Among Stuckey's hundreds of thousands of social media followers, that fight is often waged in podcast recordings, comment sections, PTA meetings and local elections. But this weekend, the battle converged in the Dallas suburbs during Stuckey's second annual "Share the Arrows" women's conference, where throngs of Bible-wielding Christian women gathered at the Credit Union Texas Event Center to be inspired in person by their favorite online influencers, including Jinger Duggar Vuolo from the hit show "19 Kids and Counting" and homeschooling "momfluencer" Abbie Halberstadt.
Held just one month since the assassination of Charlie Kirk, the event also served as a rallying cry for women whose faith has been reignited by the death of the far-right political activist.
"There's a new ache in all of our hearts since Charlie passed, and we're just so excited to keep this fire burning. This is a great way to rekindle that in all of us," Rachel Jonson, a 28-year-old mother from Corinth, Texas, told RNS as she sat near the back of the arena, rocking the infant wrapped to her chest.