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Opening – Charlie Kirk

Brothers and sisters, tonight we mourn the death of Charlie Kirk. Reports say that he was shot in the neck while standing on a stage, debating about the very issue of gun violence. The irony is heavy—he was a man who defended the Second Amendment, and he lost his life in a moment where the issue itself was at the center of discussion.

Charlie was the only one setting up debates between his enemies to try and bridge the gap between both parties. He willingly allowed those who hated him to have a voice. He did not have a security detail, was not under secret service protection and was martyred for standing up and speaking for what he believed in.

Charlie was quoted saying, “when respectful debates no longer happen, that is where violence begins.”

Charlie Kirk has passed away from a gun shot wound to his neck. Charles James Kirk (October 14, 1993 – September 10, 2025) was an American right-wing political activist, author, and media personality. He co-founded the conservative organization Turning Point USA (TPUSA) in 2012 and was its executive director. He was the chief executive officer (CEO) of Turning Point Action (TPAction) and a member of the Council for National Policy (CNP). The Washington Post described him as “one of the most prominent voices on the right” in his later years.

Kirk was born and raised in the Chicago suburbs of Arlington Heights and Prospect Heights, Illinois. In high school, Kirk actively engaged in politics, supporting Mark Kirk (no relation) and his U.S. Senate campaign, as well as campaigning against a price increase in his school’s cafeteria. He briefly attended Harper College before dropping out to pursue political activism full-time, influenced by Tea Party member Bill Montgomery. In 2012, Kirk founded TPUSA, a conservative student organization that quickly grew with backing from donors like Foster Friess.

Kirk expanded the organization’s influence through initiatives like the Professor Watchlist and School Board Watchlist, which sought to fire or silence professors for sharing opinions opposed by Turning Point. Critics called this a form of modern day McCarthyism. In 2019, Kirk founded Turning Point Action, a political advocacy arm, and later, with Pentecostal pastor Rob McCoy, formed Turning Point Faith—aimed at mobilizing religious communities on conservative issues. Kirk hosted The Charlie Kirk Show, a conservative talk radio program. A key ally of Donald Trump, Kirk promoted conservative and Trump-aligned causes. He received criticism for a variety of controversial statements, especially regarding his opposition to gun control, abortion, LGBTQ rights, his criticism of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Martin Luther King Jr., and his promotion of Christian nationalism, COVID-19 misinformation, false claims of electoral fraud in 2020, and the Great Replacement conspiracy theory.

Today, on September 2025, Kirk was shot and killed at the age of 31 while speaking at a TPUSA event on the campus of Utah Valley University (UVU), as part of his long-running public debate events at higher education institutions across the United States. The shooting, part of a larger problem of political violence in the United States, received international attention and condemnation.

Charlie was born in the Chicago suburb of Arlington Heights, Illinois, and raised in nearby Prospect Heights. His mother is a mental health counselor, and his father is an architect. Kirk was a member of the Boy Scouts of America and earned the rank of Eagle Scout. In 2010, during his junior year at Wheeling High School, he volunteered for the successful U.S. Senate campaign of Illinois Republican Mark Kirk (no relation). In his senior year, Kirk created a campaign to reverse a price increase for cookies at his school. He also wrote an essay for Breitbart News alleging liberal bias in high school textbooks, which led to an appearance on Fox Business. Kirk attended Harper College near Chicago. He withdrew before completing a degree or certificate.

At a subsequent speaking engagement at Benedictine University’s “Youth Empowerment Day”, Kirk met Bill Montgomery, a retiree more than 50 years his senior, who was then a Tea Party–backed legislative candidate. Montgomery encouraged Kirk to engage in political activism full-time. He subsequently founded Turning Point USA (TPUSA), a “grass-roots organization to rival liberal groups such as MoveOn.org.” At the 2012 Republican National Convention, Kirk met Foster Friess, a prominent Republican donor, and persuaded him to finance the organization.

