every week and glad to be here.
Speaker BDo you discuss the faith of Phil Sessa?
Speaker BOh, yeah.
Speaker BOh, hey, Phil, you're here.
Speaker BDidn't notice that.
Speaker BPhil, why don't you introduce yourself in your podcast?
Speaker DThat was a short joke.
Speaker DYou couldn't see me, right?
Speaker DThat's okay.
Speaker DAndrew and I have a long history of coming at each other.
Speaker BI wasn't making a short joke at all.
Speaker BNot this time.
Speaker DComing soon.
Speaker DSo, Phil Sessa, host of the podcast Stop and Think about it, where we try to look at everything that's happening through a biblical lens, whether we're just discussing a theological topic or something happened in society, in the media and politics, everything through a biblical lens and get people to actually stop and think about it and not just be a cultural parrot.
Speaker BWell, while you're stopping and thinking about it, maybe Melissa, maybe you can do some equipping.
Speaker ESure, gladly.
Speaker EMy name is Melissa Lex.
Speaker EI do go by the nickname Melba Toast.
Speaker EIf you're a friend or family or an acquaintance, feel free to call me that.
Speaker EBut my podcast is called Thoroughly Equipped.
Speaker EAnd basically I assess women's ministry or popular female leaders in women's women's ministry by looking at what they teach.
Speaker EI look at some of their books, a lot of their conference speaking engagements, and basically just what they teach.
Speaker EAnd then we compare it to scripture and try to exalt Christ and the gospel as much as we can in.
Speaker EIn kind of critiquing women's ministry and wanting to just glorify God through biblical womanhood in a way.
Speaker BSo with this topic tonight, what I want to start with is, you know, the first question we had is, is, was Charlie Kirk a Christian martyr?
Speaker BSo, Phil, I'm going to throw this out to you.
Speaker BTo start with is, you know, let's.
Speaker BLet's try to define what is a Christian martyr.
Speaker CRight?
Speaker BThat'd be good to do.
Speaker BBefore we say he, whether he was or not, what would you think is a good definition for a Christian martyr?
Speaker DSo a Christian martyr is someone who dies for their faith in Christ, for representing Christ, for preaching Christ, for having a biblical worldview.
Speaker DThey're not dying because they're a bad employee for the way that they dress necessarily just for their political views.
Speaker DBut it has to be rooted and grounded in the person and the work of Jesus Christ.
Speaker DSo we look throughout church history and just even with the, the disciples, they were considered martyrs because they were preaching Christ, teaching Christ and they died because they were identified with Christ.
Speaker DAnd so that's why they were considered martyrs.
Speaker DFrom the Greek word witness.
Speaker BYeah, pill.
Speaker BThat's a good point.
Speaker BThe pill don't always think about.
Speaker BThat's where we get the idea of witness was from martyr.
Speaker BBut you know, you brought up a really good point that I, I, it's not really to the topic, but I want to highlight it because there are many people professing Christians who say they're being persecuted when really they're just getting the just desserts of being a jerk.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BI mean, yes, I know someone who came to church at prayer meeting and wanted prayer because he was persecuted at work.
Speaker BHe got fired.
Speaker BAnd he was fired because six hours out of the eight hour day he was evangelizing.
Speaker BAnd so it was like you didn't get fired because you were evangelizing, you got fired because that's all you were doing, you weren't doing your job.
Speaker BIs, that's not persecution.
Speaker BBut the, you know, I, I heard something very interesting I guess with, with Phil, your next mayor unfortunately.
Speaker BBut, but he, he referred to, and I'm trying to remember who it was.
Speaker BOne of the terrorists in at 9 11.
Speaker BHe referred to him as a martyr.
Speaker BAnd there was, there were people that said well he wasn't a martyr.
Speaker BWhich got me thinking, well then what, how are they defining a martyr?
Speaker BBecause I like you would, I would think your definition was good.
Speaker BBut see the, the, the terrorists that died in, you know, in those planes, I would say they were martyrs for their faith.
Speaker BThey weren't Christian martyrs.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BBut they did die for their belief.
Speaker BNow in their case, they took their own lives.
Speaker BSo that maybe that may make a difference.
Speaker ERight.
Speaker BBut I think, I think they were referring to some of the people that, you know, were, had been killed after, in the aftermath of it.
Speaker BBut I, for, I can't remember who he was referring to.
Speaker BBut that aside.
Speaker BSo with that definition, anyone disagree with that definition or have something they want to add to it?
Speaker DOkay, then let's, as far as applying it to the man that flew into the Trade Centers as well.
Speaker BWell, no, I'm just saying as far as your definition of a Christian martyr.
Speaker DGotcha.
Speaker BSo, so with that, you know, let's discuss whether Charlie Kirk could be considered a Christian martyr because there were a, there's, so let me Give the, the gamut of what I've heard.
Speaker BI've heard.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BNow I've heard he's, he's, he's a Christian martyr because he was a Christian who was murdered.
Speaker ERight.
Speaker BI've heard that.
Speaker BWell, he was a Christian martyr because he was a, an outspoken Christian and he was shot for his beliefs in Christianity.
Speaker BI've heard that he's not a Christian martyr because he was political and he, he was shot for his political views.
Speaker BAnd then I've heard he wasn't a Christian martyr because he's not a Christian.
Speaker BThat's the gamut of what I have heard.
Speaker BNot sure where you guys are at, but I'll, I'll start with you, Spencer, just to ask, do you think that, as we had the definition from field, would you think that Charlie Kirk fits the definition of a Christian martyr?
Speaker BWhat would be your.
Speaker AYeah, I, I certainly think he fits the definition of a Christian martyr.
Speaker AYou know, I guess people can say what they want about his faith, but it seemed authentic to me.
Speaker AAnd, you know, I think the thing that would make him a Christian martyrs because he was in the political realm, but everything he was arguing was built on his biblical worldview in a Christian foundation.
Speaker AHe wasn't arguing for conservative politics because he thought it made his bank account better.
Speaker AHe, you know, he was arguing against abortion because it's murder, because you're created in the image of God.
Speaker AYou're created by God, you know, all these different things.
Speaker AEvery issue he was arguing was from a Christian foundation, and he wasn't outspoken Christian.
Speaker AEven in the days that he got shot, he was arguing and defending the faith.
Speaker AAnd, you know, I don't think you have to necessarily be, you know, preaching from a pulpit or, you know, getting burned at the stake for translating the, the scriptures to be considered a martyr.
Speaker ASo I think Charlie definitely fits that moniker.
Speaker BMelissa, go ahead.
Speaker DI just wanted to.
Speaker DSo you, you said you have these, these four things that you heard.
Speaker BI, I mean, there could be more.
Speaker DYeah, that's just what I heard, of course.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker DAnd I, I think the one that we could X out automatically is the he was not a Christian.
Speaker DI think we could just like, toss that one out.
Speaker DI think he absolutely was a Christian.
Speaker DHe absolutely is a brother in Christ.
Speaker DAnd so I can't see how anyone would come to the conclusion that he just wasn't a Christian.
Speaker BWell, so, so I'll give you the pushback then, and let's have fun.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BSo there's some who think that he was a closet Roman Catholic and so.
Speaker BBecause when he was shot, he did have a necklace of a St. Christopher.
Speaker BI think it was St. Christopher necklace.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd I guess his wife was seen with rosaries.
Speaker BAnd so they were saying, like, oh, they're really.
Speaker BThey're really Catholics, but they were pretending to be evangelical because that's the, you know, that was going to get a larger base, which I kind of go.
Speaker BReally?
Speaker BBecause there's a lot more Catholics than.
Speaker ABut, but, yeah.
Speaker AI don't know if anybody's seen Catholics on social media.
Speaker AThey were really shy about beating their chest about their Catholic faith.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI mean, that one.
Speaker BWhen you see.
Speaker BLook, okay, Turning Point USA on that.
Speaker DAndrew, on that point.
Speaker DWho did he ask to mentor him?
Speaker DSomebody from Answers in Genesis, like Trent Horn or somebody like Frank Turek, who is not my favorite apologist.
Speaker DI mean, he does have some good things because he's.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker DI mean, he's an evidential guy and I'm a presuppositional guy.
Speaker DBut he didn't ask Trent Horn.
Speaker DHe did ask a Christian.
Speaker BIs Trent Horn with answers in Genesis.
Speaker BNo, sorry.
Speaker BI'm asking.
Speaker BLet me.
Speaker DI'm sorry.
Speaker ACatholic answers.
Speaker BYeah, I was like.
Speaker BI'm like, sorry, did I.
Speaker BThat's a.
Speaker BThat's a big.
Speaker DCancel that.
Speaker BSo, yeah, Catholic answers would make more sense.
Speaker DI'm sorry.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BBut yeah, I mean, I think I.
Speaker BAnd, you know, as I.
Speaker BTo that point, someone asked me, how do I.
Speaker BHow do I answer the fact that he.
Speaker BHe had a St. Joseph, you know, necklace on?
Speaker BAnd I said, the same reason that I wear high.
Speaker BIt was given to me in Maritza by my parents.
Speaker BIt has, it has sentimental value to me.
Speaker DOkay.
Speaker BPeople don't know I'm wearing it because it's underneath my shirt, but it's sentimental to me.
Speaker DIt.
Speaker BIt doesn't mean that I'm practicing Judaism.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo there, there could be something behind.
Speaker BWe have to know why before we assume, you know, so.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BBut there is.
Speaker BI mean, I'm just saying it to say there are people who are making that claim.
Speaker BAnd so I, I just gave the categories I heard, so I want to.
Speaker DSee where you got.
Speaker BYou guys could fit in a fifth or sixth category if you want.
Speaker BMelissa, what do, what do you think?
Speaker BDo you think that the assassination of Charlie Kirk fits in the definition?
Speaker EYes, absolutely, I do.
Speaker EI think he was a martyr.
Speaker EAnd I think I would say we need to stand firm in claiming that because, like you, I've seen a lot of people saying that he's not a martyr and then placing these Certain stipulations on what would a martyr would be like the fact that he was rich means then he couldn't be a martyr or the fact that he wasn't like led to his death he couldn't be a martyr or that he wasn't told to renounce his faith, then he can't be a martyr.
Speaker EOr at that point he wasn't exactly declaring the gospel at that specific time.
