This piece expands on the themes in my earlier articles, “Eyes Wide Open: How to Read News Critically in an Age of Propaganda,” “When Christian Nationalists Distort Faith,” and “Hope for the Helpless: A Call to True Faith, Not Fear-Based Nationalism.“
In a recent segment of his show, Charlie Kirk delivered one of his now-typical monologues, filled with sweeping declarations about the state of faith in America. According to Kirk, Christian music now dominates the charts, young men are returning to church in historic numbers, and women, infected by a so-called “Jezebel spirit,” have abandoned their spiritual responsibilities. Mary, the mother of Jesus, he argued, is the antidote to feminism. To Kirk, this cultural shift is a sign of a spiritual renaissance rooted in the Sermon on the Mount and the Ten Commandments: “the bedrock of Western civilization,” as he puts it.
Let’s pause. Not to argue theology, but to practice critical reading.
The Problem with One-Note Narratives
Charlie Kirk is not a theologian. He is a political activist whose brand thrives on cultural polarization. When he speaks about Christianity, he does so through a lens of grievance politics and traditionalist nostalgia. What he offers is not religious renewal but a reactionary remix of theology, morality, and partisan ideology.
So how should we evaluate these claims? Let’s walk through five critical reading tools to separate fact from framing.
1. Identify the Source and Its Incentives
Who is Charlie Kirk, and what does he want? Kirk is the founder of Turning Point USA, a conservative nonprofit that uses social media and campus activism to advance its cause. His incentives are political influence and cultural power, not spiritual growth. When he talks about faith, it is usually in service of social control or political posturing.
2. Examine the Evidence (or Lack Thereof)
Claim: Christian music is dominating the charts.
Reality: While Christian artists like Maverick City Music or Lauren Daigle have had some mainstream success, they are not displacing Taylor Swift, Drake, or Bad Bunny. Kirk is cherry-picking to fit a revival narrative.
Claim: Young men are returning to church in droves.
Reality: Some data shows a modest rise in male attendance post-pandemic, but women still outnumber men in religious affiliation. Gen Z (the group Kirk often refers to) is also the most secular generation on record.
Claim: The “Jezebel spirit” has infected young women.
Reality: This is not an empirical claim. It’s a metaphor rooted in evangelical subculture and is used to discredit women who seek autonomy, education, or leadership roles.
3. Spot the Missing Context
Kirk never discusses why young people are leaving institutional religion: church scandals, politicization of faith, lack of inclusivity, or abuse of power. He doesn’t mention the rise of people identifying as “spiritual but not religious” or the growing interest in faith practices outside traditional institutions.
4. Decode the Language
Phrases like “Jezebel spirit,” “crushing feminism,” or “Mary as the weapon” are not theological insights, they are rhetorical weapons that rely on fear, shame, and coded moral panic rather than love, grace, or truth.
This is marketing, not ministry, and where Christian nationalism often creeps in.
As I wrote in “When Christian Nationalists Distort Faith,” the blending of patriotic fervor with cherry-picked theology creates a dangerous cocktail, one that elevates control over compassion, and myth over message. It repackages Jesus not as a savior of the broken, but as a mascot for cultural domination.
5. Consider Alternative Interpretations
If more men are showing up to church, maybe it’s because they are looking for structure in a chaotic world. If women are leaving, maybe it’s because the institutions have failed them. A revival that demonizes one gender and glorifies the other is not revival. That’s regression.
The Real Call to Action: Read With Discernment
Although I have faith, it is biblically grounded, not in a specific church or denomination, but in what the Scriptures say. That’s how we raised our children: to ask hard questions, to challenge easy answers, and to seek their relationship with God without us imposing our version of it.
We taught them to question everything, including us, and they have. They’ve found their paths to faith, and what’s more, they’ve done so with honesty and without fear. That is far more powerful than coerced conformity or cultural coercion wrapped in religious garb.
Kirk’s monologue is a case study in modern propaganda: a slick blend of fact, fear, and fundamentalism. If we want to be informed citizens and spiritually grounded people, we must learn to ask deep questions:
-
Who is speaking?
-
Why now?
-
What data supports this?
-
What’s being left out?
-
Who benefits from this narrative?
As I argued in “Hope for the Helpless,” true faith is not fear-based. It doesn’t reduce women to metaphors or weaponize Mary to silence dissent. It doesn’t masquerade cultural panic as gospel. True faith leads with love, not shame. It invites inquiry, not indoctrination.
So, by all means, let’s talk about revival. But let’s not confuse it with the marketing pitch of a political showman cosplaying as a prophet.