Irony of his death while debating guns“The wise have eyes in their head, while the fool walks in the darkness; but I came to realize that the same fate overtakes them both.” (Ecclesiastes 2:14)

Guns are not the problem; sin and brokenness are“For from within, out of the heart of man, come evil thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery.” (Mark 7:21)

Elite using tragedy to seize freedoms“For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world.” (Ephesians 6:12)

Division as their tool“Every kingdom divided against itself will be ruined, and every city or household divided against itself will not stand.” (Matthew 12:25)

Human life is sacred beyond politics“So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them.” (Genesis 1:27)

Not God’s wrath, but a nation stepping away“Since they did not think it worthwhile to retain the knowledge of God, so God gave them over to a depraved mind.” (Romans 1:28)

God stepping aside when a nation rejects Him“My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge. Because you have rejected knowledge, I also reject you as my priests.” (Hosea 4:6)

Signs of end-time unraveling“You will hear of wars and rumors of wars… Nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom. There will be famines and earthquakes in various places. All these are the beginning of birth pains.” (Matthew 24:6–8)

Hope in Christ despite chaos“God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, though the earth give way and the mountains fall into the heart of the sea.” (Psalm 46:1–2)

But let me be clear: guns are not the problem. The weapon is only an instrument. The deeper sickness is found within our society, in broken minds, in untreated wounds of the heart, and in a culture that has been hollowed out of virtue. The real crisis is not in steel and powder, but in the spiritual and mental health of our people.

And yet, every time a tragedy like this strikes, the elite rise up with one voice. They will use Charlie’s death as another reason to strip away freedoms. They will not mourn him as a man, but as a political pawn. They will seize the moment, twisting it into another opportunity to divide us further. That is how their machine works—feed off blood, feed off fear, feed off division.

But we cannot let ourselves be swept into their current. Before Charlie was a public activist, he was a human being. A soul. A son. A friend. A brother in Christ. His death is not a headline—it is the tearing away of a life made in the image of God. And we must not let politics rob us of that truth.

To my brothers and sisters in Christ: do not let anyone tell you this is God’s wrath. This is not the punishment of the faithful. Scripture tells us that judgment begins when a nation tells God, “We don’t need You.” America has said those words in a thousand ways—in our laws, our schools, our entertainment, our very culture. And when a nation says, “We can handle this without You,” God does what He has always done. He steps aside. And when He steps aside, the forces of chaos rush in. That is what we are seeing now.

This is not random. It is tied into the same current that moves wars, collapses empires, and prepares the ground for what the prophets warned us about—the bilabial conflicts, the brother against brother, the false peace, and the great shaking of the end times. Charlie’s death is not an isolated moment. It is a signpost pointing us toward a world that is unraveling.

But do not despair. God has not abandoned us. He has not forgotten His people. When the flood rises, He still builds an ark. When Babylon burns, He still preserves a remnant. And when nations rage, His kingdom is not moved.

So tonight, even in our grief, we hold to hope. Hope that Christ is still Lord. Hope that death is not the end. Hope that the shaking of this world is only the birth pains of a greater kingdom to come.

Let us remember Charlie not as a political warrior alone, but as a man made in the image of God. Let us resist the lies that seek to divide us. Let us cling to the truth that only in Christ is there peace. And let us lift our eyes, for our redemption is drawing near.

Let us also forgive those who are slandering and celebrating his death. For Jesus showed us this example that they know not what they are doing. The one and final commandment Jesus gave above all was to love god and love your neighbor the same. Please try and remember this as you grieve.

Monologue

There are voices in the Church that come and go, stirring emotion for a season but fading when the world shifts its attention. Then there are voices that endure, not because of showmanship or spectacle, but because of truth. Andrew Wommack is one of those voices. For more than fifty years, he has declared a simple message: the work of Christ is already finished, and the believer’s task is not to beg God for what He has already provided, but to believe, receive, and walk in it.

His life did not begin in the spotlight. He was a Texas boy who, in 1968, encountered the living God in a way that altered the course of everything. From that moment forward, he chose to put down tradition and pick up the Word. He was not trained in ivory towers or polished seminaries; his education came through long hours in prayer and the Scriptures. What came out of that quiet devotion was a revelation that would impact millions: grace and faith, working together, unlock the reality of God’s promises.

