In tragedy, I saw instinctive kindness, courage, and faith. His death has sparked an awakening that no bullet can silence.
On Wednesday, September 10, I pulled my son out of school for a lesson no classroom could teach. Charlie Kirk was coming to Utah. I had heard of him but wasn’t a follower. What I was deeply concerned about was censorship—both imposed and self-inflicted—and the way silencing has spread in our culture.
I wanted my son to see honest discourse modeled in real life. I wanted him to witness not just applause, but opposition—because that’s reality. My hope was to raise someone who could listen with dignity, and respect for differing viewpoints.
When the shot rang out, it sounded more like a firework than a gunshot. For a moment, I didn’t know if I should be afraid. Then conviction hit me. I thought of the children at the Covenant school who instinctively covered one another. That same human decency rose up that day.
As we ran, I lost sight of my son. In the middle of a group mocking Charlie, I cried out that I couldn’t find him. One young man stepped out and said, “I’ll help you.” That moment stood out—his instinct was to do good.
Minutes later, my son texted to ask if anyone needed first aid. His scouting troop had prepared him well. His first instinct was not to flee but to help. Even as police swarmed the scene and it became clear the shooter was still at large, people lingered to care for one another.
That day proved something simple yet profound: kindness and courage are not programs or slogans, they are instinct
In the days since, I have seen pain, anger, and ugliness—but also courage. People are saying, “I’m done hiding what I believe.” There has been an awakening.
I didn’t know much about Charlie before. Afterward, people sent me his quotes—usually short clips, stripped of context. But debates don’t last thirty seconds. So I began listening in full.
What I found surprised me. Charlie spoke with facts, not appeals to emotion. He spoke truth with care and compassion. People might not have agreed, but often their outrage came from feelings, not reason. Charlie changed hearts not only by speaking, but by listening.
The Everyman
Later, I ended up at a McDonald’s with my son and several shaken students. Their eyes
were red from crying. One said words I will never forget:
“Charlie was the only one who talked to us.”
That was his gift. He gave hope to the young by fighting for opportunity. He gave hope to the older people by saying aloud what they had long thought but were afraid to speak.
In my view, Charlie was murdered because he was the best version of the everyman. Within two days of his death, I Am Charlie Kirk shirts had sold out. Vigils spread. People picked up Bibles and began attending church again.
But being “like Charlie” is not about a slogan; it’s about being rooted so deeply in truth and faith that you cannot do otherwise. It means waking each day and saying sincerely, Here am I.
I believe Charlie was a true Christian, and that is why he died. The world is increasingly hostile to believers. In the UK, the Bible app has been banned. Here in America, a college gathered 700,000 signatures to prevent him from speaking, claiming his message was not “inclusive.” Still, he planned to go.
The shooter said, “I couldn’t allow him to keep spreading hate.” But Charlie’s life proved the opposite. Everything he did flowed from love.
“Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.” (John 15:13)
Charlie loved even his enemies. That is why he listened to them. He believed in grace, which is why Erika, his widow, could say of the young man who killed her husband and her children’s father: I forgive you.
Charlie was killed not just for his words, but because so many were listening. He lived as a servant leader—grounded in faith, courage, and truth.
That is his legacy.
And for those of us who carry his memory forward, the call is clear: to live with the same courage, the same conviction, and the same love.
We are Charlie.
Submitted By Cari Bartholomew

