WATCHMAN’S REPORT The Martyrdom of Charlie Kirk and the Rising Spirit of Antichrist


I. A Sobering Moment in Our Time

On September 10, 2025, Charlie Kirk—conservative activist, founder of Turning Point USA, and outspoken Christian—was fatally shot while speaking at Utah Valley University. His death sent shockwaves through the church, the conservative movement, and the hearts of many young believers who saw in him a bold voice for biblical truth in a culture increasingly hostile to righteousness.

Kirk was not a perfect man, nor did he claim to be. But he was a man who dared to speak truth in love, confronting cultural decay, defending biblical values, and empowering a generation of young Christians to stand firm in their convictions. His assassination, still under investigation, appears to be politically and spiritually charged—a flashpoint in the war between light and darkness.

Like Stephen in Acts 7, Charlie Kirk stood boldly before hostile crowds, proclaiming truth without compromise. And like Stephen, he paid the ultimate price. His death echoes the ancient cry: “Lord, do not hold this sin against them.” (Acts 7:60)


II. The Pattern Repeats

Jesus warned us plainly: “You will be hated by all for My name’s sake” (Matthew 10:22). The same spirit that cried “Crucify Him!” in Jerusalem now cries “Cancel him!” in our streets, campuses, and media. The same crowd that chose Barabbas over the sinless Son of God now cheers for chaos, rebellion, and moral inversion.

Charlie Kirk’s death is not just political violence—it is prophetic confirmation. The spirit of antichrist is not coming; it is here. It mocks holiness, persecutes truth-tellers, and seeks to silence the prophetic voice. It is a spirit that hates fathers, despises order, and exalts confusion. And it is increasingly emboldened.

As in the days of Elijah, when Jezebel sought to kill the prophets and silence the voice of God (1 Kings 19:2), so now the spirit of antichrist seeks to intimidate and eliminate those who speak truth. But just as God preserved a remnant then (1 Kings 19:18), He will preserve one now.


III. The Church Must Awaken

This is not a time for passive lament. It is a time for prophetic clarity and spiritual resolve. The children of God must recognize that we are not called to blend in—we are called to stand out. We are not called to appease culture—we are called to confront it.

Let us not forget: the Apostles were beaten, imprisoned, and executed for preaching Christ. Today, believers are mocked, censored, and even killed for doing the same. The persecution may look different, but the root is the same: the world hates the light because it exposes its darkness (John 3:19–20).

Like Daniel in Babylon, we must refuse to bow to cultural idols (Daniel 3:18). Like Esther, we must speak up “for such a time as this” (Esther 4:14). Like Paul, we must be ready to suffer for the sake of the gospel (2 Timothy 2:3).


IV. What Must We Do?

Here are Spirit-led responses for this hour:

  • Strengthen the Remnant: Equip believers—especially young ones—with biblical literacy, apologetics, and spiritual resilience. Let Charlie’s legacy provoke a generation to speak boldly and live faithfully.
  • Expose the Spirit of Antichrist: Teach discernment. Name the ideologies that oppose Christ—whether in media, education, or politics. Don’t just rebuke darkness; illuminate it with truth.
  • Reclaim the Public Square: Like Kirk, we must re-enter the arenas of debate, education, and culture—not with rage, but with reason, conviction, and compassion. The gospel is not fragile. It belongs in every sphere.
  • Pray and Prophesy: Intercede for our nation. Declare revival. Call the church back to the altar. The blood of the martyrs still speaks—and it calls us to action.
  • Honor the Martyrs: Let us not sanitize their sacrifice. Charlie Kirk’s death must not be reduced to a political statistic. It is a spiritual wake-up call. Let us honor him by continuing the work he began.

V. Final Exhortation

The world may hate us. The spirit of antichrist may rage. But we are not without hope. We are not without power. And we are not without assignment.

“Do not be surprised, brothers, that the world hates you.” (1 John 3:13) “But take heart; I have overcome the world.” (John 16:33)

Let the watchmen cry aloud. Let the church arise. Let the truth be spoken—no matter the cost.

As Isaiah declared, “Arise, shine, for your light has come, and the glory of the Lord rises upon you.” (Isaiah 60:1)

Let us be that light. Let us be that voice. Let us be that remnant—faithful until the end.

VI. Honor Roll of Martyrdom

The blood of the martyrs still speaks.

“Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us.” (Hebrews 12:1)

  • Stephen — stoned for proclaiming Christ, saw heaven open as he forgave his killers.
  • The Apostles — crucified, beheaded, exiled; each sealed their testimony with blood.
  • The Prophets — mocked, hunted, silenced for calling Israel back to covenant.
  • Joan of Arc — burned at the stake, condemned by religious and political powers alike.
  • Dietrich Bonhoeffer — executed for resisting Nazi tyranny and defending gospel truth.
  • Martin Luther King Jr. — assassinated for preaching justice, reconciliation, and nonviolence.
  • Charlie Kirk — slain for speaking truth in love, confronting cultural rebellion with conviction.

Change is Coming


There is a time for everything and a season for every activity under the heavens

I really enjoy the smell of burning leaves wafting through the air at the arrival of fall. Living in Western Pennsylvania I am blessed with a change of seasons 4 times a year. We experience the bleakness of winter with the countryside blanketed in white. This eventually gives way to the beauty of spring and a countryside bedazzled with brilliant colors. Summertime rolls in and backyards are alive with outdoor activity. Barbecues are ablaze. Swimming pools overflow with those attempting to escape hot and humid evenings. We return full circle back to fall and the brilliant colors of the changing leaves.

Nature teaches us that there is a season and a time for everything. Scripture amplifies this theme of nature. It declares that indeed there is a time for everything. There is also a season for every activity under heaven.

It is natural for nature to revolve in cycles. Earth’s orbit revolves in a cycle, which leads to our seasons. With just casual observation, we can see the cycles of life. There is a time to be born and a time to die. There is a time to plant and a time to reap what was planted. There is a time to gather and a time to scatter. There is a time to build up and a time to tear down. All this reflects the cycle of life. A modern-day idiom goes something like this, there’s nothing as constant as change. In fact, the only thing we can really count on is that things will change. Without change there’s no room for anything new. Fall serves a vital purpose. Old leaves fall to make way for new leaves that will appear in the spring. It is the order of life for the old to make way for the new.

Although things change some things remain constant, gravity for example and the laws of nature and of nature’s God. In order to support the changes of life, some things must remain constant and without change. If there were not gravity, then life as we know it would not exist. If the earth did not rotate on its axis, there would be no night and day. If the earth stopped revolving around the sun, the seasons would come to an end.

It is with that thought in mind that I address a rather disturbing trend in our society. Things that should not change are being altered quickly. At the same time, things that ought to change are being held as sacred. The latter being etched in stone, while that which was actually etched in stone is being done away with.

Earthly governments, principalities, and powers from the beginning until now are uniformly represented in the Scriptures as wild beasts. They are full of destructive savageness and offensive uncleanness. It is but folly and fanaticism for men to talk of Christian states and governments in this world. Christians and good men may be involved in their administration. Christian ideas may sometimes temper their enactments. However, earthly states and governments themselves are not Christian, and they cannot be. They are all the products of devastated nature’s wilds, and full of ungodliness. Fix it as we may, such is the result. The best-planned institutions and the wisest laws are ever disappointing their framers. The same can be said of the United States government.

It is not surprising then to find the Sovereign Law of the Land. Our Constitution is being ravaged. It is rewritten with hellacious fervor. God Himself delivered the very law on etched stone from Sinai’s thunder-shaken heights. However, this law could not restrain mankind from its sinful and destructive nature.

Many revolutions have been wrought. Men have labored, sacrificed, bled, and died to achieve freedom and just governance. They believed they would secure the precious boon for which the race has sighed and cried for ages. However, it was only a rearrangement of the chairs on the deck of the Titanic. It was an exercise in futility.

In our day, people wish for a grand ‘United Nations.’ They seek something shaped to populism and compacted by common laws and special interests. ‘Enlightened’ ideas are expected to rule so that all the world will become one. However, the result will be the embodiment of hell itself, full of blasphemy and lies. Good shall be called evil and that which is evil will be exalted as good.

Revolutions, creeds, and transformation, progressivism, and liberal ideologies seek to overturn old creeds and revise the Decalogue. They introduce vain philosophies of men. These attempts rule out a personal God and exalt self in His place. All man’s foolhardy ideas to reconstruct society may promise much and tug at the heart. However, they are destined to fail in the end. 