Wommack’s message was both liberating and offensive. Liberating, because it freed believers from the crushing weight of legalism and the hopelessness of begging God for scraps from His table. Offensive, because it challenged centuries of church tradition and dared to declare that healing, prosperity, and victory were not luxuries, but birthrights of the redeemed. He taught that Jesus had already provided everything through the cross, and that faith was not a tool to manipulate God, but a response to what He had already done.

He did not stop at words alone. His faith was tested in living rooms, hospital wards, and through the countless testimonies of those who took him at his word and saw God’s power manifest in their lives. What began with a small Bible study and a radio program in the 1970s grew into a worldwide ministry. Through books, broadcasts, and the founding of Charis Bible College, Andrew created a pipeline for discipleship that continues to multiply long after his voice leaves the pulpit.

This is not the story of a celebrity preacher or a man who built monuments to himself. It is the story of a servant who believed God and taught others to do the same. Andrew Wommack’s legacy is not only in the institutions he founded, but in the countless believers who discovered their identity in Christ through his teaching. Tonight, we honor not just a man, but the grace of God that flowed through him to set captives free.

Part 1: Early Life and the Call of God

Andrew Wommack’s story begins not with fame, nor with a pulpit in a great cathedral, but with a young man in Texas who hungered for God. Born in 1949, he grew up in a simple family environment, but at the age of 18 his life was forever altered. On March 23, 1968, Andrew encountered the presence of God so profoundly that he described it as feeling the pure love of Christ flood his heart. In that moment, everything changed. His plans, his ambitions, even his sense of self melted away before the call of God.

Unlike many who pursue ministry through polished institutions, Andrew’s training came through raw devotion. He spent hours in the Word, pouring over the Scriptures, not to impress others, but to know God intimately. Prayer and study became his school. Faith and obedience became his curriculum. While others sought credentials, Andrew sought relationship. That foundation would shape every sermon, every teaching, and every outreach that followed.

But his beginnings were humble. He pastored small congregations, often with only a handful of people in attendance. He served faithfully in places where there was no applause and little financial support. Yet in those hidden years, Andrew learned the principle that defined his entire ministry: God’s Word is enough. When you believe it and act on it, it will produce results, no matter how small the setting.

It was in these early days that Andrew also began to teach the revelation that had so captured his heart: grace and faith working together. He saw clearly in Scripture that believers did not need to beg God for blessing—He had already provided it through the finished work of Jesus. The Christian’s role was not to convince God to move, but to believe what God had already done. This message, first preached to living rooms and tiny churches in Texas, would one day ripple across the globe.

Part 2: The Simplicity of the Gospel

When Andrew Wommack began to preach, he quickly discovered something that disturbed him: much of the church had complicated the Gospel. What was meant to be “good news” had been buried under layers of tradition, rules, and human effort. People were worn out trying to please God, convinced that His love was conditional and His blessings scarce. Andrew saw this not as faith, but as bondage.

His teaching cut through that fog. He reminded believers that the Gospel was never meant to be a burden. It was simple, it was liberating, and it was centered on the cross of Christ. The message was not “try harder” or “earn God’s approval,” but “receive what Jesus has already purchased.” To Andrew, religion had made things complex, but Scripture was clear: salvation was a gift, grace was sufficient, and God’s promises were for today.

This simplicity became the hallmark of his ministry. He often said, “If it’s complicated, it’s probably not God.” He taught people that they didn’t need years of theology to know God’s love, only faith to believe His Word. In homes, in small churches, and later on radio, he repeated the same truth with patient consistency: God is good, His Word is true, and you can trust Him.

For many, this was revolutionary. Men and women who had lived under the crushing weight of guilt discovered freedom. Those who thought God was angry at them heard, maybe for the first time, that He had already forgiven them through Christ. The simplicity of the Gospel set them free. And this simple, uncompromising message would become the seedbed for the global ministry that followed.