Speaker ESo I think we have to be, it's good that we have our definition and we need to stand clear on it and just be willing to say yeah, he was a martyr and we're not going to turn around and say that he wasn't.
Speaker EHe was a Christian martyr who's who was died.
Speaker EWho died because yeah politically he, that's what he was on campus to try and bring political reform.
Speaker EBut like Spencer said, it was based off of his faith and he was very, very clear that so clear on it.
Speaker EYou just can't avoid that that he was a Christian first and foremost and then he died because he developed his worldview and his arguments based off of Scripture.
Speaker BAnd last I'm going to ask even since you're last I'm going to add a little more to it and just say okay, was he a Christian martyr?
Speaker BAnd then how would you respond to the people who would say but he was.
Speaker BIf, if you say yes, I should say if you think he was a Christian martyr, how would, how do you think we should respond to people who say yeah, but he was, he wasn't shot for his Christian beliefs.
Speaker BHe's shot for his political beliefs.
Speaker CI do believe he was a Christian martyr and I believe my response has been and would be that he, he was actually shot because they could not shut him up.
Speaker CThey, he, they could not debate him.
Speaker CThey could not win the argument with him because whenever somebody would come up to the table and talk to him, he would almost always bring things back to Scripture.
Speaker CAnd he, he had a very strong belief that everything would come back to a biblical worldview.
Speaker CAnd it really surprised me how many times I watch videos he would start out with a very political argument but he would almost always even though he wouldn't base a lot of like he would, he would tell pro abortionist that he wasn't using a religious argument to support pro life.
Speaker CBut at the end he would always say but I believe that you know, humanity, human life is sacred because it was made in the image of God.
Speaker CSo he would always bring it back to a Christian worldview at some point in and people couldn't win the argument with him.
Speaker CAnd so I think that's why they took him out as he was influencing so many people in, in establishing a Christian worldview in one of the most secular places in our country.
Speaker CAnd they could, and they couldn't win the argument anymore.
Speaker CAnd I think that because of that, certain that, you know, the person who shot him, at least alleged, who has been arrested for shooting him, was doing it because of the gay debate, the gay trans debate.
Speaker CAnd so that they could not win that on from a Christian worldview.
Speaker CYou know, there's so many arguments against it from a biblical worldview.
Speaker CAnd I.
Speaker CThere's no way they could win that argument with him.
Speaker CSo it may have seemed on the out outside like it was a political thing that got him assassinated, but his stance on those issues were inarguable because they were based on Scripture.
Speaker DYeah, Andrew, if I could just jump in and Eve, that was great.
Speaker DAnd I couldn't agree with you more on everything you just said.
Speaker DEspecially they couldn't, they couldn't step up to the table of debate and defeat him in that way.
Speaker DSo, and since they can't argue, let's, let's just shut his mouth.
Speaker DSo he can't, he can't debate with anybody.
Speaker DBut I think an important thing to bring to light is, are the, the issues that he was debating, would we say that those are political issues or moral issues that our Bible speaks about?
Speaker CRight.
Speaker DAnd so.
Speaker BGood point.
Speaker DThat is something that I think that a lot of believers are not considering.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker DSo homosexuality, we say, well, that's a political issue.
Speaker DWell, when I look in the Bible, it's a moral issue.
Speaker DSo that's not, it's not like on the political side of the table just because it's discussed in politics.
Speaker DThat is still in our realm as Christians because it's a moral issue and therefore it's a theological issue issue.
Speaker DHomosexuality, again, it's a moral issue.
Speaker DIt's a theological issue which our Bible speaks about.
Speaker DAnd these things are, are decided upon by the God that we serve.
Speaker DAnd so it's easy to throw off and say, well, these are political things.
Speaker DWell, actually they're moral and theological things.
Speaker DAnd so the person who shot him shot him because of his moral and theological beliefs, not simply because while he had a different political stance.
Speaker DAnd so I think we need to, as Christians think in terms of theological and moral.
Speaker DAnd I think basically, Eve, you were saying that, and I think everybody basically here is saying that, but I just wanted to say it maybe more directly.
Speaker BNo, that's a Good point.
Speaker BHey, Phil, just so you know, Ken Ham just texted me.
Speaker BYou're banned from the ark encounter for confusing Catholic answers with answers in Genesis.
Speaker BHe just said he's gonna throw you off the ark.
Speaker BHe's, he's gonna.
Speaker BHey, Phil, come on, I want to show you the roof of the ark.
Speaker BOops, did you fall?
Speaker DThere's the highest point of the ark.
Speaker DI want you to look down.
Speaker BLet me give you a little pat on the back, a little push.
Speaker DAll right, so we have a plank now.
Speaker AWhat's your name of it?
Speaker BAll right, so you know, now that you know, we're, we're over a month removed from it.
Speaker BBut at the time, there were, there were a lot of people that were saying that churches, like, if their pastor didn't mention Charlie Kirk on Sunday, they would, you know, they should go find another church.
Speaker BSo I want to talk about how the leadership and churches should, should, how we think they should have or did deal with them.
Speaker BThe, the death of Charlie Kirk and the, the backdrop to this really would be for consistency sake, and this is the way I view it, consistency sake.
Speaker BWhere did this come from that you must mention Charlie Kirk?
Speaker BWell, it came from George Floyd where there were people saying, if your church didn't mention George Floyd, you need to leave that church.
Speaker BWe're hearing the same exact language with Charlie Kirk.
Speaker BSo I don't know from your churches if any of your churches did or did not mention Charlie Kirk.
Speaker BI'm not going to ask that and don't know if you want anyone wants to share that or not, but how should.
Speaker BSo, Eve, I'll start with you.
Speaker BI mean, how do you think the churches should, should have responded to, to his assassination?
Speaker BDid they have to mention it?
Speaker BShould we have leave the church if they didn' mention it?
Speaker BWhat, what are your thoughts?
Speaker CWell, I wouldn't leave a church over something like that.
Speaker CAnd it's a good thing I wouldn't because my church didn't really deal with it much.
Speaker CBut I, I do believe that churches should be sensitive to those that were perhaps seeking because of what happened to Charlie Kirk.
Speaker CI don't know if it was necessarily you needed to hold a vigil or a prayer meeting or anything, but be sensitive that there would be perhaps some unbelievers coming off the street who were impacted by what happened to Charlie Kirk and were wanting to walk into a church and needed to hear the gospel.
Speaker CAnd I, I think that it, in, in that sense, it may have been, it maybe look a little bad for a church for a pastor to Speak openly against Charlie Kirk from the pulpit.
Speaker CAt most, they could just not say anything at all.
Speaker CBut, you know, there might.
Speaker CThey never know who might have walked in off the street, who came because of Charlie Kirk's testimony.
Speaker CAnd we're.
Speaker CWe're needing to hear something, you know, hear something positive about Christians and Christ and might get turned off otherwise.
Speaker CBut, yeah, I guess that would be my perspective on it.
Speaker BLet me ask this.
Speaker BIs it.
Speaker BWould anyone disagree with Eve?
Speaker BDoes anyone think that.
Speaker BThat the churches should have mentioned it?
Speaker BOr is there anyone that says the churches must avoid it?
Speaker BEither.
Speaker BEither extreme.
Speaker AI will say the churches should have mentioned it.
Speaker AYou know, so I think they should have mentioned it, and I think they should continue to mention it.
Speaker AYou know, I'm a. I'm very Reformed, hopefully reforming further each and every day.
Speaker AAnd my church is very reformed.
Speaker AAnd if there's one complaint, we're all sinners, right?
Speaker AWe all have ways to go.
Speaker ABut the Reformed church, even you, Andrew, even you, brother, sanctified as anyone.
Speaker ABut, you know, one of the errors that I think that I've seen, and it's not a bad error, it's a good side to error on.
Speaker FBut.
Speaker ABut it's this reluctance to drift even one iota away from the text.
Speaker ANever leave the text.
Speaker AThere's safety in the text, which is where we should be.
Speaker ABut there's moments and opportunities like a Charlie Kirk assassination that we would recognize as a Christian martyr, that the Bible speaks on this.
Speaker AThe Bible speaks on Christian martyrdom.
Speaker AIt speaks on dying for your faith and being courageous in the face of difficulty.
Speaker AAnd like Eve said, there might have been people coming to seek in that moment.
Speaker AI mean, we know a lot of people have turned to faith or turned back to faith in light of what happened to Charlie Kirk and even in light of what Charlie Kirk was doing.
Speaker ASo to miss that opportunity, it's like when Roe vs. Wade was overturned and churches just stayed mum on it.
Speaker ALike, are you kidding me?
Speaker ALike, how do you miss that opportunity?
Speaker ASo I think they should have spoke on it.
Speaker AIt didn't have to be, you know, a Charlie Kirk sermon from the pulpit, but address something that everybody in your congregation is aware of and is dealing with in their own life to some degree, especially the younger generation.
Speaker AI mean, Charlie Kirk was as impactful as anybody in American society for young Christians looking for answers.
Speaker ASo to miss that is just a terrible, terrible tragedy.
Speaker AAnd then I'll say the second thing.
Speaker AEven if your church did happen to mention Charlie, I saw a couple videos of churches playing Charlie Kirk videos.
Speaker ADuring their Sunday sermons.
Speaker AAnd I'll just say from the ones that I saw doing it, I'm glad they did it.
Speaker ABecause most of the time the gospel message Charlie presented in those videos was better than what they were going to hear from the pulpit at those churches.
Speaker AYou know, so if you're the kind of church that's going to play a Charlie Kirk montage on a Sunday morning, that's probably better for your congregation at the end of the day.
Speaker ASo I think they should have and if they didn't, they missed an opportunity, but the opportunity is not gone.
Speaker ACapitalize on this because this is what Christianity is missing in our country.
Speaker AYou know, this seeker sensitive movement that makes it seem like all Jesus exists for is to supercharge your life, get you a promotion at work, make more friends, make more money.
Speaker AAnd we have this opportunity to refocus that.
Speaker AThis is what the Christian life is about.
Speaker AIt's about the next life and sacrificing it all for Christ here.
Speaker AEven if you should die as a 31 year old, immensely successful man, you lay it all down for Christ and that's what ultimately matters.
Speaker ASo they should capitalize on it.
