Erika Kirk sat down with conservative audiences this week to carry forward her late husband’s final message, discussing the book Charlie finished just weeks before he was shot and killed on September 10, 2025. The conversation — part tribute and part call to action — reminded patriots that Charlie’s voice still matters, and that his last work was never about politics first but about saving the soul of a nation.
The book, Stop, in the Name of God: Why Honoring the Sabbath Will Transform Your Life, is a direct rebuke to the frenetic, soulless pace Big Tech and the cultural establishment foist on American families. Charlie argues for one intentional day of rest — to put down the phone, reconnect with God and loved ones, and rebuild the civic virtues that made this country great.
Erika, now leading Turning Point USA and carrying the mantle of his legacy, spoke with steady conviction about how the Sabbath made Charlie a better husband and father and how his last pages read like his final words to the country. Her grief is real, but so is her resolve to make sure his work lives on as a blueprint for rebuilding community and resisting the atomizing forces of modern life.
This is not soft religion for the private sphere; it is strategic culture-war ammunition. Conservatives should welcome a serious, faith-based blueprint that asks Americans to reject the consumerist, digital treadmill the left and their corporate partners profit from, and instead cultivate rooted families and responsible citizens. The book’s instant traction shows there is hunger across the country for common-sense spiritual renewal.
Mainstream media and the cultural elites will try to spin or ignore this message, but the simple truth Charlie shared — that rest strengthens virtue, family, and faith — is an existential counterweight to the chaos they celebrate. If conservatives want to win not just elections but hearts, we should promote practices that make people human again: Sabbath, community, and real conversation without screens.
Patriotic Americans owe it to Charlie’s memory to read his final work, wrestle with its challenges, and fight for a public life where faith and family come before algorithms and applause. Erika Kirk’s brave stewardship of that legacy is exactly the steady leadership the movement needs right now, and her message is a clarion call to reclaim our time, our kids, and our country.






