My problem with the Kirk memorial service and all the conversation about his assassination generally is that many people seem to have no coherent idea about the proper relationship between faith and politics. In their minds, the two spheres seem all mixed together higgledy-piggledy.
One faith leader told my Times colleague Elizabeth Dias about a conversation she had had with Charlie Kirk, who told her, “I want to talk about spiritual things, and in order to do that, I have to enter the political arena.”
Why on earth would Kirk believe that?
As people eulogized Kirk, it was rarely clear if they were talking about the man who was trying to evangelize for Jesus or the one trying to elect Republicans. A spokesperson at Turning Point declared, “He confronted evil and proclaimed the truth and called us to repent and be saved.” Is that what Kirk was doing when arguing with college kids about tariffs?
The ceremony bounced back and forth between prayer and political point scoring, between people offering to love their enemies and President Trump proudly hating them, between declarations that all humans are made in the image of God and Stephen Miller basically declaring that all his enemies are vermin.
David Brooks, We Need to Think Straight About God and Politics.