Speaker BOkay, so let me, so I'll, I don't know, maybe pushback would be too hard of a word, but I'll give you my view.
Speaker BWell, let me give you, let me give you my struggle with it and see what you guys think and see who wants to may push back, but when you say must, that's where I struggle.
Speaker BSo as I said in light, I want to be consistent with things when, when we had George Floyd and people were demanding that churches mention George Floyd.
Speaker BMy argument against that was the fact that the church worship service is the worship of God, the not man, not what happens.
Speaker BYou know, it's not about.
Speaker BThis is why I don't like singing Happy Birthday to people in a, in a church service and things like that.
Speaker BI, I, I don't even like taking individual prayer requests for, within the congregation during church services because I think it's for the worship of God.
Speaker BRight?
Speaker BWe're together, everything should be focused on him.
Speaker BAnd so I was more in line when after he first passed to say, hey, it shouldn't be mentioned.
Speaker BConsistent with how we view how I viewed George Floyd.
Speaker BHowever, Spencer, to the point that you made that I was hearing that argument, well, if he's a Christian martyr, shouldn't we as Christians mention him?
Speaker BBecause this is in a line with what we would see as giving God glory.
Speaker BThe, if it's done where the focus is on the fact that he was martyred for his faith, Isn't it then appropriate?
Speaker BAnd so I. I kind of wavered to start to say, well, like, I was.
Speaker BI wasn't saying any church was wrong for mentioning it, and I wasn't saying any.
Speaker BThat churches must mention it.
Speaker BSo I kind of.
Speaker BI kind of wavered.
Speaker BAnd part of it, you know, Spencer, on.
Speaker BLike, a little bit of what you had said is the fact that he was a Christian martyr.
Speaker BTherefore, it is something for Christians to say, hey, this is what we're.
Speaker BThis is the battle we're facing when we go out, and we got to give God glory in everything that we do.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BSo I. I struggled with it a bit because maybe because I was outspoken against the mentioning of George Floyd.
Speaker BAnd yet here, I think, as you just mentioned, there is a.
Speaker BThere is a bit of a difference.
Speaker BSo I'll just open up to see if anyone has.
Speaker BWants to push back on me on that.
Speaker BI'm sure Phil does, because Phil always likes to push back on me.
Speaker DI mean, perhaps it's preferential, but I mean, if we're.
Speaker DIf we're thinking in the sense of.
Speaker DSo some churches, I usually have our church focus on International Day of Prayer for the Persecuted Church.
Speaker DAnd not that we should only think about our persecuted brothers and sisters once a year and then forget about them for the rest of the year.
Speaker DWe shouldn't do that.
Speaker DBut what would we do if.
Speaker COne.
Speaker DOf our pastors was shot?
Speaker DI mean, we would stay silent about that.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker DIf one of our pastors was murdered, we would certainly speak about them in.
Speaker DI mean, in the congregation.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker DSo good point.
Speaker DHere is, if we.
Speaker DHere is a brother in Christ who is.
Speaker DWho is well known by many people in our congregations who is martyred, and here is a family who now is without a.
Speaker DWell, Erica, without a husband and his children without a father.
Speaker DAnd not that you have to speak, but I think it's appropriate when you're praying to perhaps include praying for his family, praying for his friends, praying for the ministry that he had and for those that are.
Speaker DThat were touched, that were close to him and the mission that he had.
Speaker DSo I think there's an appropriateness in the timing that is there for.
Speaker DFor churches, unlike George Floyd.
Speaker DYes.
Speaker DThere was a death of a person created in the image of God.
Speaker DSo in that sense, we shouldn't be happy.
Speaker DBut George Floyd was a criminal as well.
Speaker DCharlie Kirk was not a criminal.
Speaker DHe was.
Speaker DHe was assassinated and martyred by a criminal.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker DSo, I mean, that you can't even Put those two guys in the same camp.
Speaker BNo, George, George Floyd was killed by a criminal himself.
Speaker DHe was killed by a criminal?
Speaker DYes, he's the one.
Speaker BHe's the one that took the fentanyl.
Speaker BSo he killed himself.
Speaker BSo you know, but, but you know, and you bring up a good point because that's how my pastor dealt with it.
Speaker BMy pastor every week will pray for the country, pray for the leaders.
Speaker BAnd so he included just in prayer for Charlie Kirk with that.
Speaker BAnd I, I thought that was tastefully done.
Speaker BHe didn't make a sermon out of it.
Speaker BHe didn't mention it the rest of the service.
Speaker BSo let's, let's deal with the memorial.
Speaker BThat.
Speaker BThat was something.
Speaker BOh, go ahead.
Speaker BSorry, I didn't see a raised hand.
Speaker EI couldn't see the raised hands.
Speaker EI don't know where they're at.
Speaker EAnyway, I was thinking along the lines, we don't.
Speaker EWe have a couple epistle.
Speaker BYou just go to the reactions and.
Speaker EOkay, wait, I do.
Speaker EI'll look at it later.
Speaker EBut I was just thinking, don't we.
Speaker EOne of the things about having.
Speaker EBringing up a Christian martyr during a Christian during a service, I'm.
Speaker EI'm kind of thinking, well, we have a couple epistles that were written because of persecution of the church.
Speaker EAnd the way the.
Speaker EThese epistles were written were to encourage the church during time of deep persecution.
Speaker ESo there's.
Speaker EIt's like a open door.
Speaker EI think that like Spencer was mentioning that if you didn't bring to light the current situation, our cultural situation at this moment, and that we have literally almost crossed a line in American history pretty much because of his martyrdom, his assassination is an open door to really talk about God, God's work through the persecuted church and just, you know, all the other stuff that we have through those epistles that were written to encourage the Christian church.
Speaker EAnd in the same way, I think a faithful, wise way, a pastor, those who did and those who again I won't say should, but I think it would say would be wise in bringing to light just the.
Speaker EThe truth of God's word.
Speaker EEven from maybe the epistles that showed.
Speaker EI'm trying to explain here, like, well, it's just an open door.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BLike to use a passage of scripture talking about persecution and using this in it.
Speaker BBecause like, I know a lot of people after 911 use passive.
Speaker BI mean there were a lot of people preaching about the Tower of Salam that fell, you know, after 9 11.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo like there are times where people may take events, cultural events and you.
Speaker BBecause everyone's, it's on everyone's mind to, to shift and start talking about that and, and address that.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker EWell, and, and I'm also thinking it connects, if, if you use this opportunity, it connects us to the historical, to our historical roots, to those who have died and were persecuted in the past.
Speaker EI think it's just very wise to bring that into the situation.
Speaker BIt's a great.
Speaker EThat's really important to the discussion.
Speaker BYeah, that's a good point.
Speaker BSo let's, let's talk about the memorial Evil, and I'll start with you, but I'll just give my point.
Speaker BSo I was on One Little Candle, which is one of the other podcasts on the Christian podcast community with Rebecca.
Speaker BI actually did that one in person because I had the privilege of preaching at her church.
Speaker BAnd so we got, I got there early so that we could record together.
Speaker BAnd it was interesting because there were two of the, of the people that she, she wasn't thrilled with.
Speaker BMaybe if she was here, I would let her say what her thoughts were.
Speaker BBut it was, and I forget it was Steve, I forget his last name now, but it was, it was Steve something and Trump.
Speaker BAnd because they were, those two were outside of the way the rest of the talk seemed to go, they were very political.
Speaker BThey were about fighting.
Speaker BAnd so, you know, Trump saying he doesn't know that he wants to forgive.
Speaker BHe said Charlie would, you know, Charlie looking down, disagreeing with him, but he just doesn't know he could do it and do it what, you know, Erica did.
Speaker BSo I'm just going to say my point, and then I'm going to kick it over to Eve.
Speaker BI actually was very surprised by the memorial service because those two, the reason they stood out, I think, to Rebecca was those two were the political ones where all the others were about Christ.
Speaker BAnd I really expected it to be mostly political with a little bit of a few strong Christians speaking out.
Speaker BBut you, you, you even had Roman Catholics and, and like, you had Don Trump Jr. You had J.D.
Speaker Bvance, you know, guys like this, I mean, Marco Rubio, I'm not sure if he's a Christian or not, but guys who, I wouldn't have thought give biblical messages.
Speaker BAnd I kind of said this on a couple of different podcasts about this just so folks understand, most of these people are not writing their own speeches.
Speaker BOkay.
Speaker BThey have speechwriters.
Speaker BAnd if you don't know how a speechwriter works, basically, when, if you're going to have to have a speechwriter.
Speaker BSo Phil is going to be my speechwriter no, let me think better of that.
Speaker BSo Spencer's going to be my speechwriter because Phil's going to throw some, some things in there purposely to, you know.
Speaker DYou don't want Bronx Bronxian in there, I guess.
Speaker DHow you doing.
Speaker ECouple?
Speaker DForget about it.
Speaker BSo but if I, if I was going to have Phil write my A speech, the thing Phil's going to say is, well, what is it you want said?
Speaker BBecause that's the job of the speechwriter.
Speaker BIt's not to just write a speech.
Speaker BIt has to be the speech that the person wants delivered.
Speaker BAnd so that told me that for especially a lot of the politicians, they must have said to the speechwriter it's got to be about Christ because that's what Charlie would have wanted.
Speaker BSo I'm reading into that because of the fact there was such strong evangelical gospel presentations, even from those who don't know the gospel, that that must have come through to the speech writers as well as their own hearts.
Speaker BBut, and so I was pleasantly surprised by that.
Speaker BBut there's been a lot of reaction.
Speaker BWe've been removed from it.
Speaker BI, I had hopes that maybe this would be a great revival.
Speaker BSo I'm going to throw this over to you, even say, you know, I, I'm going to assume we all watch the memorial, but what were your reactions to memorial and, and a follow up I'm gonna have to for you guys is, do you think that there was any lasting results?
Speaker BDid, do we see a, a new, another revival from this?
Speaker BLike was thought.
Speaker CWell, I did see the entire thing.
Speaker CI did come in, I guess they had like a worship service that was going on while people filed into the stadium because there were people lined up I guess since like 4 in the morning.
Speaker CAnd they had.
Speaker CEvery one of them had to go through security in order to get into the stadium.
Speaker CSo that took them a long time to get everybody in.
