Evil Is Destined To Lose, Charlie Kirk Knew This
- Hananya Naftali
- Sep 22
- 4 min read
Has evil ever won in the long run? History, faith, the human heart - they all answer: no. Evil is real. It corrupts, it murders, it divides. But in the end, it cannot stand. Charlie Kirk understood that. His story, his faith, and the memorial held in his honor prove beyond doubt that good will have the final word.

They killed Charlie Kirk. But they didn’t kill the truth. They didn’t kill the movement. They didn’t kill the mission.
On September 10, 2025, on the campus of Utah Valley University, Charlie Kirk was assassinated by a 22-year-old radical named Tyler Robinson. Kirk wasn’t just another commentator. He wasn’t hiding behind a screen. He was face-to-face with students, calling on them to defend truth, build families, reject godlessness, and speak boldly in a culture obsessed with compliance. That’s what made him dangerous to the left, and that’s what got him killed. But instead of silence, the world heard a roar.
Charlie Kirk’s Death Was Evil, And He Was Fighting It
Evil is not abstract. It has a face. It walked onto that campus with a loaded weapon and a twisted ideology. The man who murdered Charlie said in exchanged messages with his transgender partner: “I’ve had enough of his hatred.”
That’s what evil calls truth now, hatred.
Charlie never called for violence. He never asked for riots, mobs, or censorship. He asked for debates. He asked to be proven wrong. But in a world that runs on moral confusion, logic and facts are treated as threats. And Charlie was treated like an enemy.
He was hated for defending the unborn, for telling young people to get married and raise strong children, for rejecting identity politics and gender madness, for believing in God, country, and family. That’s the kind of man evil can’t tolerate.
But guess what? That’s the kind of man evil can’t defeat either.

The Memorial That Shook the Ground
State Farm Stadium in Arizona was filled with over 63,000 people for Charlie’s memorial. They came from all over the country, some flying across states, others driving through the night. Not for a concert. Not for a football game. For a 31-year-old conservative leader who told them the truth, even when it was unpopular.
The event was emotional. Explosive. Righteous. And absolutely not politically correct.
President Donald Trump took the stage and called Charlie what he was: a martyr for American freedom.
JD Vance called Kirk “a hero to the United States of America” and “a martyr for the Christian faith.” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Senator Marco Rubio, and White House officials like Stephen Miller made it clear: Charlie’s death is not the end of anything. It’s a beginning.
And yet, the most powerful moment wasn’t political.
It was Erika Kirk.
Erika Kirk stood on that stage, her husband’s blood still fresh in her memory, and she said, “I forgive him.”
The man who murdered her husband in cold blood, she forgave. Why? Because Charlie believed in redemption. Because Charlie believed that even the worst sinner could be saved. Because Charlie believed that young men, even broken ones like his killer, could be rescued from the grip of evil.
This wasn’t weakness. It was strength.
Erika didn’t speak like a grieving widow. She spoke like a general picking up the banner from the fallen and marching forward. And now she’s leading Turning Point. Her voice has become the next weapon in this fight.
That forgiveness? That’s what evil can’t handle. Evil feeds on hate. It collapses under mercy.

What Scripture Says About All This
God never promised that good men wouldn’t be killed. He never said we wouldn’t walk through fire. But He promised the fire wouldn’t win.
“Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.” — Romans 12:21
“Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for You are with me.” — Psalm 23:4
Charlie knew where he stood. He didn’t die confused. He died clear, clear about what is right, what is wrong, what is worth living for, and yes, what is worth dying for.
He didn't want a comfortable life. He wanted a meaningful one.
Charlie turned a podcast into a movement. He raised up a generation that’s not ashamed to be Christian, conservative, and loud about it. He invaded the last place the radical left thought they had total control: college campuses. And he won hearts and minds there.
Now he’s a martyr.
What the killers of truth don’t realize is that martyrs create armies. What they tried to bury is now resurrecting with more power than they imagined.
They can try to cancel. They can try to intimidate. They can try to assassinate. But they cannot win.
Evil Is Destined to Lose
Evil always looks unstoppable, right before it falls. Goliath looked like he couldn’t miss. Pharaoh looked like he’d never let Israel go. Rome looked like it could crush the early Church. But evil always underestimates the God of justice.
Evil loses because good doesn’t quit. Because people like Charlie Kirk lived and died knowing that their life wasn’t theirs to keep. Because love, fierce, muscular, holy love, is stronger than hate.
Charlie Kirk is gone. But he’s not gone. His words are still echoing in stadiums. His values are still burning in thousands of young hearts. His wife is still leading. His God is still sovereign.
The devil thought he won. He always thinks that.
But he’s wrong.
And he’s always destined to lose.




