(LifeSiteNews) â The âproper human response to evil is anger,â Fr. Mike Schmitz told Megyn Kelly on Wednesday, soon after the death of Turning Point USA CEO Charlie Kirk.
Fr. Schmitz, the host of the popular âBible in a Yearâ podcast, joined Kelly, a conservative commentator and Catholic, to process the assassination of Kirk, a 31-year-old father, husband, and conservative activist.
âPlease help us understand, I donât know how to process it,â Kelly said, fighting back tears. Fr. Schmitz began by saying he was praying for Kirkâs family and friends.
âWe live in a broken world,â Fr. Schmitz said. âGod is good,â but humans have used their freedom for evil, the priest said.
Soon after, Kelly shared her own frustration with processing the situation. âI feel so angry.â
She said a previous guest said to âreact in love,â but Kelly said, âAll I feel is deep, deep anger. And I know Iâm not alone. And how do you process that,â she asked.
âThatâs not a healthy emotion. Itâs not something you should stay mired in, it eats, it corrodes you from the inside, and yet I know millions of people are feeling it,â she said.
Fr. Schmitz responded that âanger is the proper response,â even while there are other stages, such as grief and acceptance.
He then pointed out that âthere were times when Jesus saw injustice, where Jesus saw evil ⌠He was angry.â
âThere were times when people refused to reach out or refused to say it was good to reach out to help the helpless,â and Jesus, Fr. Schmitz said, âlooked at them with anger.â
If people did not react to evil, like Kirkâs shooting or the shooting several weeks ago at a Catholic school in Minnesota with anger, something would be wrong, Fr. Schmitz said.
âThe proper human response to evil is anger,â he said. âGodâs response to evil is anger.â
Kelly interjected that she wanted to know how to keep âthe Devilâ away from her kids and didnât want âevil coming for them.â
She continued to say that âGod expects you to work to get in,â you cannot just get into Heaven by being âa good person.â
She shared while she wants to help others, âright now I want vengeance,â including wanting the killer to âsufferâ and to keep evil away from other loved ones.
âAnger can be a positive emotion,â Schmitz said.
âSometimes you need to fight for the right thing,â he said, drawing a parallel to William Wilberforceâs fight against slavery.
He did warn that anger can be bad. âAnger is an active emotion. Resentment is when things settle,â he warned.
âAnger can move us to do good,â he said, pointing out how Kelly could use her platform to call for people to come together and move forward together.
âWe canât afford to go into resentment, but we have to know how to choose what to do with our anger,â the priest said.
Speaking through tears, Kelly expressed her feelings about the targeting of individuals for holding âcore Catholic beliefs.â
âWe just donât want to see ours shut down for standing up for core Catholic beliefs ⌠like children arenât born in the wrong body and we shouldnât be divided by race,â Kelly said.
Fr. Schmitz reminded viewers that Kirk said he wanted to go to campus to keep up dialogue, saying when people stop talking, violence ensues.
âWe fight through debate,â he said, echoing Kirkâs sentiments.
Suspected killer arrested
Law enforcement reportedly has Kirkâs alleged shooter in custody, as reported this morning by LifeSiteNews.
Tyler Robinson, a 22-year-old, reportedly made comments suggesting he killed Kirk. His father reportedly turned him into police after another person told Robinsonâs dad.
This morning, Utah Governor Spencer Cox gave a press conference on the situation.
âAuthorities also were told of a recent conversation between Robinson and a family member in which they talked about Kirk coming to UVU, and the reasons why they didnât like him and the viewpoints he had, the governor said,â as reported by The College Fix. âIn the conversation, Kirk was described as âspreading hateâ and âfull of hate,'â Gov. Cox said.
News Source : https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/fr-mike-schmitz-on-charlie-kirk-assassination-proper-human-response-to-evil-is-anger/