Speaker CAnd so, you know, they had several praise bands and singing and I didn't care for all the music, but I thought it was appropriate for a memorial service.
Speaker CAnd I skipped through a lot of it because it, a lot of that happened while I was still at church myself.
Speaker CAnd so I just kind of tuned in, reversed back to see where it started and then, and then went live and just kind of had it on the background until the actual service started.
Speaker CBut I was rather impressed.
Speaker CPretty much even the people like Tulsi Gabbard, who is not a Christian, managed to find something somewhat religious to say when they were up there.
Speaker CAnd I think that that rather reflected a lot on who Charlie was to each of them, that he presented Christ to them in such a way that they knew that that should be foremost.
Speaker CAnd I mean, a memorial service is typically about the person who died.
Speaker CAnd so when I hear people say, well, it was all about him, and I'm like, well, it was supposed to be all about him.
Speaker CHe was the one who died.
Speaker BActually, Actually, that was.
Speaker BThat was one of the surprises, though, Eve.
Speaker AIt was.
Speaker BWasn't really about him for much of it.
Speaker BIt was really about Christ.
Speaker BYeah, that's what surprised me.
Speaker CI think it was a lot of the more diehard Christians that say, you know, that it was.
Speaker CIt was too much about him.
Speaker CBut I was like, I thought that even the, the fact that people come up and will talk about a person and it at, you know, at their death, and if the, even the ones who are not Christians themselves see him as representing Christ and that, that should tell you where he was publicly, that in.
Speaker CEven privately, that everybody who came up and spoke about him spoke about his faith, even if they didn't understand it themselves.
Speaker CAnd I think even, even President Trump even mentioned that in a way, because I don't know that he was necessary.
Speaker CA lot of people say he was mocking the fact that Erica had forgiven the shooter, but I think he wasn't mocking.
Speaker CI think he was maybe doing a little bit of self examination, realizing that he wasn't there, that that was not something he himself could do.
Speaker CAnd which is, you know, hearing President Trump actually reflect on something that he lacks is pretty interesting in and of itself.
Speaker CBut all this to say the memorial did present Christ over and over again.
Speaker CBut the first speaker was Charlie Kirk's pastor, and he came out and he's.
Speaker CHe said that Erica had asked him to be the first one to speak so that, that it wouldn't.
Speaker CThat.
Speaker CSo that it would be sure that the Gospel was presented even before anyone else spoke.
Speaker CAnd I really appreciated that.
Speaker CI appreciated that all of the speakers mentioned Christ and Charlie's faith.
Speaker CI, I thought it was.
Speaker CI thought it was a really good memorial.
Speaker CAnd I.
Speaker CFor those who only have watched snippets taken out of context, I think they've really missed out if they haven't actually sat through the whole thing.
Speaker CWhether it has a lasting impact.
Speaker CI think on some people it has.
Speaker CAnd I think that.
Speaker CI think there are a lot of.
Speaker CI see some.
Speaker CI, I follow some accounts on Instagram.
Speaker CThere's one particular.
Speaker CI won't mention her name, but she is a.
Speaker CShe's gay, she's lesbian, and she has Spoken.
Speaker BNo, she doesn't.
Speaker BShe just practices that.
Speaker CWell, she.
Speaker CI don't know that she practices it.
Speaker CI think that's how she identifies herself.
Speaker CAnd she has rediscovered her faith after Charlie Kirk's assassination, and she has spoken at one of his memorials.
Speaker CShe was actually at the memorial.
Speaker CShe was one of the people in the center that has had been invited specifically as press, and she was.
Speaker CShe has said.
Speaker CAnd she's defended him multiple times, even though.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd she's conservative, but she's spoken out about her faith.
Speaker CI thought it was very interesting that she.
Speaker CShe had something to say about a church that I guess they were doing a memorial in Tennessee and it was the.
Speaker CIt was a TPSU TP USA event, and they were going to have it at a church, but because they had invited people to speak who were gay, the church refused to.
Speaker CTo let them have it, so they had to move the venue.
Speaker CAnd she was a little upset about that.
Speaker CShe.
Speaker CShe was like, didn't Jesus, you know, have.
Speaker CHave meals with sinners and all that kind of stuff?
Speaker CSo.
Speaker CBut anyway, I think that there have been a lot of people who are influencers, and I think a lot of young people in colleges have been directly impacted by what happened to Charlie Kirk.
Speaker CI think it's emboldened a lot of Christians who would normally be very quiet in their faith, and I think that can only be good because if people are a lot more.
Speaker CInstead, I think it actually was the opposite.
Speaker CI think they tried to shut him up.
Speaker CAnd what they did was they emboldened a lot of Christians in our culture who didn't think that they had the voice to speak up.
Speaker CAnd now instead of being afraid to speak up, they're actually more emboldened to speak up.
Speaker CAnd that can only be a good thing in the long run, you know, that you're willing to share your faith and be public about it.
Speaker CIt may not be that Charlie Kirk's professions in his videos, which are going to last forever.
Speaker CWell, at least as long as there's video, may not have a direct impact on people, but his death has emboldened Christians to be able to be more open about their faith instead of the opposite.
Speaker BOkay, so you.
Speaker BYou brought something up that really.
Speaker BThis wasn't in the list of questions.
Speaker BSo I'm just going to throw it out and see who.
Speaker BWho may want to respond to this then, because we're talking about, you know, you mentioned about Trump.
Speaker BYou know, I don't know if any of you feel this or not, but I think that Charlie Kirk's death has, has had an impact on Trump even more so I think than maybe even him being shot himself.
Speaker BBecause I mean if we think back to 2016, 2015, 16, he was like saying he has nothing to repent of, he's going to heaven.
Speaker BEven after being shot, he, he started talking more spiritual, but he was still saying that he was going to heaven even after, you know, like he was even saying, you know, with, with the peace deals he's doing, he deserves heaven.
Speaker BAnd now if you, you're hearing him talk about him, maybe not sure that he like saying he, he's not sure he's going to make it to heaven.
Speaker BAnd I don't know about you guys, I was like, wow, it's, it's like there's a, a change.
Speaker BLike, you know, I kind of joke that maybe he stopped getting his spiritual advice from Paula and, and now is getting it from Pete.
Speaker BYou know, you're getting it from Peter Heste instead of Paula White because that now maybe he's getting the gospel.
Speaker BBut I mean, I don't know how much that might be due to Charlie's death.
Speaker BThe people who are being more outspoken, even those around him maybe.
Speaker BBut I mean, what do you guys think about that?
Speaker BIs it, I mean, could that be a long lasting thing if like a president, United States gets saved?
Speaker AThat'd be neat.
Speaker BThat'd be good.
Speaker BI mean not saying that we haven't had ones that were, but I don't know we had any that get saved while in the White House.
Speaker BBut what do you guys think?
Speaker BI mean, as far as the memorial reactions to it, any long lasting effects of it?
Speaker DI think if Trump got saved, we see the tallest skyscraper church in the, in the world.
Speaker DTrump church.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker DI thought the memorial service was really amazing.
Speaker DI mean it was very God glorifying.
Speaker DI mean even if speech writers.
Speaker AYou.
Speaker DKnow, put together other, the speeches that other people were writing, it was all still so God glorified at the end of the day.
Speaker DI mean those were the words that were spoken, you know, like when the scriptures, when the disciples were getting upset because there were people preaching who were not part of, you know, the group of the disciples, you know, the sectarian issue.
Speaker DJesus said, well, you know, like they're preaching the correct message, they're just not with us.
Speaker DYou know, we have a lot of people preaching the wrong message.
Speaker DAt least the right message went out.
Speaker DYou know, they were Armenians there.
Speaker DI don't know how many of them were Calvinists, but I mean it was very good.
Speaker DI, I really enjoyed it.
Speaker DAnd not that it was.
Speaker DI'm saying that for entertaining purposes, but, I mean, the gospel was clear.
Speaker DIt was direct, and it was packaged in the midst of his life.
Speaker DI think it was.
Speaker CWas.
Speaker DIt was very wisely done.
Speaker DIt's very tastefully done that his life, his legacy, was honored in the.
Speaker DIn light of the one he lived to honor the Lord Jesus, because it was the Lord Jesus that gave Charlie's life meaning.
Speaker DIt was the Lord Jesus that caused Charlie to.
Speaker DTo go out and put himself out there and.
Speaker DAnd try to bring logic and morality and theology onto the forefront and to say, listen, if.
Speaker DIf you have a better theological idea than me, then bring it to the table.
Speaker DAnd I mean, I've never seen such a huge memorial service like that.
Speaker DI mean.
Speaker BYou know, to.
Speaker DTo quote that great theologian Donald Trump.
Speaker DI mean, it was huge, but it was God glorifying, and I mean, you could watch that over again, and you're gonna get the gospel, I mean, all around.
Speaker BSpencer, what do you.
Speaker BWhat are your thoughts?
Speaker AWell, I would just say to your second question there, that if Donald Trump got saved in the White House, I think that would have immense impact on the country.
Speaker AMaybe we'll talk about that in the Christian nationalism piece if we get there.
Speaker ABut.
Speaker ASo I think that would be great.
Speaker AI think anybody that was upset about Donald Trump being there, I mean, understand, at least as far as we can understand today, he's not saved, so why would we expect him to say something, you know, in light or in the line of someone that is saved?
Speaker ASo I think that would be great.
Speaker ABut to the memorial, I thought it was absolutely fantastic.
Speaker AI loved it for many of the reasons that everybody here has been saying.
Speaker AMaybe someone can check the stats.
Speaker ABut from what I heard, there was over a hundred million people watching that around the world, so it might have been the greatest gospel proclamation in the history of the world.
Speaker BI thought I heard a billion watched it.
Speaker BI think, I think they said that there was a hundred thousand streams that day, but it has been watched afterwards.
Speaker A100 million streams that day.
Speaker B100 million streams.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BSo I think, I think that.
Speaker BI think.
Speaker BAnd I could be wrong.
Speaker AI.
Speaker BYou know, you might be right.
Speaker BPhil probably could go look this up, but I think someone said that there were like a billion views.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo even better.
Speaker AI mean, this is the greatest gospel proclamation in the history of the world in one day or in, you know, one short time period.
Speaker ASo to that, yeah, Peter thought he.
