In Dallas, 6,700 Women Rally for Culture War Battles After Kirk’s Death

Share the Arrows
Allie Beth Stuckey speaks during the “Share the Arrows” women’s conference, Saturday morning, Oct. 11, 2025, at the Credit Union of Texas Event Center in Allen, Texas. (RNS photo/Kathryn Post)

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Stuckey told RNS that “Share the Arrows” has a “pretty narrow” theology and politics, and that unlike other Christian women’s conferences “who dabble in the social and racial justice,” Stuckey has “zero tolerance” for that.

Despite the specific conservative audience, “this is probably one of the biggest Christian women’s conferences out there, too, and it’s only our second year,” Stuckey observed. “I do think that tells us a little bit about where Christian women are headed.”

In the wake of Kirk’s passing, Stuckey has joined many conservative faith leaders in talking about the possibility of revival. In her speech, Childers hinted at Stuckey’s role in that movement, describing Stuckey as “exactly like a female Charlie Kirk” who had “rallied together 6,500 Charlie Kirks to come together.”

Stuckey, though, insisted that Kirk was an anomaly.

“I and maybe 100 other people represent a sliver of what Charlie was,” Stuckey told RNS. “If I am part of the team that takes the baton of evangelizing and being an apologist for the faith in the conservative realm, I will be honored to take that.”

Roughly 6,700 people attend the “Share the Arrows” women’s conference, Saturday, Oct. 11, 2025, at the Credit Union of Texas Event Center in Allen, Texas. (RNS photo/Kathryn Post)

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KathrynPost@churchleaders.com'
Kathryn Post
Kathryn Post is an author at Religion News Service.

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