
Erika Kirk stood before a massive crowd, her voice wavering under the weight of grief, yet brimming with conviction. She spoke of the shock of seeing Charlie’s body — the heartbreak, the sorrow — moments that no one should ever have to live through. But she also spoke of a strange peace, of mercy in tragedy, and of a man who had lived so fully that his legacy could not be dimmed even by death.
Erika expressed a painful sense that Charlie was taken too early, just when so much was still possible. They had built so much together: family, mission, faith. Yet even in that pain, joy glimmered — joy in knowing that hundreds of thousands came to say goodbye, that people traveled from far and wide, that his message had taken root in many hearts.

She affirmed that Charlie lived a life without regrets. That though his work was unfinished, his business — his purpose — had already made its mark. That his love, his faith, and his mission would continue. And in forgiving the one who killed him, she modeled the radical mercy she believed Charlie would have shown.