America has lost more than a man this week. We lost a voice that embodied one of the most quintessentially American acts imaginable: peacefully debating ideas in the public square.
Charlie Kirk was not engaged in violence. He was not plotting destruction. He was doing something that has been at the very heart of our national identity since the founding of this Republic — exchanging perspectives with fellow citizens in spirited conversation.
That is why his murder cuts so deeply. It was not simply the silencing of a conservative or an assault on a Christian leader. It was an attack on the very principle of free speech — the cornerstone of liberty.
“Come now, and let us reason together, says the Lord,” reads Isaiah 1:18. That invitation is both divine and democratic. God Himself invites us to bring our disagreements and differences to our brothers and sisters peacefully. In the same way, our nation was built on the premise that we can come together, challenge one another’s ideas, and remain neighbors, citizens, and fellow Americans.
When I speak to my congregation on Sunday morning, I am blessed to freely say what I believe in my heart to be right and true. When I take an interview or when someone challenges my faith or my perspective, I have the God-given right to say what’s on my heart, as does anyone who disagrees with me.
What happened in Utah was the antithesis of that. Instead of reasoning together, someone chose to end the conversation with violence. Instead of persuasion, he reached for a weapon. This wasn’t only a political assassination, but an assault on the American experiment itself.
For generations, our colleges and universities have been forums where ideas are tested, sharpened, and sometimes even overthrown. Today, they’ve become a place to get heckled, canceled, or chased out by a mob. And if disagreement becomes grounds for murder, then none of us is safe. Our entire way of life begins to unravel the moment we cannot sit in a lecture hall, on a campus lawn, or in a town square and speak our minds without fear of being silenced by a bullet.
The First Amendment was written precisely for this very reason. Freedom of speech is not merely the right to agree with popular ideas; it is the right to voice unpopular ones. It is the right to question, to provoke, even to offend. Without that freedom, we descend into tyranny—where only the loudest student or the angriest activist dictates what may be spoken.
Kirk understood that. He spent his career engaging young people in dialogue, challenging them to think, and encouraging them to stand firm in their convictions. Whether one agreed with him or not, he was committed to the American promise that debate is not dangerous, but essential.
Today, after the murder of an innocent husband and father, we face a chilling question: Will we allow violence to define our discourse? Will we allow fear to govern our speech? If so, then the murderer who pulled the trigger yesterday succeeded in more than ending one man’s life — he ended the freedom of each and every American.
We cannot allow that to happen. Now more than ever, we must recommit ourselves to the simple but profound truth that disagreement is not hatred. If we cannot learn to debate without violence, then our Republic will not survive.
Our nation was born in debate. The Continental Congress was one long debate about what independence meant. The Constitutional Convention was a collection of feisty disagreements that ended up birthing our foundational documents. Even within the church, the Apostle Paul writes in his letter to the Ephesians to “speak the truth in love.” We sharpen one another through dialogue, not through death and destruction.
Any honorable, principled human being should be grieving Kirk’s death today. And the best way to honor his death is to recommit ourselves to the freedom he exercised on his final day—the freedom of speech. We can heal our wounds by sitting side by side with those we disagree with, listening to them, reasoning with them, and showing the world that Americans do not fear debate. We embrace it.
Kirk’s voice has been silenced, but his death must not silence the principle he embodied.
Pastor Jentezen Franklin is a bestselling author, the senior pastor of Free Chapel and founder of Jentezen Franklin Media Ministries. He was recently appointed to President Trump’s Religious Liberty Commission.