 
Indeed, all who delight in piety and are determined to live a devoted and godly life in Christ Jesus will meet with persecution [will be made to suffer because of their religious stand]. But wicked men and impostors will go on from bad to worse, deceiving and leading astray others and being deceived and led astray themselves. 2 Timothy 3:12-13 (AMP)

What should we do as Christians living in a fallen world? We are ruled by fallen men whose hearts and minds are being deceived. They are growing worse and worse. Should we simply throw our hands up in defeat? One could come to that conclusion when we review the events that took place in our country just last week. A couple of lone Senators stood-up to declare that the road we are traveling is ruinous. They insisted we need to go in an entirely new direction. They found themselves shouted down and demeaned for having the audacity to stand-up for what they believed to be right. These courageous men and women took a stand. They confronted the evil ideologies of those transforming our society. The few stood tall calling for a change. They wanted to change course. They wished to try something different. They were only told that what exists is ‘settled law.’ It is written in stone and not to be undone by them or anyone else. There was nothing they could do. So, we might as well surrender and sit down and shut up.

Most thinking people could easily argue that when a product proves defective, you repair, replace, or junk the product. Then you try something else. Only in government is it ever wrong to ask for a change. It is seen as wrong to argue for a better outcome. Daring to seek to right a wrong is also discouraged. Our Constitution allows ‘we the people’ to ‘Petition the Government for a Redress of Grievances.’ However, in all actuality, we are forbidden to do so.

Things need to change in D.C. There is no doubt about it, but things also need to change in the heartland of America. We need to regain our ‘righteous’ footing and restore the sure foundations upon which we wish to build our society. We cannot continue to allow the wholesale slaughter of innocent children, and the destruction or should I say the reconstruction of the family unit to go unchallenged. This must not be acceptable by those who call themselves Christian. I am afraid that there are too many “Christian” in name only. They are siding with the destruction of our society. They enable those in power to continue their onslaught.

We do need to choose sides. We can stand with the Lord and his laws. Alternatively, we can support those who are actively erasing any mention of God from our society. In the end there will only be two camps. Those who are standing with the Lord when he returns and those who will be fighting against the Lord. Which side do you suppose comes out victorious?

The Son of Man will send forth His angels, and they will gather out of His kingdom all causes of offense [persons by whom others are drawn into error or sin] and all who do iniquity and act wickedly and will cast them into the furnace of fire; there will be weeping and wailing and grinding of teeth. Then will the righteous (those who are upright and in right standing with God) shine forth like the sun in the kingdom of their Father. Let him who has ears [to hear] be listening and let him consider and perceive and understand by hearing. Matthew 13:41-43 (AMP)

Yes, indeed things will change. A law will be established. That which was sent down from heaven will once again become the chief cornerstone. It is the rock that the builders of our current societal structure have rejected. God’s law is the only one that is ‘settled’.


“All flesh is as grass, And all the glory of man as the flower of the grass. The grass withers, And its flower falls away, But the word of the LORD endures forever.”  1 Peter 1:24-25 (NKJV)

This has been a View From the Nest. And that is the way I see it. What say you?

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Along for the Journey. Allen Frederick

Modern Towers of Babble: Broadcasting Confusion in the Name of Clarity


🌀 Modern Towers of Babble: Broadcasting Confusion in the Name of Clarity

We are living in an age of amplified voices and diminished discernment. Platforms promise clarity, but deliver confusion. Ministries chase relevance while forfeiting reverence. Like the builders of Babel, we construct towers of talk — lofty, impressive, and tragically misaligned. In our quest to be heard, we’ve forgotten how to listen. Modern Towers of Babble isn’t just a critique of culture. It’s a call to return to Spirit-led silence and sacred speech. It’s also about the clarity that only comes from communion, not commentary.

“Remember this, my dear brothers and sisters: Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak, and should not get angry easily.”James 1:19 (GW)

I don’t know about you. I’m growing weary of all the talk. It’s the endless chatter that fills our screens, our feeds, and our minds. The 24-hour news cycle has become a relentless echo chamber. Multiple cable channels now exist solely to broadcast commentary, speculation, and opinion around the clock. Each one features its own cadre of talking heads, dissecting the day’s hot topic with surgical precision and emotional fervor.

You’d think with all this talking, something good might come of it. But let’s be honest: most of it is negative, divisive, and draining. If you consume too much of this “news speak,” it doesn’t inform—it infects. It doesn’t enlighten—it exhausts.

“When there are many words, sin is unavoidable, but the one who controls his lips is wise.”Proverbs 10:19 (HCSB)

Scripture doesn’t mince words here. Proverbs warns us that when speech multiplies, error is inevitable. As believers, we’re called to steward our words—not just to speak truth, but to speak it in love. Our speech should build up, not break down. It should heal, not harm.

