On Monday, Ashtyn Weight went looking for a church.
âI am looking for recommendations on church to attend!â she posted on a Gillette, Wyoming, ârants and raves" Facebook page. As of Friday, dozens of commenters had ventured recommendations.
Weight told Cowboy State Daily in a Friday text message that sheâs always been a âbelieverâ and a follower of God, but she drifted away from attending church as she grew older, letting âexcuses get in the way.â
She enjoyed watching late conservative icon Charlie Kirk because he often shared his faith, she said. Â
âAfter learning about his passing, I, like many others, experienced a spiritual awakening,â wrote Weight. âWhile I had never stopped believing, I had become a lukewarm Christian. I want to do better, not only for myself, but also so my relationship with God can be an example for my children as they grow in their own faith.â
Sheâs trying out churches starting this Sunday.

The Increase
Many churches across Wyoming saw an increase in attendance after Kirk was shot and killed Sept. 10, while speaking to students at Utah Valley University.
Among nearly all of the church leaders who spoke Friday with Cowboy State Daily, even those who donât attribute their attendance swells to Kirkâs death, or didnât note an influx at all, said the vibe at their services changed last weekend.
Preston Ackerman, one of the pastors at Rock Springs Evangelical Free Church, said he saw new faces when he preached Sunday evening â and noted a higher-than-usual Sunday traffic spike on the website that day.
Ackerman attributes that not only to Kirk and his outspokenness about his faith, but to the mass broadcast of Kirkâs death.
âBecause of the gruesome nature of it, and because so many witnessed it just from their phones, I think it was shocking,â said Ackerman in a Friday interview. âAnd any time death is brought before somebody, they start to ask deeper questions.â
This was the United Statesâ first high-profile assassination displayed fully in a video on social media platforms, he noted. Â Â
The Associated Press also found that worth discussing, in a Sept. 11 story contemplating legacy media outletsâ âfading gripâ on information in the social media age. Traditional media outlets were careful not to show the video in full, the story noted, but âit mattered littleâ in the end.
To Ackerman, the new Charlie Kirk effect is that non-Christian conservatives are now asking âwhat compelled Charlieâ to be so bold, in the face of disagreement and vitriol.
And that may be driving them to church.
The mood was grief-stricken on Sunday but not defeated, Ackerman added.
âIt was somber but not a hopeless somber,â he said.
He linked his sermon to Kirk briefly toward the end, as he preached from a Psalm 119 passage characterizing Godâs word as a âcounselorâ to which broken-hearted people can run.
Up In Jackson
Matt Mumma, associate pastor at the non-denominational, âBible-preachingâ Cornerstone Church of Jackson, Wyoming, said he saw an attendance influx â of tourists.Â
Attendance was down to around 100 or 120 adult congregants and less than half as many kids the week before Kirkâs death. And it bumped to around 140 adults, plus a matching ratio of kids the weekend after, said Mumma.Â
âBeing in a touristy area, (there were) more just out-of-town visitors than normal,â he said. âIt seemed like people in town during that week who were not sure what to do or what to think showed up.â
This is a phase of the year where tourist visits to the church would normally be waning, Mumma added.
The churchâs lead pastor discussed Kirkâs death, said Mumma.Â
The sermon was a âpicture from heaven,â from Revelation 15, on what itâs like to be martyred for oneâs faith, he added.

âRevivalâ
Scott Muller, minister at Christian Church of Riverton, said attendance didnât surge Sunday, but he knows of people still traveling or out sick.
âI have a feeling a bunch of people will be there this weekend,â he said. âI definitely think (the shooting) sparked a revival across the nation.â
Muller pointed to a Facebook post by state Rep. Joel Guggenmos, R-Riverton, who urged against hating those whoâve celebrated Kirkâs death.
Guggenmos referenced the killing of the first Christian martyr on record, Stephen, and how the man whoâd become the Apostle Paul then watched in approval.
The vibe Sunday was âa little bitâ different, said Muller. Some people seemed bolder about their faith. Some seemed angry, he added.
The Shakeup
Marty Crump, pastor at Family Life Church in Gillette, said he noticed some angst in his community from congregants who complained that their churches didnât address Kirkâs death Sunday.
âThatâs not a reason to leave a church,â said Crump. âThatâs something you should sit and talk to your pastor about before you just get up and leave.â
The issue has made people passionate, and Gillette people are often passionate in the first place, Crump noted.
Crump addressed Kirkâs death briefly Sunday, he said, adding that the manâs death was personal to his church because Kirk spoke there around the year 2019.
Sunday was âreally full,â but Crump canât attribute that to Kirkâs death, necessarily, since it was the churchâs 40th anniversary service and celebration, he said. The church has been getting more calls than usual though.
Crump encouraged attendees to pray for those âon both sidesâ of this issue, he added.
A Busload of Catholics
Similarly to Crumpâs church, the Cathedral of Saint Mary in Cheyenne had a Sunday influx but doesnât attribute it to the Sept.10 incident.Â
Pam Watkins, administrative assistant, told Cowboy State Daily the total number of the weekendâs Mass services was up by about 66 from the one-weekend count from the prior month.
A âwhole busloadâ of tourists who happened to be Catholic rolled through town last weekend, and that increased the tally, said Watkins.
Father Steven Titus at Saint Matthewâs in Gillette didnât notice an influx either, but he did encounter grief at Mass last weekend, he said.
Titus didnât go into graphic detail when he preached, but he referenced a âviolent deathâ and the recent Catholic school shooting in Minnesota.
And he stressed âthe need for prayer and faith,â he said.

Lutherans In The Southwest
Jonathan Lange, Missouri-Synod Lutheran pastor in Evanston, said he didnât see an attendance uptick Sunday, but âpeople were highly interested in the church addressing the matter.â
âThey wanted to talk,â he added.
Many congregants view the Kirk event as generationally significant â comparable to the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., Lange said.
No Change Here
At the Christ Episcopal Church in Cody, Kirkâs death didnât prompt a noticeable change, church secretary Virginia Schmidt told Cowboy State Daily.
The church is âconcerned with all deathsâ but not as prone to be thrown into revolution by Kirkâs, she said, adding âthe Episcopal church is very social-justice aware and oriented in general.â
Kirk was critical of what he called the transgender movement. He was also openly critical of race-based and race-influenced hiring, as well as racial and social justice movements.
âOf course (his death is) a tragedy,â said Schmidt. She added: âI hope if more people are going to church, that will bring more peace into our communities and our country.â
Over The Years, Though
Erica Jensen, public affairs specialist at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (LDS) Cheyenne, Wyoming, East stake, said there was no significant change Sunday.
âJust a regular church Sunday for us,â said Jensen. Over recent years, however, more young people have been âturning to Jesus Christ,â she said.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.





