🎪 THE CLARITY REPORT — SPECIAL EDITION

When Tragedy Points Us Toward God

Here’s my one observation about the Charlie Kirk controversy — and it’s not about suspects, lawsuits, influencers, or social media drama.

For a brief moment after Charlie Kirk died, the conversation wasn’t about personalities.
It wasn’t about platforms.
It wasn’t about clicks or accusations.

It was about Jesus.
It was about faith.
It was about revival.
It was about eternity.

People paused.
People prayed.
People reflected on life, death, and meaning.

And then — slowly — the focus shifted.

The story stopped being about what God might be doing in the midst of tragedy
and started being about who said what, who knew what, and who should be blamed.

That shift tells us something important — not about Charlie, not about Candace, not about any organization — but about human nature.

We are drawn to drama, even when God is calling us to discernment.
We are tempted by controversy, even when the moment calls for reverence.

My observation is simple:

👉 When tragedy points us toward God, we should resist the urge to pull it back toward ourselves.

If Charlie Kirk’s death led people to think more seriously about faith, truth, and eternity, that is not something to abandon once the news cycle heats up.

That is something to protect.

Because at the end of the day:
No amount of speculation brings a man back.
No amount of online argument heals a family.
And no amount of outrage replaces the hope found in Christ.

Let’s not lose the good God was doing
by chasing the noise of men.

🙏 CLARITY CLOSE

Run to win.
Be God’s friend.
And remember…

It pays to serve Jesus.

James T. Harris

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