Speaker BDid well with 3,000 getting saved at one time, like preaching to 3,000.
Speaker ASo, I mean, I Thought it was amazing.
Speaker AAnd it wasn't the Catholic gospel.
Speaker AAnd they weren't speaking about a generic God.
Speaker AThey were speaking about Jesus Christ.
Speaker AIt was a Christian gospel.
Speaker AI think maybe my favorite speech of the entire event was Tucker Carlson, because he got up and he called America to repentance, which was incredible to hear.
Speaker AAnd then Erica Kirk, you know, offering forgiveness for the killer was amazing.
Speaker ABut she even went, not further, but she also just how awesome it was.
Speaker AShe talked about proper male and female biblical roles.
Speaker AI was like, what am I watching?
Speaker AThis is a great.
Speaker ALike, most churches won't touch that topic.
Speaker ASo I thought it was amazing.
Speaker ALike you said, there were Catholics, there are Armenians, but it wasn't an Armenian gospel.
Speaker AIt wasn't a Catholic message.
Speaker AIt was a message of Christ.
Speaker AIt was a gospel message.
Speaker AIt reached potentially billions of people around the world, and it was awesome.
Speaker AYeah, there was a couple of, you know, speeches.
Speaker AI mean, I didn't even watch the Donald Trump speech because I knew when he came up after Erica Kirk, I was like, this is going to be an absolute dud compared to what she just did.
Speaker ASo I think it was great.
Speaker AI loved almost all of it.
Speaker AI mean, I think when I got done watching, I talked with Nikki about this, because there was a stretch from like, really Tucker Carlson to Erica Kirk where it was just like one of our national leaders, like Tulsi Gabbard, Marco Rubio, J.D.
Speaker Avance.
Speaker AAnd it was like the.
Speaker AI mean, even RFK Jr. Got up there, like, these are the most powerful people in our country.
Speaker AAnd one after another, they got up and proclaimed Jesus Christ.
Speaker AAnd part of me was wondering if.
Speaker ABecause I think Marco Rubio's Catholic.
Speaker ABut I bet you there's been a piece of those men for a decade or more that have wanted to share their faith, but they felt they weren't able to, you know, the, the politics weren't right or they wouldn't be.
Speaker ABe rewarded for it.
Speaker AAnd in that moment, because of Charlie Kirk's courageousness or courageousness, and it's like they just let their hair down.
Speaker AThey just let their faith out, no restraint.
Speaker AAnd I thought it was just amazing to hear just one after another in that line.
Speaker AIt was just.
Speaker AIt was something special.
Speaker BI thought, well, that's what J.D.
Speaker Bsaid, right?
Speaker BHe said that it emboldened him.
Speaker BHe.
Speaker BHe.
Speaker BHe was.
Speaker BHe had a strong faith, even though it's Catholic.
Speaker BBut he said, you know, it really, his.
Speaker BCharlie Kirk's behavior, you know, like him speaking out, emboldened him to say, you know what?
Speaker BI should be speaking out of my faith.
Speaker BSo, I mean, anyone else want to talk about the reaction from the memorial?
Speaker BWhat we think of it's the impact, any lasting impact that might have had.
Speaker AI'll just offer up real quick on that lasting impact.
Speaker AI'm sorry, I do think it'll have lasting impact, but not necessarily because of the memorial.
Speaker AI think Charlie Kirk, his life and his ministry is going to have a lasting impact.
Speaker AAnd I think, I think Eve mentioned it, that he's even more impactful now because even people who were unaware of Charlie Kirk or listened to him on a nominal basis.
Speaker ABasis.
Speaker AI can just speak to my own family.
Speaker AI didn't even know my children knew who Charlie Kirk was.
Speaker ABut my 17 year old sons, they came home that day and they were talking about it.
Speaker AAnd for probably two weeks straight afterwards, there was a Charlie Kirk video on our TV every day that they were watching.
Speaker ATheir friends were talking about it at church.
Speaker ASo I think Charlie Kirk's life ministry and his message will have a lasting impact.
Speaker AAnd it was only accelerated because of his death and the memorial service that reached the world.
Speaker DAgreed.
Speaker DWell said.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker DAnd so in my public school, I mean, teenagers were talking to me about it.
Speaker DI work in a predominantly black school, maybe 85% black, 15% Latino.
Speaker DI mean, a lot of kids were talking about it.
Speaker BAnd what, what race are those people, by the way?
Speaker DWell, you have to watch them run.
Speaker BThey're human.
Speaker DThe human race, human race.
Speaker DAnd I mean, a lot of the kids had listened to Charlie Kirk and they were like, yeah, people say he was a racist, but you know, I, I didn't think he was a racist.
Speaker DI thought, I thought he made a lot of sense.
Speaker DYou know, Now I had one person who worked in the school that I had texted and I texted that Ray Comfort had done something on Charlie Kirk.
Speaker DAnd because they were going to have on their podcast.
Speaker DAnd the response was, well, you know, he spoke against black people and women of color and I really, I feel bad about his family, but I really don't want to hear anything about him.
Speaker DAnd I was thinking, man, how sad, because this person as well identifies as a believer, you know, but a lot of the students were very open to, to dialogue about it.
Speaker DAnd a lot of them start the.
Speaker AConversation, hey, I'll just mention here, because I'm a, I'm in the military, but I'm a junior ROTC instructor at an inner city high school.
Speaker APredominantly Hispanic Hispanic, very impoverished school.
Speaker AAnd one of the classes we had shortly after his assassination, we were just sitting around or in a circle Asking kids, you know, if you could meet anyone famous to have lunch with, who would you want to have lunch with?
Speaker AAnd probably out of the 80 kids we saw, probably five to six of them said Charlie Kirk, which was pretty shocking.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker AAnd they were all talking about Charlie Kirk the days after he was killed.
Speaker ASo, I mean, even in the inner city, Hispanic, New Mexican culture, Charlie Kirk had an impact.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker BInteresting.
Speaker BSo let's get into, you know, last, the, the last theology throwdown we did.
Speaker BWe talked about Christian nationalism, some stuff with Doug Wilson since he had done.
Speaker BWe, you know, our last episode with his, his interview.
Speaker BAnd so, you know, let, let's talk about the Christian nationalism aspect.
Speaker BThere were, there are people who believe that Charlie Kirk was a Christian nationalist.
Speaker BNow I think we even did this, mentioned this in the last episode is that the problem is what's the, what is the proper definition of a Christian nationalist?
Speaker BThat's the problem.
Speaker BYou can go back and listen to our last episode where we talk about that.
Speaker BBut it is a thing where I, I said, then I'll say, now I don't like the term Christian nationalist because it's a term that the left came up with.
Speaker BThey came up with it, you know, for the purpose of, you know, saying all Christians are trying to do insurrection.
Speaker BAnd so I, I just don't think it helpful to, to feed them with that.
Speaker BThat's my view.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BSo the, but there is a thing where, because he spoke on political things, people just assume he wanted to make a, create a Christian nation, not just a conservative nation, not just a, you know, a moral nation, but he was specifically wanted to see a Christian nation.
Speaker BNow I'm using those two words separately.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BHe wants to see a nation that was made up of Christians.
Speaker BAnd so I, I do, I don't want to rehash everything we did last episode, but when we talk about Charlie Kirk in light of being a Christian nationalist, is there anyone.
Speaker BAnd I just don't know where you guys are at, so I'll just, I'll just ask, is there anyone here who thinks he was a Christian nationalist?
Speaker BAnd if so, why.
Speaker BAnd then is there anyone here who thinks he was not a Christian nationalist?
Speaker BAnd if so, why?
Speaker BI know, I know my view.
Speaker BBut Spencer, what are your thoughts?
Speaker AI do believe he was a Christian nationalist.
Speaker AAgain, maybe not by the left's definition, which is interesting.
Speaker AIt used to be white Christian nationalist.
Speaker AThey got that part pretty quickly.
Speaker ABut, you know, I'm a Christian nationalist.
Speaker AI love God and I love this country, and I think this country is run better when we're run by biblical morality, if that's, and I, you know, we have Christian people who love and fear God.
Speaker AAnd in fact, that's the only way this country can truly be free.
Speaker AI mean, go live in atheistic North Korea and see how free you are.
Speaker AOr Islamic like Iran, go see how free you are.
Speaker ASo I do believe he was, but I think he was a true Christian nationalist.
Speaker AAgain, someone who loved God.
Speaker AHe had a biblical worldview.
Speaker AHe desired to see godly men and women in leadership roles, not to, you know, establish a theocracy, but to establish this country in a way that it doesn't actually just, it's not abhorrent to God on every front like it currently, currently is.
Speaker ASo I think he was, and I don't think we should be ashamed of that.
Speaker BAll right, let me, let me give a new voice for the audience to hear.
Speaker BA.m. brewster just got came in.
Speaker BSo I, so you guys hear his voice and know his name, his podcast.
Speaker BAaron, if you wouldn't mind just quickly introducing yourself your podcast and then the question is to you is, do you, do you think that Charlie Kirk was a Christian nationalist?
Speaker BIf so, why would he, what would you base it on?
Speaker FSo my name is Aaron Brewster and I have two podcasts on the Christian podcast community.
Speaker FI have Truth Love Parent and I have the Celebration of God.
Speaker FAnd Truth Love Parent is one that's still putting out new episodes, but Celebration of God is still super relevant every single year.
Speaker FYou guys will check out both of those.
Speaker FI think I'm going to have a difficult time answering this only because as talking with lots of different Christian nationalists, I think they all defined it differently.
Speaker FSo, you know, I've heard some people who would not accept Charlie Kirk into their camp, but I, not considering myself a Christian nationalist by most definitions I've heard, would consider him to be because I think he was more so than I am.
Speaker FRight.
Speaker FAnd then at the same time, I, I agree 100 with what the last speaker said.
Speaker DSpencer, to the degree that, you know.
Speaker FI, yeah, Spencer, I, I, I do love my country.
Speaker FIt can only ever glorify God.
Speaker FIt'll only ever thrive as it submits to him.
Speaker ERight?
Speaker FAs at least is doing the job that God created it to do, which is punishing evil and rewarding good.
Speaker FSo to that degree, if that's the definition of Christian nationalists, I guess I am too.
Speaker FAnd Charlie would be as well.
