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The WallBuilders Show

Tim Barton, David Barton & Rick Green
The WallBuilders Show
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972 episodes

  • The WallBuilders Show

    History Shows Religious Expression Belongs In Public Life

    2026/07/07 | 26 mins.
    The story we’re told about faith in public life is usually simple: religion belongs at home, and anything more is a modern political invention. The receipts say otherwise. We trace a straight line from the founding era through the 1800s and into the mid-1900s showing how biblical literacy and religious expression were woven into American civic culture, public education, and even the everyday tools students used to learn language.

    We talk about Benjamin Rush’s argument that virtue is essential to liberty, then look at concrete examples like an 1816 New Jersey public school report describing young students memorizing New Testament passages, Psalms, catechism lessons, and hymns. We also unpack Noah Webster’s 1828 dictionary and how often it points readers back to Bible verses, revealing how deeply Scripture shaped American vocabulary and education. Add in public statements from Presidents Zachary Taylor and Ulysses S. Grant, and you get a picture that feels nothing like the modern caricature.

    Then we bring it to the present with the legal shift many communities have missed: the Supreme Court’s emphasis on “history and tradition” and what that means for religious liberty today, including Bible courses taught academically, student-led prayer, and holiday programs that acknowledge the roots of Christmas. We close with clear, local action steps you can actually take, from displaying “In God We Trust” and pursuing Ten Commandments displays to restoring chaplains, released-time options, and Bible curriculum access in public schools.

    If you care about religious liberty, constitutional education, and rebuilding civic literacy with real history, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with the one point you want your community to act on next.
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  • The WallBuilders Show

    America’s Schools Once Taught The Bible By Law

    2026/07/06 | 26 mins.
    A single Supreme Court test helped drive 50 years of fights over prayer, the Bible, and religious symbols in public life and most people never learned its name. We unpack how rulings like Engel v. