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U.S. Christian nationalists call Kirk a 'martyr'
Los Angeles Times
|September 14, 2025
Experts on faith warn of potential for extremism and retribution
A WOMAN lays her head down on a seat at CenterPoint Church during a vigil the day after Charlie Kirk was killed in Orem, Utah.
A few hours after Charlie Kirk was killed, Sean Feucht, an influential right-wing Christian worship leader, filmed a selfie video from his home in California, his eyes brimming with tears.
The shooting of one of the nation's most prominent conservative activists, Feucht declared, was no less than "a line in the sand" in a country descending into a spiritual darkness.
"The enemy thinks that he won, that there was a battle that was won today," he said, referencing Satan. "No, man, there's going to be millions of bold voices raised up out of the sacrifice and the martyrdom of Charlie Kirk."
Soon afterward, Pastor Matt Tuggle, who leads the Salt Lake City campus of the San Diego-based Awaken megachurch, posted a video of Kirk's killing on Instagram, adding the caption: "If your pastor isn't telling you the left believes a evil demonic belief system you are in the wrong church!"
Kirk's death has triggered a range of reaction, much of it mournful sympathy for the 31-year-old activist and his family. But it also has sparked conspiracy theories, hot-take presumptions the left was responsible and calls for vengeance against Kirk's perceived enemies.
At a vigil for Kirk in Huntington Beach last week, some attendees waved white flags depicting a red cross and the word “Jesus,” while some chanted, “White men, fight back!” Kirk spread a philosophy that liberals sought to disempower men, and some of his male supporters see his killing as an attack against them.
Whether the calls for vengeance will ebb or intensify remains to be seen, especially with Utah Gov. Spencer Cox's announcement Friday that a suspect in the fatal shooting, 22-year-old Tyler Robinson, had been arrested after a family member turned him in.
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