The Old Time Revival Inspired by Charlie Kirk’s Memorial: A Soliloquy For Young Believers


It’s been a few weeks since Charlie Kirk was assassinated, and a few days since his memorial, which was a landmark television event in itself. Yes, many folks of high standards and lofty ideals spoke in eloquent tones, delivered soaring soliloquies on the life of a young patriot taken too soon. It was somber for the most part, but like any television production, it utilized technology to connect with the audience.

My wife, Momo, and I shed a few tears, moved by the words spoken by government officials that professed their Christianity to the world, and didn’t hold back. Near the end, when Charlie’s widow, Erika Kirk, spoke with humility and eloquence, I knew she had been chosen to lead a new revival of young men and women to Christianity and conservatism. She will lead them to reclaim our country as envisioned by the founding fathers.

Then, in a flashback, uninvited moments I often have as I grow older, I envisioned it as something entirely different. In crystal-clear black and white, it evoked the memory of an old-time 1950s Texas Christian revival I attended as a young child, held in a weathered circus tent in a field of drought-stricken grass near Santa Anna High School. Unlike the sturdy Baptist Church in town, there were no pews or wooden floors; only hard wooden folding chairs and a foot-trampled, grassy floor, harboring insects that crawled up my legs and delivered vicious bites. I yelped, and my mother smacked me on the back of my tiny, crew-cut-wearing head. “Be respectful,” she sternly whispered, “God is using the preacher as his lightning bolt.” No matter how hot the weather and the misery caused by pestilence, I obeyed. Pretending to listen to the droning sermon, half asleep from the heat and boredom, I would rather have been anywhere but that tent. My grandparents sat behind us, their hands holding heavy black Bibles that would leave a mark when connected to an insulant child’s behind. I could feel the searing stare of my grandmother’s laser eyes on the back of my neck. I looked straight ahead in fear, knowing that if my chin dipped half an inch or I wavered sideways, a bump from the good book would remind me why I was there. I was six years old and a reluctant, ignorant, bordering on a Christian at best. I yearned in silence to follow my older cousins; they were washed in the blood of the Lamb, bathed in the Holy Spirit, and had been dipped like spring sheep in a trough of holy water. I was just a young kid with no spiritual compass to guide me. It took some time, too slow to my mother’s liking, but I eventually came to Jesus in my own terms. Making me kiss the casketed, heavily perfumed body of my dead great-grandmother set me back a few years, from trauma alone. But God did find me, and I found him. It wasn’t the lightning bolt jolt from above, but a slow and gentle process that fitted my preciousness.

The memorial service in Arizona was similar, but in a larger way. Thousands gathered in air-conditioned comfort, with cold drinks and hot dogs served to feed the masses. Clean restrooms, paved parking, and ushers were on hand to help you find your seat. Believers and those seeking to become believers gathered to pay respects to a young man who will likely become the unofficially appointed sainted leader of the next Jesus Revolution, similar to the one started by Pastor Greg Laurie in the early 1970s in California. Take away the stadium, put the masses in a tent with no air conditioning, a grass floor, a rural setting, and a grieving, electrifying widow instead of a hellfire and brimstone preacher delivering the word of God, and you have today’s equivalent of an old-time tent revival. And, it’s about time.

The Fall Of A Nation: The Battle Of Good VS Evil


I thought this country couldn’t get worse than it was a few weeks ago, then the young innocent Ukrainian woman was murdered on a commuter train by a sick thug who had been arrested and released back into our society fourteen other times. She was stabbed in the neck while other commuters, all black Americans, sat a few feet away from her, and did nothing. The look of complete fear on her face as she bled out, not comprehending that she was dying. She came to the United States to escape the war in Ukraine, start a new life, find employment, and feel safe in a country of freedom. In her moment of death, she likely wondered why the people sitting around her would not help. I’m not afraid to call people out: the pointing of fingers and cries of “racist” don’t bother me in the least. I call it like it is, and over the years, it has caused me a few bumps and bruises. The mainstream media said not one word of sympathy or outrage over her murder, because the girl was white and the killer was a black career criminal, as was the sainted George Floyd, and that won’t fit their narrative for national news. Sickening.

Now we have the assassination of Charlie Kirk, a conservative Christian political figure, and a husband and father of two small children. He wasn’t an elected official, but had a staggering following of young people, and that is what scares the left the most: young Christian conservatives who will vote Republican and shun the leftist politicians and ideology. When they catch the killer, we will slowly find out the truth about him and why he chose Charlie as his grand Opus.

The comments and cute little videos on Twitter/X by young liberal white men and women were, at best, vicious and vile. These fools are either brainwashed from indoctrination by the school system or possessed by Demons from Hell. I think it’s all those afflictions that make them what they are —the most dangerous movement in our country. The main stream media and cable news like CNN and MSNBC have stoked the fires in the beast’s of hate twenty-four hours a day since President Trump was elected. Charlie Kirk was a prize-winning target for these people. Young, well-adjusted, happily married with children, Christian, and a lily-white male. He was the leftist equivalent of a Fifteen-Point Buck they could hang on the wall of their lyre. They are celebrating: dancing in the streets, and buying rounds of Red Bull for their friends. One more down, and thousands more to go.

It’s akin to putting a college-age person in front of the television or tablet and feeding them a sick version of NPR’s Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood, and Mr. Rogers is a 300 lb. Transvestite male. And we wonder why young people think they should have a vagina or a penis, instead of what God gave them. You may want to be a girl or a boy, take massive amounts of transitioning drugs that ruin your brain and reasoning, and then dress like one, act like one, and try to convince society that you are female. Still, you are not, unless you lose that useless appendage between your legs and your chromosomes magically change. Now, have this screwed up boy or girl believe the vile crap they read, give them a reason, provide them with access to a weapon or two, point them in the direction of any business, school, church, political rally, or anyone that “done them wrong,” and you have an indoctrinated, mentally ill killer, who the news media will cover their ass when it’s all said and done.

Have I said too much? Yep, probably. Feel free to call me at BR-549, ask for Junior.