Part 3: Grace and Faith Together

At the very center of Andrew Wommack’s teaching is a revelation that became his life’s banner: grace and faith are not enemies, nor are they separate truths—they are two sides of the same coin. Grace is what God has already accomplished through Jesus Christ, freely given and complete. Faith is man’s response, not to twist God’s arm, but to take hold of what has already been provided.

Andrew explained it with clarity that stripped away confusion. Grace without faith becomes passive, leaving believers waiting for God to do what He has already done. Faith without grace becomes legalism, striving and exhausting the soul in endless attempts to earn what God has already freely given. But when grace and faith are joined, believers step into the balance of receiving and walking in God’s promises.

This was not theory for Andrew; it was a revelation that marked his own life. He testified that when he stopped pleading with God and instead believed the Word, he saw answers come—healing, provision, direction, and transformed lives. For Andrew, faith was not about forcing God’s hand, but about resting in the finished work of Christ and acting accordingly.

His book Living in the Balance of Grace and Faith became a cornerstone of his teaching ministry, crystallizing this revelation for believers worldwide. Thousands found themselves freed from cycles of guilt and futility, stepping instead into a life of assurance and joy. They learned, often for the first time, that God was not holding out on them—He had already given all things that pertain to life and godliness.

Grace and faith together became Andrew Wommack’s anthem. It was the message that transformed his tiny congregations into thriving discipleship movements, and it continues to echo through every broadcast, book, and Bible college classroom that bears his imprint.

Part 4: Healing as Part of Redemption

From the beginning, Andrew Wommack refused to separate the work of salvation from the promise of healing. For him, Isaiah’s words were not poetic exaggeration but a divine guarantee: “By His stripes we are healed.” Just as Jesus bore our sins, Andrew declared, He also bore our sicknesses. To deny that truth was, in Andrew’s eyes, to diminish the completeness of the cross.

This conviction put him at odds with much of the modern church, where healing was often treated as optional, outdated, or reserved for the sovereign will of God in rare cases. Andrew’s response was simple and bold: “Jesus already paid for your healing—it’s part of the package.” He taught that believers did not have to beg God for health but to receive what was already provided in Christ.

Testimonies began to follow. People reported being healed from chronic illnesses, terminal diagnoses, and lifelong conditions simply by believing and standing on the Word Andrew preached. These stories were not framed as miracles reserved for the few, but as proof of a spiritual law at work. Just as faith activates grace for salvation, so faith activates grace for healing.

Andrew himself witnessed personal breakthroughs that solidified this truth. He shared accounts of praying for the sick and watching impossible conditions reverse before his eyes. To him, these were not extraordinary events, but the natural outworking of the Gospel when it was believed without compromise.

Critics accused him of being reckless, of offering “false hope,” or of aligning with the so-called prosperity movement. But Andrew did not waver. His stance was unwavering because his authority did not come from church councils or traditions but from the Scriptures themselves. Healing, he insisted, was not a side benefit; it was part of redemption’s core.

And so, in homes, churches, and auditoriums around the world, Andrew Wommack’s message released faith in the hearts of countless believers. To the weary, he offered hope. To the sick, he offered healing. And to all, he offered a reminder that Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever.

Part 5: The Authority of the Believer

Another pillar of Andrew Wommack’s teaching was the truth that believers are not powerless subjects waiting on God’s intervention—they are children of God, vested with the authority of Christ Himself. Andrew often said that Christians spend too much time asking God to do what He has already equipped them to do. To him, the New Testament was clear: Jesus gave His disciples power over demons, authority to heal the sick, and the mandate to proclaim liberty. That commission did not expire with the apostles; it belongs to every believer.

Andrew’s teaching on authority was both practical and liberating. He explained that the same Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead lives in us, which means the devil, sickness, and even fear must bow to the Word spoken by a believer in faith. He often pointed to James 4:7—“Resist the devil, and he will flee from you”—as a verse many had ignored. He emphasized that the responsibility to resist was ours, not God’s, and that victory came when Christians stood in their rightful place of authority.

