Pastors, pundits and needless schism
If you are tempted to follow people trying to cause schism in your church, take a breath and take a break from social media.
After the brutal murder of Charlie Kirk, there were Christians who exploited the opportunity to cause schism in the body of Christ and gather followers to themselves. "If your pastor does not talk about Charlie Kirk, leave your church!" Schism is not new, as the Apostle Paul dealt with it in 1 Corinthians 1:12-16 and warned of schismatic teachers in Acts 20:29-31.
A pastor's job is not to talk about politics. A pastor's job is to preach the Gospel, preach righteousness to Believers, and exhort Believers to seek sanctification and repent of sin. Outside of the pulpit, pastors counsel individuals and families to more closely follow Christ. Pastors may use events of the day to speak prophetically to their congregation, so it is certainly not wrong to address a horrible murder and pray for the victim's family. It is not "political" to speak prophetically this way.
However, it is is needlessly schismatic to demand that a pastor must address a specific event, even a horrible crime, or you will leave the church. It is worse to cause schism and division in other churches by stirring up their congregation against their pastor who, according to Hebrews 13:17, watches over their souls. Causing division in the body of Christ over this is wrong.
This is not to say you should never request your pastor address something in a sermon, and this is not to say there is never a reason to leave a church. But these rabble-rouser on social media are creating divisions in a number of churches that are doctrinally sound and do speak prophetically about controversies and current events. Setting up this one horrible event as the only standard shows these people have no sense of proportion.
If you are tempted to follow these people trying to cause schism in your church, take a breath. Take a break from social media. If you have concerns, speak privately and respectfully to your pastor. Do not allow some loudmouth who does not even know you exist, much less care about your family or your eternal soul, to peel you away from your church. No church is perfect, but many are faithful. A demand for unattainable perfection as you define it will only lead to frustration and disillusionment.