Speaker FBut I think that the vast majority of people out there with blogs and with podcasts and with voices claiming to be Christian nationalists, they look at It a little bit differently and I think that Charlie potentially looked at it differently than I do.
Speaker FI cannot say that definitively though, not having heard all of this content and whatnot.
Speaker FI just get that impression from some of the things I've said.
Speaker FSo I guess I would say that some areas where I might disagree with Charlie is the fact that there are certain things in the scriptures that God demands that I don't believe the government has the right to or should demand.
Speaker FIn fact, I think that when the government starts demanding it, we actually end up where we are today as a country.
Speaker FIf you start legislating for sinful, self worshiping country promoting reasons, certain things of God like the church you go to and things like that, then you end up creating a lifeless, soulless, self focused religion based behavior in a country.
Speaker FAnd that's.
Speaker FI mean yes, we like to think that a bunch of people murdering other people for their own glory is bad, right?
Speaker FBut honestly a bunch of people going to church for their own glory is just as bad in God's eyes and ends up with people in hell.
Speaker ESo.
Speaker FSo I do want a country where we are safe.
Speaker FI do want a country where we are free to worship the Lord as he would have us.
Speaker FBut I think that there are definitely lines that can be crossed that aren't as beneficial as a lot of Christian nationalists think they are.
Speaker BAll right, Eve, any thoughts that you might have on this, on him being a Christian nationalist?
Speaker CWell, he actually answered that question.
Speaker CI think somebody asked him point blank if he was a Christian nationalist and he said, I, I'm a patriot, I love my country.
Speaker CAnd that way I'm a nationalist and I am a Christian, I, I represent Christ and.
Speaker CBut I am not.
Speaker CHe says, I don't necessarily.
Speaker CIn that vein, I would consider myself a Christian nationalist.
Speaker CBut he doesn't necessarily hold to the camp.
Speaker CAnd I think one of the reasons why he gets consistently tied with them is that he had kind of a big tent in which he collected friends under.
Speaker CAnd I don't think Charlie ever turned anybody away.
Speaker CI think if somebody came and talked to him and did so civilly, he would spend time, you know, talking to them, he would publicly be friends with them and, and he would not turn his back on anybody.
Speaker CAnd because of that I think he would be seen publicly with people that then people would associate with him.
Speaker CWell, he was seen with this person, so that makes him part of this camp and he was seen with this person and he said nice things about this person, so that makes him part of that camp.
Speaker CAnd I think it was just an aspect of who he was as a person that he just, he, if he would make friends out of anybody, regardless.
Speaker CI've seen some young influencers who are, would not put themselves forward as being Christian who considered Charlie to be a very close friend and have been publicly mourning him.
Speaker CAnd if you associated with everybody who considered him a friend, then he was gay, he was a nationalist.
Speaker CHe was, you know, it's just like throw it all out there because there, there wasn't anybody he wouldn't be a friend with.
Speaker CAnd so I think that that's how he gets tied in with some of these movements.
Speaker CAnd I don't know, I think to me, I, I think that there can be some problems with publicly associating with everybody, but at the same time, Jesus managed to do it.
Speaker CHe always called people to repentance.
Speaker CAnd we don't know, we don't know how those friendships went.
Speaker CYou know, when he was friends with people who needed the Lord, you know, how privately, how much time did he spend, you know, trying to draw them to Christ.
Speaker CAnd so, you know, only God knows what was actually in his heart.
Speaker CBut I don't think he was a Christian nationalist.
Speaker BYeah, I, I just, me personally, I mean, he went to a Calvary chapel so that, you know, like for people that were trying to say he was trying to bring in the kingdom, like with a post millennial thinking, I don't think he would have had that from a Calvary Chapel.
Speaker BBut it doesn't mean that just because he went to a Calvary chapel, he agreed with all their theology.
Speaker BI mean, you know, one of our other podcasters, Matt Slick from Matt Slick Live, he, he would be a Presbyterian and he attends Calvary Chapel, you know, you know, used to for many, many years.
Speaker BAnd he's a hardcore Calvinist and his pastor was hardcore anti Calvinist.
Speaker BSo, you know, just because where he goes to church doesn't dictate what he believes.
Speaker BYou know, it may give us some insight.
Speaker BBut I think Eve you, you know, actually referring to what he actually said on it, well, that's kind of like cheating.
Speaker BSo what do we think about though, you know, his, his methods.
Speaker BYou know, I think it was Phil you mentioned, Ray Comfort was invited out to TPC TP USA event afterwards.
Speaker BAnd if, if anyone watched that, you know, you could go, go watch that on Living Waters.
Speaker EYou.
Speaker BRay got up, EZ got up, Mark Spence got up, and then Oscar got up.
Speaker BAnd I actually personally thought Oscar did really well because he did have someone that really, you heard him emphasize with and sympathize with them, with real compassion for them in what they had gone through.
Speaker BAnd it was, you know, I think for the people who came for a TP USA event though, what they got was a Living Waters event, Open air evangelism.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BThey're different.
Speaker BI think that Charlie Kirk's method was open form debate.
Speaker BYou know, it's kind of like what I do on Apologetics Live where anyone can come in and ask any question.
Speaker BWell, anyone could come up to the mic with a TP USA event and ask any question where really I think when, when Ray was doing it, they were about sharing the gospel.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd so you saw Ray kind of avoid certain questions because he just wanted to get to the gospel.
Speaker BAnd, and so there is a difference there.
Speaker BLet's recognize that difference.
Speaker BSome of us may be more strong one way or the other, wanting to see things go one way more the other.
Speaker BSome people felt that, that you know, Charlie wasn't a Christian martyr because he wasn't just sharing the gospel.
Speaker BAnd I, I had to tell people like, I've been out, you know, and so have you.
Speaker BPhil Sessa, you were with him in, in New when he came to New York.
Speaker BAnd so we've seen him.
Speaker BHe doesn't just do of.
Speaker BHe plays clips of him just sharing the gospel, but he does a lot of apologetics and he would answer a lot of questions.
Speaker BYou know, issue.
Speaker BI mean the, the film 180 came out of him addressing the issues of abortion.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo I, I just want us to be careful not to think that, well, you know, it has to be just preaching the gospel over and over and over again.
Speaker BBecause I think a big reason Charlie big did draw the big crowds is that he would take any question that anyone can come up and ask him anything and he would, he would study and prepare himself.
Speaker BAnd I'm going to, I'll say this, I'm going this A long winded me kind of giving my answer I guess to this question as well.
Speaker BYou know, Phil, Phil will know this.
Speaker BBut you know, one of the things that some of the guys Living Water Mark Spence would say is you don't have to know everything all at once.
Speaker BYou just, just know the, the answer to the last question.
Speaker BWhen, when Charlie Kirk started doing this, he would, he would really address one issue, study one issue at a time and get really good at the one issue and then move on to a different issue.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BSo that toward the end of his life he could just take any topic and he, he had that repertoire because he had so studied all of these things.
Speaker BAnd I, I would say that whatever method you're going to do, that might be the, the best thing to do is just don't try to learn everything all at once.
Speaker BBut I, the question is, is, you know, looking at his methods, his tactics for, for doing open form debates versus just sharing the gospel.
Speaker BNow some people think that that style is divisive, but was it effective?
Speaker BShould we, should we avoid that?
Speaker BShould we emulate that?
Speaker BShould we just share the gospel like Ray Comfort would do or, and Ray doesn't just do that, but that's, he wants to focus on that versus Charlie answering, you know, these questions, giving, you know, arguments and then bringing it to the gospel.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker DCan I just jump in there?
Speaker DYeah, yeah.
Speaker DSo first of all, Charlie is extremely well studied.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker DI mean the guy read like 100 books a year.
Speaker DSo as far as a student, he's an incredible student in a lot of different areas.
Speaker DAnd I think he used to be commended for just being an incredible, studious man.
Speaker DHe, he had a wide, a plethora of knowledge on a lot of different topics.
Speaker DHe, he, he wasn't like a one shot pony.
Speaker DHe, he could speak about pork.
Speaker CPork.
Speaker DSports, I guess.
Speaker DPork too, right.
Speaker BI heard once you got into a debate over a Star wars movie or something, I didn't follow that, but there you go.
Speaker DI mean he, he could, he could speak about abortion and then who's a better basketball player, Lebron or Michael Jordan?
Speaker DAnd what I loved was, I mean, he applied logic across the board and sort of like Voddie mentions, if you learn a few categories, you can speak to a lot of different issues.
Speaker DIf you learn basic categories and you just kind of pull that, that file out of your mind.
Speaker DAnd so he was, he was very skilled in that.
Speaker DOf course he had a capacity to hold a lot of information, but I think that his methodology worked really well.
Speaker DHe let the person speak, he would say things, he would pause, he would ask for clarification.
Speaker DWhat do you mean by this?
Speaker DHe was asking questions.
Speaker DIt wasn't just a lecture.
Speaker DAnd so he was eliciting dialogue.
Speaker DSo it wasn't just, okay, you've asked your question, now shut up and let me just give my answer.
Speaker DSo his approach was great.
Speaker DAnd I think that as believers, we should be able to speak on various topics.
Speaker DI mean, the, the, the woman, the, the two prostitutes that came to Solomon and said, well, this is my baby.
Speaker DNo, it's my baby.
Speaker DI mean, he spoke to that issue.
Speaker DHe didn't say, well, that's Outside of my realm.
Speaker DI don't deal with babies.
Speaker DI'm a king.
Speaker DNo, he spoke.
Speaker DSpoke to that issue.
Speaker DAnd I think we should be able to.
Speaker DTo speak to issues and bring logic to such issues.
Speaker DAnd then as we're able to, perhaps we can steal steel, steer certain issues to the gospel.
Speaker DIf we don't know, like, if somebody brings up, well, you know, who do you think's right?
Speaker DYou know, do you think, you know, Israel's right or, you know, is Hamas and, you know, what's happening over in Palestine and all of that?
Speaker DI mean, I was approached with that at a street fair, and I said, well, you know, that one I kind of, you know, did a U turn back to the gospel because that's what we were actually talking about.
Speaker DAnd I said, well, this really doesn't have to do with what we're talking about concerning the gospel, where you're going to go when you die.