This message awakened countless believers who had been living in defeat. People who once begged God to remove their problems learned instead to speak directly to the mountain, commanding it to move in Jesus’ name. Families reclaimed peace. Individuals broke free from addictions. The oppressed discovered that they did not need to fear the enemy—they had already been given dominion over him.

Andrew himself modeled this authority in his ministry. He told stories of praying against storms, resisting sickness in his own household, and standing firm against spiritual opposition. He never claimed it was about his power but about Christ’s power flowing through anyone who would believe. The authority of the believer was not a mystical privilege for the few but a birthright for all who are in Christ.

For many, this teaching was the missing piece that transformed their Christian walk from passive religion to active victory. No longer did they see themselves as victims of circumstance, but as ambassadors of a kingdom that cannot be shaken. And at the center of it all was Andrew’s simple reminder: “You already have what it takes, because Christ lives in you.”

Part 6: Media Ministry Expansion

If Andrew Wommack had remained in small churches and living room Bible studies, his impact would have been significant but localized. Yet God had a wider audience in mind. In 1976, Andrew stepped into radio broadcasting, launching a program that carried his calm, steady voice beyond the walls of his congregation. With little more than a microphone and faith, the message of grace and faith began to travel where Andrew himself could not go.

What started small quickly gained momentum. Listeners resonated with the clarity of his teaching. There were no theatrics, no emotional manipulation—just Scripture explained with simplicity and conviction. His Texas drawl became a familiar sound to believers searching for truth. Tapes and cassette teachings soon circulated across the United States, reaching people who had never set foot in a charismatic church.

In time, radio gave way to television. The “Gospel Truth” broadcast expanded Andrew’s reach to millions worldwide. His message was not packaged with polished production or flashy gimmicks. It remained the same: God’s Word works, and believers can trust it. People who would never attend a revival meeting found themselves tuning in day after day, receiving steady doses of revelation that reshaped their understanding of God.

The media ministry not only spread Andrew’s teaching but also laid the groundwork for discipleship movements that would spring up across continents. Testimonies poured in—families restored, bodies healed, faith renewed—all because someone heard a simple message over the airwaves. In an era when many preachers sought fame, Andrew used media not for celebrity but for multiplication. His goal was not to be seen, but for Christ to be known.

By embracing media, Andrew Wommack stepped into a new season of ministry. The living room preacher became a global voice, and the truths first whispered in small gatherings began echoing across nations. The seed of the Gospel was being scattered far and wide, preparing the way for an even greater vision: training disciples face to face.

Part 7: Founding Charis Bible College

As Andrew Wommack’s teaching spread through radio, television, and books, he realized something profound: information alone was not enough. The Church was filled with converts, but it was starving for disciples. People needed more than sermons—they needed training, mentorship, and immersion in God’s Word. Out of that conviction came one of the greatest works of his ministry: the founding of Charis Bible College in 1994.

Located in Colorado Springs, Charis was never designed to be a traditional seminary. Andrew’s vision was not to produce theologians who debated in ivory towers, but disciples who lived out the Gospel with power and boldness. At Charis, the Word of God was central. Students were not only taught doctrine but also how to apply it—to walk in healing, to exercise authority, to live in grace, and to share the Gospel with confidence.

The school began modestly, with just a handful of students, but quickly grew into a global movement. Branch campuses spread across the United States and into nations abroad, multiplying Andrew’s reach through those he trained. The college became a greenhouse for future pastors, missionaries, teachers, and everyday believers who carried the message of grace and faith into their own communities.

What set Charis apart was its balance. Academic teaching was paired with spiritual formation. Classroom lessons were reinforced with practical ministry opportunities. Students were encouraged not only to know the Word but to do it—to lay hands on the sick, to cast out fear, to walk in the fullness of what Christ provided. For Andrew, this was discipleship in action: equipping believers to become world-changers.

Today, Charis Bible College stands as a living legacy of Andrew Wommack’s vision. It embodies his passion for raising up disciples who will take the simple Gospel to the ends of the earth. Through its graduates, his influence multiplies exponentially, proving that one man’s obedience can spark a movement that reshapes nations.