“Finally, brothers and sisters, keep your thoughts on whatever is right or deserves praise: things that are true, honorable, fair, pure, acceptable, or commendable.”Philippians 4:8 (GW)

This isn’t just a call to positive thinking—it’s a call to spiritual discipline. In a world saturated with noise, we must be intentional about what we dwell on and what we declare. Not every opinion deserves a platform. Not every headline deserves our attention. And not every voice deserves our agreement.

“Let no corrupt communication proceed from your mouth, but that which is good to the use of edifying, that it may minister grace unto the hearers.”Ephesians 4:29 (KJV)

What is corrupt communication? It is not just profanity. It also includes lies, misleading statements, biased commentary, slander, false accusations, and half-truths. Additionally, it involves twisting scripture or reality to suit a narrative.

There’s an old saying: “Let your words be sweet, for you never know how many you may have to eat.” Or even better: “If you don’t have anything good to say, say nothing at all.”

So here’s my challenge: Let’s be slow to speak, quick to listen, and even quicker to discern. Let’s resist the echo chamber and return to the still, small voice of truth. Because in a world addicted to noise, silence—when Spirit-led—can be revolutionary.

And that’s the way I see it. What say you?

This has been a View From the Nest be sure to comment, like and share.

SUNDAY DRIVE: THE PARABLE OF THE FAILED TRAFFIC LIGHT



🚦The Parable of the Failed Traffic Light

Most would agree that traffic lights exist to create order at busy intersections. They don’t think, adapt, or show discernment — they simply function. But what happens when the systems we’ve come to depend on go offline?

That’s exactly what I witnessed one day: two traffic lights out on a heavily traveled stretch of road. According to conventional wisdom — and the traffic engineers who installed them — their absence should have caused chaos. Instead, something extraordinary happened: peaceful order emerged. Drivers slowed, considered others, and moved cautiously through the intersection. No honking, no wrecks, no gridlock. Just mutual respect and personal responsibility.

What a picture of what’s possible when people operate not by rigid control, but by internal conviction.

🔥Spiritual Spark

This moment reminded me of the difference between law and grace. Laws are good — needed even — to teach boundaries and consequences. But they’re passive tools. Grace, however, is active. It empowers. When the light was out, drivers leaned not on a device but on discernment. Similarly, when we operate under grace, we move with humility. We act with caution. We have a shared awareness that we’re not the only ones on the road.

God didn’t create us to be micro-managed. He gave us the Holy Spirit — the ultimate inner guidance system — to navigate life with wisdom.

“I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts. I will be their God, and they will be my people.”Jeremiah 31:33

This new covenant re-centers our spiritual flow not around blinking lights and external control, but around responsive hearts. The civil cooperation I witnessed at the failed intersection mirrored a kind of Kingdom living. Each person was yielding, aware, gracious, and sober-minded.

📖Scriptural Infusion

Let’s layer in a few more connections:

  • Romans 8:14“For those who are led by the Spirit of God are the children of God.”
    → Spirit-led believers aren’t reckless; they’re responsive.
  • Galatians 5:22–23“But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance… Against such things there is no law.”
    → When the Spirit governs, the need for excessive regulation diminishes.
  • 1 Corinthians 10:23“‘I have the right to do anything,’ you say—but not everything is beneficial.”
    → Freedom without wisdom is a collision course. But freedom exercised in love builds a civil and spiritual society.

Reflection Question for the Ride:
When “the lights go out” in your life, how do you respond? When systems fail, how do you react? What do you do when you’re left without outside guidance? Do you lean into the Spirit within, or do you panic without?

You were made for more than controlled stops and starts. The traffic of life might be dense, but grace empowers you to move with purpose, empathy, and faith.

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Promoting the General Welfare


Philippians 2:4 (HCSB)
4 Everyone should look out not only for his own interests, but also for the interests of others.

The Preamble to our Constitution reads: We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America. The Constitution therefore was established with an express purpose of securing justice, domestic tranquility, defense, promote the well-being of its citizenry, and secure liberty now and into the future. How are we doing?

“Tocqueville began with a shocker: That the first political institution of American democracy is religion. His thesis went something like this: The premises of secular materialism do not sustain democracy, but undermine it, while the premises of Judaism and Christianity include and by inductive experience lead to democracy, uplift it, carry it over its inherent weaknesses, and sustain it.

[Because of its] own inherent tendencies, democracy tends to lower tastes and passions, to devolve into materialistic preoccupations, and to undercut its own principles by a morally indifferent relativism. Further, democracy left to itself tends to surrender liberty to the passion for security and equality, and thus to end in a new soft despotism, tied down with a thousand silken threads by a benign authority.”