Speaker DSo I think it depends on what the question is and what's your capacity to understand and how you dialogue.
Speaker BAll right, since Aaron, you came in a little bit later, give you.
Speaker BGive you a shot.
Speaker BWhat are your thoughts on the.
Speaker BOn his.
Speaker BThe methodology?
Speaker FBefore I answer, just out of curiosity, do you guys touch early on about the element that we all face in regard to fear of man and the difficulty of speaking truth in public?
Speaker FAnd you didn't.
Speaker FOkay, because I think part of that is how I would want to answer this.
Speaker AOne of the things I think that.
Speaker FCharlie did well, and I think Phil spoke to this as well, is that he had a conversation.
Speaker FThere are lots of people who, when they go out, whether it's street preaching or street evangelism or whatever the case may be, I mean, so many of us.
Speaker FI know that I, myself, myself, as a biblical counselor, as somebody who feels like all day long, every day, I'm speaking truth.
Speaker FThere are certain situations in which I find myself where the flesh just is scared, uncomfortable.
Speaker FI don't want to do.
Speaker FAnd all of these are not.
Speaker FThese are bad reasons.
Speaker FLike, I'm not justifying and saying it's okay.
Speaker FBut one of the things I love that Charlie did is he thrust himself into a situation where he invited, I don't want to say conflict.
Speaker FThat happened a lot, but he invited conversation, he invited disagreement.
Speaker FHe put himself out there.
Speaker FHe made himself vulnerable.
Speaker FAnd I think one of the reasons he was so well studied is, yes, he was a smart man who enjoyed learning, but he also created an organization that thrust him out there, and he knew he had to have answers.
Speaker FHe knew he had to be able to talk about stuff.
Speaker FSo, yeah, that's really powerful.
Speaker FAnd I think that we all need to put ourselves into those situations, whether it's.
Speaker FI've said this before on the show, but, you know, I've been out to eat with Andrew and really appreciated how, you know, and I actually was just in a.
Speaker FIn a church in Louisiana, and the pastor there did the exact same thing where, you know, they.
Speaker FThe waitress takes your order, right?
Speaker FAnd then you say, hey, you know, we're about to pray for our food.
Speaker FIs there anything that we could pray for you for?
Speaker FWe're Christians.
Speaker FThis is the church we go to.
Speaker FWe believe.
Speaker FAnd there are lots of different ways of framing it, but basically telling yourself, this is something I'm going to do, I'm going to do this when I go out because it pleases the Lord, yes, but I need to make myself do it.
Speaker FOtherwise we'll have tons of excuses for not doing it.
Speaker FAnd that's basically by sitting out there putting up a sign early in the early days, right?
Speaker FHe was thrusting himself into that.
Speaker FAnd some people might say, well, that was just Charlie's personality that came easy to him because that's who he was.
Speaker FAnd you know what?
Speaker EMaybe.
Speaker FMaybe that's true.
Speaker FI don't know.
Speaker FI know that I. I tend to be more introverted.
Speaker FActually, I believe it or not, I need to force myself to be extroverted.
Speaker FBut I think that we as Christians have to force ourselves to be a little bit more extroverted.
Speaker FIf we're going to be salt and light and we're not going to hide it under a bushel, we've got to make ourselves do that.
Speaker FSo if taking a page out of Charlie's book of how he pushed himself, invited a disagreement, invited conversation, and even invited conflict in order to speak the truth, then that's something we can all learn from.
Speaker BThat's a good point, Spencer.
Speaker AI mean, I. I thought his methods were wonderful.
Speaker AI mean, I'm in agreement with what the other gentlemen have said already.
Speaker AI think, you know, as Christians, we're supposed to be in the world.
Speaker AIf God didn't want us in the world, he would have taken us out of the world.
Speaker AYou know, this is why, like, the monastery doesn't work.
Speaker AYou know, you sitting in a dark room with the Bible isn't actually all that impactful on the world.
Speaker AYou know, we have to figure out where.
Speaker AWhere are the people that need to hear the gospel, and then we need to be where they are.
Speaker AYou know, this is something I don't like Hearing, you hear a lot of times, you know, we're going to go to, you know, a basketball game or watch a game.
Speaker AYou know, in our house, we have a lot of kids over that like to watch sports.
Speaker AIt's like, well, I don't like to watch sports.
Speaker AI don't like to go to football games, or I don't like to be around large crowds at parties, or I don't like to do a million things.
Speaker ABut do you, you know, like to speak about God?
Speaker ADo you like to find people that near need to hear the gospel?
Speaker AThen you kind of have to go to where the people are and you need to talk about the things that people want to talk about.
Speaker AI mean, that's very rare opportunities in life when you walk up to someone and they go, hey, sir, share the gospel of Jesus Christ with me if you would.
Speaker BYou know, never had that happen.
Speaker ANever had that happen.
Speaker ABut there's a million opportunities to just engage with someone in dialogue about a million different topics.
Speaker ALike you said, it could be Michael Jordan and LeBron James.
Speaker AYou don't have to love sports.
Speaker ADo you love the person that talking to you about sports?
Speaker AThen talk to him about it.
Speaker ALearn something.
Speaker AI mean, we can stretch ourselves a little bit, right?
Speaker AYou know, If Charlie's reading 100 books a year, you know, if you know that your grandson, who isn't a believer yet, like sports, well, you can go out of your way to watch a basketball game once a week.
Speaker AI mean, I don't think that's too much to, you know, to stretch yourself.
Speaker AYou don't have to be setting up Turning Point USA events at college campuses in front of thousands of people to do what Charlie Kirk did.
Speaker AYou just have to be willing and able to engage with people, listen and learn.
Speaker AI mean, you can have a conversation with anybody about any topic.
Speaker AYou don't have to know anything about it.
Speaker AOh, well, sure.
Speaker AI mean, I don't know anything about Indian food.
Speaker ATell me about Indian food.
Speaker ALet's talk about it.
Speaker AYou know, and then now I know you and we have a relationship and we can maybe steer this conversation in a different direction.
Speaker AYou know, I think there's some truth to that adage that, you know, people don't care how much you know until they know how much you care.
Speaker AI think that's very true in the Christian realm.
Speaker AAnd, you know, all your theology, all your, you know, books read and Bible study, none of it matters if you can't actually get to people and talk to them and, and share that knowledge.
Speaker ASo I think Charlie's methods were spot on.
Speaker AAnd I think it was spot on because he wasn't aggressive, he wasn't attacking.
Speaker AI mean, people say he was, but that's people lying about Charlie, by and large.
Speaker AThere might have been rare instances, but for the most part, he was courteous to people.
Speaker AHe was respectful.
Speaker AHe wasn't overly judgmental.
Speaker AHe just spoke what he believed to be the truth.
Speaker AHe didn't accept, you know, the lies when people told it to him.
Speaker ABut, you know, he was just open and honest, and he drove the conversation where he wanted to go.
Speaker AAnd I think that's a lesson we can all learn.
Speaker FIf I may real quick, just speak to what Spencer just said, because that was so.
Speaker FThat's so, so powerful what I'm about to say.
Speaker FThis has nothing to do with me.
Speaker FI think this is just my attempt to try to be more Christ honoring by being someone more like Charlie.
Speaker FRight.
Speaker FBut my family and I have started to look for inroads into our community to see where we can be more salt and light, build those relationships, show people that we care.
Speaker FAnd one of the things that we've done is we actually tried to identify the places where we were not inherently going in that direction.
Speaker ERight.
Speaker FIt's very easy for us to be comfortable doing what we love.
Speaker FWhat happens is if you love golf and you're gonna go play golf with guys, yes, you can be a testimony for Chrysler, but it's oftentimes really easy to kind of just slide into.
Speaker CJust.
Speaker FI'm here, I am, I'm comfortable and I'm playing golf.
Speaker FRight.
Speaker FAnd I'm liking it, and these guys are cool, and so we're just going out with our lives.
Speaker FBut to make deliberate inroads into an intersection of your community where you wouldn't normally go, kind of keeps it more in front of your face as to why you're there.
Speaker FWhere did Charlie choose to go?
Speaker FA place that none of us who have graduated from college and aren't college professors go.
Speaker FA place who needs us.
Speaker FBecause it is dark.
Speaker FIt is doubly dark on these college campuses.
Speaker FHe forced himself to go to places that needed the truth.
Speaker FAnd so what we try to do as a family is just identify areas in our community here in Brevard where there isn't a light, where there aren't a lot of Christians there building relationships and speaking truth and love and then choosing to go to those places because it's the darkest place and that's what it needs it most.
Speaker FAnd I think that's a good thing that we can all Do I guess, in a way to, again, to be more like Charlie.
Speaker FBut of course, that's not why we're here.
Speaker FRight?
Speaker FWe're here to be like Christ.
Speaker FWe're here to obey God.
Speaker FBut I think he set a good example in these areas.
Speaker BEve give you the last on.
Speaker BOn this one?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CWell, it's better than being first, actually.
Speaker CGood to hear what everybody else says first.
Speaker CI, I think that Charlie had a talent for open debate.
Speaker CI think he was gifted.
Speaker CI think God blessed him with a song, a way to hold all of that knowledge in your head and to be able to engage with people in a very civil way and be able to politely hold your ground.
Speaker CAnd he just did it so well.
Speaker CI don't know that there will ever be another Charlie Kirk, because he was specifically gifted in that.
Speaker CAnd I think that those who step forward to do something like that, they need to make sure they're prepared because they're going to get people who try a lot of gotchas.
Speaker CThere were a lot of people who did that with Charlie.
Speaker CThey would come up and think they had the argument that was going to knock him aside and, And.
Speaker CAnd he would always hold his ground.
Speaker CAnd I know there's a lot of young people that are.
Speaker CAre taking up the Charlie Kirk mantle and are putting up, you know, tables all over college campuses to, to answer questions and stuff.
Speaker CAnd, And I just.
Speaker CI think that it takes a certain kind of person to do it, and I think they need to make sure that they're prepared to do what Charlie did.
Speaker CI was actually a little turned off by watching Ray Comfort's TPUSA event at Cal State.
Speaker CI got about halfway through Ray Comfort's, and I actually thought he was making people angry.
Speaker CAnd I don't know that his attempt to share the gospel is going anywhere, because even the Christians who are in the crowd were getting mad at him.
