Wyoming Rep. Scott Smith, who uses crutches due to a physical disability, walked nearly three miles to reach Charlie Kirk's funeral when traffic bottlenecked. “The number one takeaway (from that funeral) is the most important thing in life is your walk with Christ,” he said.
When traffic bottlenecked nearly three miles away from the stadium in Glendale, Arizona, where the world’s most powerful people and some of the world’s biggest Christian music stars were set to memorialize Charlie Kirk, Wyoming state Rep. Scott Smith decided to hoof it.
On crutches. Through huge throngs of people. As the day’s temperature crept from 85 degrees at 5:30 a.m. to a high of 103 degrees.
It was a significant decision for Smith, who uses crutches full-time due to a physical disability in one leg. He pressed on through the human current on narrow sidewalks, over gravel – sometimes diverting onto lesser traveled side roads.
“And walking as far as I did was painful,” he recalled.
But according to Smith, God led him on through the pain.
“I just felt inspired by the Lord that, ‘Hey, it’s a moment in history, and you should be a part of it – in honor of a man that deserved being honored,’” he said. “The number one takeaway (from that funeral) is the most important thing in life is your walk with Christ.”
cowboystatedaily.com
When traffic bottlenecked nearly three miles away from the stadium in Glendale, Arizona, where the world’s most powerful people and some of the world’s biggest Christian music stars were set to memorialize Charlie Kirk, Wyoming state Rep. Scott Smith decided to hoof it.
On crutches. Through huge throngs of people. As the day’s temperature crept from 85 degrees at 5:30 a.m. to a high of 103 degrees.
It was a significant decision for Smith, who uses crutches full-time due to a physical disability in one leg. He pressed on through the human current on narrow sidewalks, over gravel – sometimes diverting onto lesser traveled side roads.
“And walking as far as I did was painful,” he recalled.
But according to Smith, God led him on through the pain.
“I just felt inspired by the Lord that, ‘Hey, it’s a moment in history, and you should be a part of it – in honor of a man that deserved being honored,’” he said. “The number one takeaway (from that funeral) is the most important thing in life is your walk with Christ.”

Wyoming Lawmaker Walks 3 Miles On Crutches To Get Seat At Charlie Kirk Funeral
Wyoming Rep. Scott Smith, who uses crutches due to a physical disability, walked nearly three miles to reach Charlie Kirk's funeral when traffic…