Part 8: Controversies and Criticism

No voice that speaks with clarity into the fog of religion escapes resistance. Andrew Wommack’s ministry, though grounded in Scripture and humility, faced its share of controversy. Some accused him of preaching a “prosperity gospel,” others dismissed his teaching on healing as dangerous, and still others claimed his emphasis on authority and grace undermined traditional church structures. Wherever his message went, it provoked both freedom and offense.

Andrew never denied that his words cut across long-standing traditions. He openly challenged doctrines that portrayed God as distant, angry, or unpredictable. He resisted the idea that sickness might be “God’s will” or that believers must suffer to earn holiness. To many, these statements sounded reckless. To Andrew, they were simply faithfulness to what the Word declared. His boldness created friction with denominations that preferred safe, domesticated theology.

Critics wrote articles, issued warnings, and even labeled him a false teacher. But Andrew’s defense was never rooted in debate; it was in fruit. Lives were being changed. People were walking free from guilt, healed of disease, and stepping into ministries of their own. For him, that was proof enough. He often said, “If the Word of God works, the results will speak for themselves.” And indeed, they did.

Yet controversy also tested his heart. Would he water down his message for the sake of acceptance? Would he soften the sharp edge of truth to fit into denominational boxes? Andrew chose instead to stay the course. With a steady voice and unshaken conviction, he continued teaching the same revelation that had shaped his own life. Over the decades, that consistency won him respect, even from some who once opposed him.

In the end, the controversies only highlighted the strength of his ministry. He was not a man swayed by applause or criticism, but by the conviction that God’s Word is true. And while some may still disagree with him, none can deny that Andrew Wommack remained faithful to the revelation entrusted to him.

Part 9: Legacy of Discipleship

When history looks back on Andrew Wommack’s life, it will not only remember the radio programs, the television broadcasts, or even the founding of Charis Bible College. His truest legacy will be measured in disciples—men and women who were transformed by the Gospel he preached and who carried that same message into their families, workplaces, and nations.

Andrew often said that the Church was too focused on making converts when Jesus had commanded us to make disciples. A convert may believe, but a disciple follows. A convert may attend church, but a disciple lives the Word daily. This conviction shaped everything he built. His books, teachings, and schools were designed not just to deliver knowledge, but to create lives that mirrored the authority, grace, and power of Christ.

Through his discipleship model, Andrew multiplied himself. Graduates of Charis Bible College went on to plant churches, lead ministries, and transform communities around the world. Thousands of testimonies poured in—stories of people once bound in legalism or despair now walking free in faith. Each testimony became another stone in the monument of his legacy.

But his discipleship emphasis was never limited to institutions. He encouraged parents to disciple their children, spouses to disciple one another, and believers to disciple friends. For Andrew, discipleship was not a program but a lifestyle, rooted in relationship and sustained by the Word.

Even now, his voice echoes through generations. His writings and recorded teachings continue to train new believers who may never meet him in person but who still receive the fruit of his revelation. In this way, Andrew’s legacy is alive, multiplying far beyond what one man could achieve in a lifetime.

Andrew Wommack’s greatest accomplishment is not found in the number of people who listened to him, but in the number of people who became disciples of Christ because of him. That is a legacy that will endure into eternity.

Part 10: A Faith That Still Speaks

Though Andrew Wommack has spent more than half a century in ministry, his message has never shifted. It remains as steady as the Word he preaches: God’s grace is sufficient, faith is powerful, and the believer is fully equipped in Christ. His calm, measured voice continues to ring out on radio, television, and in the classrooms of Charis Bible College, carrying the same truth that began in living rooms decades ago.

His faith still speaks—not only through broadcasts and books, but through the lives of those he has discipled. Every missionary sent from Charis, every church planted by a graduate, every testimony of healing or restoration sparked by his teaching carries forward the resonance of his faith. Like Abel in Hebrews 11, Andrew’s life testifies long after the words leave his lips.