Speaker CAnd so I think it's.
Speaker CYou just have to be careful.
Speaker CPick your.
Speaker CPick your location.
Speaker CAnd I think what Aaron was saying is.
Speaker CIs important too.
Speaker CIt's like, you know, do something that you're interested in, find that point of connection, and use that to help draw people to the Lord.
Speaker CI love the way Andrew does it on his podcast.
Speaker CWhenever he goes on with an interview, he has somebody challenge him to turn any topic into the gospel.
Speaker CAnd I've always thought that was fun, and I think that's something that we can all improve on, but I don't know that we can all do what Charlie Kirk did.
Speaker CI think that.
Speaker CThat he was specifically gifted in Being able to have answers and hold all that information in his head.
Speaker CAnd I think his example, the fact that he got so big and drew such big crowds that the only way they could shut him up was to assassinate him, is in some way a warning, but in some way it should embolden us because it can be done.
Speaker CIt can.
Speaker CThere is a way to reach those people in a way that makes them fear.
Speaker CFear Christ.
Speaker CBecause the Christians are so bold with the gospel.
Speaker CWe just have to make sure we know our stuff before we put ourselves into those kind of situations, if that makes any sense.
Speaker DAnd Eve, I think that, yes, I don't think we can have a carbon copy of a Charlie Kirk, but I do think that we can do a better job in our churches in training people in dialogue, in rhetoric, in engaging people in apologetics with the gospel.
Speaker DI think that the professional minister mindset, the celebrity pastor mindset sometimes takes us by storm.
Speaker DWe look at voting and go, oh, man, look how great he does it.
Speaker DWell, I mean, voting wasn't always voting and able to do what voting did.
Speaker DAnd I remember when Andrew had asked me to come to the, one of his jersey fires, and I was, I think, sitting next to Phil Johnson and Easy Zwain, and I was like, oh, man, I'm sitting next to like, John MacArthur Jr. And Ray Comfort Jr. And what am I gonna.
Speaker DIf they pass me to Mike during Q and A, what am I gonna say?
Speaker DAnd then, you know, and, and of course, you know, we have Andrew and, you know, so I make everyone look good.
Speaker DYou know, Andrew's knowledgeable as well, you know, but when they passed me in the mic, I felt, you know, that I was able to, to respond to the questions.
Speaker DAnd then Phil Johnson turned and said, that was a good point.
Speaker DIt's like, okay, but I mean, I, we can train other people, you know, to, to learn how to respond.
Speaker DListen, we have God in our, in our corner.
Speaker DWe have the Holy Spirit in our lives, we have the truth in our corner.
Speaker DAnd learning how to dialogue with people who don't have the truth.
Speaker DI, I mentioned in the chat that if you have not read the book Expository Apologetics, highly recommend that book.
Speaker DIt also helps you to learn how to do the, the expository waltz in dialoguing with people.
Speaker DAnd so, yes, we all may not go out to Athens, so to speak, like Paul or Charlie Kirk, and, and have a large audience, but can we dialogue with one person?
Speaker DCan we start with just one and, and engage one person and, and have the conversation back and forth with A single individual.
Speaker DBecause of course you're not going to go to the many if you can't go to a single person.
Speaker DAnd I think we need to step on the limb and, and make an attempt at doing so because we probably know a lot more than we think we do.
Speaker DAnd people probably know a lot less than they think that they do if they have an unbiblical worldview because they think that.
Speaker DI got your moment.
Speaker DI mean, if they don't know the gospel, they got you for what they.
Speaker DThey don't know.
Speaker DNow, I had a girl in our church who is taking social work, and she's just.
Speaker DShe's basically in a liberal cesspool.
Speaker DAnd they brought.
Speaker DAnd so one of the things that were brought up was, was the murder of Charlie Kirk and act of care.
Speaker DAnd they were trying to bring about, you know, talking about justice and everything like that.
Speaker DSo I said to her, how can they posit justice?
Speaker DBut actually they're actually promoting injustice and calling it justice.
Speaker DAnd so I was trying to help equip her to be able to have answers in her college classroom.
Speaker DAnd so, because I, I can't go to her college classroom as her pastor, so she, she's going into the lion's den and she needs to be able to have good responses.
Speaker DBut I think that we really need to help, you know, be equipped ourselves and then equip other people to do that work.
Speaker BYeah, I think that you.
Speaker BThis, this is the one thing, if I can, you know, and I kind of said it earlier, but it becomes the question of this needs to be something that you, you don't go in thinking you're going to learn everything in a day.
Speaker BYes, and that's the mistake a lot of people make is they think.
Speaker BAnd look, those videos are going.
Speaker BHave been out there.
Speaker BThere's.
Speaker BIf you, if you go and you look, you'll see the videos of people who, they.
Speaker BThey thought they could be the next Charlie Kirk.
Speaker BAnd you know, they just, you know, it's the, the Dunning Kruger effect.
Speaker BThey thought they had more knowledge than they did.
Speaker BIt looks real easy when you're watching Charlie do it, but it's a lot different when you're standing in front of the people and, and all of a sudden you don't have all the knowledge you thought you had.
Speaker BAnd that's.
Speaker BAnd some of the people that are challenging us have the same thing.
Speaker BThey, they come in thinking they have a great, you know, arguments always work in a monologue.
Speaker BAs I said to someone this week, I have never lost a debate in my own head.
Speaker BIt's when I start talking to someone else that I suddenly realize, hey, maybe that argument wasn't as good as I thought it was.
Speaker ERight.
Speaker BIn our own mind, we, we can't think of any, any arguments that defeat our arguments.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BAnd so we always win the debates in our head.
Speaker BAnd there's some people that are trying to go out and be like Charlie, but they're not doing it the way Charlie did it.
Speaker BNot learning one thing at a time, not focusing it back to the gospel.
Speaker BThe, the.
Speaker BSo I, I would agree with what you guys had said.
Speaker BI think that a big part of it is, it's, it's that in the method to do it.
Speaker BI, My encouragement.
Speaker BAnd I'm just saying this is someone, you know, sort of what you said there, Phil, you know, you know, I get people that watch me on the street do open air, and like, I can't do like you do.
Speaker BYou know, Charlie was especially gifted, but maybe not.
Speaker BHe.
Speaker BMaybe what it was, was he was more focused.
Speaker BMaybe he just, he decided that he was.
Speaker BHe put a side.
Speaker BA lot of other things in life.
Speaker DYes.
Speaker BSo that he would be focused on this.
Speaker BAnd we're, to be honest, we're distracted with many things.
Speaker BMaybe, maybe sports, maybe movies, maybe recreational things, none of them being necessarily bad.
Speaker BAnd yet he, he put a lot of that aside so he could be more focused on what he was doing.
Speaker BSo I say that to say those who are listening, you could be seen years from now being like a Charlie Kirk, someone who really.
Speaker BPeople go, oh, he's so gifted.
Speaker BPeople think I'm really gifted with the, the, you know, apologetics.
Speaker BIt's not that I'm super gifted with it.
Speaker BIt's that I've been doing it for a long time.
Speaker BI mean, after 40 years of, of answering arguments that people make, you start to hear the answers.
Speaker BYou start to, you know, and if I hear something new, I, I just have to go study that one new thing and then, and then really study it and form a response to it.
Speaker BBut over time, answering the same things over and over and over again, you're, you're honing your answers each time and you're improving it.
Speaker BAnd so I guess my, my encouragement to folks is don't give up.
Speaker BKeep learning, Keep studying.
Speaker BKeep finding good answers from scripture to the, to the issues that are raised in culture or at work, where wherever you, God may have you and, you know, look to be.
Speaker BNot like, don't be a Charlie Kirk.
Speaker BBe a follower of Christ.
Speaker BAnd, and let's Devote ourselves.
Speaker BWe don't have to go on campus.
Speaker BSome, some may, but we should be a light in this world.
Speaker BThat would be my thought.
Speaker DAnd so with what you were saying, though, you know, we're.
Speaker DAnd we're not just, to quote, voting again, we're not just trying to have a battle of wits.
Speaker DWe're trying to have a spiritual encounter with somebody.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker DBecause behind the questioner, it.
Speaker DI'm sorry, yeah.
Speaker DIs.
Speaker DIs a.
Speaker DBehind the question people is opposing is a questioner is a person who is lost, who is in darkness.
Speaker DAnd even if the person comes with the gotcha, of course we have those people.
Speaker DThey don't want an answer.
Speaker DThey just want to do the gotcha.
Speaker DBut there are some people that really want answers to the questions that they have, and they're struggling.
Speaker DAnd here we come along and it behooves us.
Speaker DI heard, I can't, I can't remember who said this, but basically anyone who's called to preach the word is simultaneously called to be disciplined to study the word.
Speaker DSo we have to be disciplined to study.
Speaker DAnd again, we can't learn everything at once.
Speaker DSo if you're going to dialogue on abortion, you can't have every argument, but if you just learn a few basic ones on, on a few categories, you can answer a lot of questions because there's nothing new under the sun.
Speaker DAnd like Andrew said, well, every now and again somebody brings up something he never heard of before.
Speaker DBut I'm gathering a lot of questions that we get are questions that we've heard of before.
Speaker DI mean, if you watch some of the Charlie Kirk videos, you're hearing a lot of the same questions and he's given a lot of the same answers.
Speaker DYeah.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BYou know, when you have a battle of wits, sometimes, you know, I remember once trying to have a battle of wits and I lost miserably.
Speaker BAnd, and Phil pointed out that I was arguing with a brick wall and I still lost.
Speaker BSo, you know, there is those times.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker DYou sound.
Speaker DHave a battle of wits.
Speaker BYeah, I know that's a movie.
Speaker BI've at least learned that.
Speaker BBut.
Speaker BYes, so.
Speaker BSo I hope this folks that this.
Speaker AHas been helpful for you.
Speaker AEducational.
Speaker BI.
Speaker BIf you did learn something, maybe you could share this with others.
Speaker BWe'll be, we.
Speaker BWe do this every month and so we'll be back next month to have another throwdown on another topic.
Speaker BWhat that topic is, I don't know know yet.
Speaker BI'm sure it'll be good, though.
Speaker BI'm sure we'll agree.
Speaker BI'm sure we'll disagree but I know we'll have love and charity for one another.