Andrew’s story is not one of sudden fame or dramatic flair. It is the story of steady obedience, of one man who chose to believe the Bible above tradition and to stay faithful year after year. That consistency built a platform not for his own name, but for the name of Jesus to be magnified. His faithfulness in the ordinary produced extraordinary fruit.

As he often reminded his listeners, the Christian life is not about begging God to move but about recognizing that He already has. That truth, spoken by Andrew Wommack thousands of times, continues to set people free today. His voice has become a beacon of clarity in a confused age, reminding the world that the cross was enough, and that believers can live in victory now, not someday in the future.

Andrew Wommack’s faith still speaks. It speaks in every disciple, in every testimony, and in every heart that dares to believe God at His Word. And that voice, rooted in grace and faith, will echo through generations until the day Christ returns.

Conclusion

Andrew Wommack’s life is a witness that the Gospel of Jesus Christ is both simple and complete. From his earliest days in Texas to the founding of Charis Bible College, he has carried one message with unshaken consistency: God’s grace has already provided everything, and faith is how we take hold of it. That truth—so simple yet so often missed—has set millions free.

His journey shows us that greatness in the Kingdom is not built on fame or fortune but on faithfulness. Andrew never sought to impress; he sought to obey. He never polished his ministry for applause; he delivered the Word in its purity. In doing so, he became a servant whose voice carried far beyond pulpits or programs. His disciples, his students, and his readers are now the living letters of his ministry, scattered across the nations.

The controversies, the criticisms, even the misunderstandings have not diminished the fruit of his work. Instead, they have revealed the strength of a man who anchored his life in Scripture and trusted God to vindicate His Word. Andrew Wommack’s story is not about the triumph of personality but about the triumph of the Gospel itself.

As we honor him, we are reminded that God still raises up men and women who cut through the noise with the clarity of truth. Andrew’s legacy calls us to live as disciples, not just converts—to walk in grace, to stand in authority, and to believe God for the impossible. His life proves that one voice, yielded to God, can echo across generations.

So we close not with the story of a man, but with the reminder of the message he lived and preached: Jesus has done it all, and the Gospel is still the power of God unto salvation. Andrew Wommack’s faith speaks because it points us to the One who is faithful and true.

Sources

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlie_Kirk

Bibliography

  • Wommack, Andrew. Spirit, Soul & Body. Harrison House, 1998.
  • Wommack, Andrew. Living in the Balance of Grace and Faith. Harrison House, 2009.
  • Wommack, Andrew. Sharper Than a Two-Edged Sword. Harrison House, 2011.
  • Wommack, Andrew. The Believer’s Authority. Harrison House, 2012.
  • Wommack, Andrew. Don’t Limit God. Harrison House, 2014.
  • Wommack, Andrew. A Better Way to Pray. Harrison House, 2007.
  • Charis Bible College. Foundational Teachings and Curriculum. Woodland Park, CO: Andrew Wommack Ministries, 1994–present.
  • Andrew Wommack Ministries International. The Gospel Truth Broadcast. Colorado Springs, CO. 1976–present.

Endnotes

  1. Andrew Wommack’s personal testimony of encountering God’s love on March 23, 1968, is a recurring account in his teachings and interviews, often cited as the moment that redirected his life into ministry.
  2. The teaching of grace and faith together as complementary truths is a central theme in Wommack’s book Living in the Balance of Grace and Faith (2009).
  3. His emphasis on healing as part of redemption draws heavily from Isaiah 53:4–5 and 1 Peter 2:24, passages frequently referenced in his book Spirit, Soul & Body (1998).
  4. The concept of the believer’s authority is expanded in Wommack’s teaching series and book The Believer’s Authority (2012).
  5. Charis Bible College, founded in 1994 in Colorado Springs, became the institutional outworking of Wommack’s discipleship model, which emphasized training over tradition.
  6. Criticism of his message often stemmed from his stance on prosperity, healing, and authority, but Wommack consistently appealed to the Scriptures and the fruit of transformed lives as his defense.
  7. The ongoing influence of his teaching is evidenced through Andrew Wommack Ministries International, with outreach across radio, television, online platforms, and international Charis campuses.

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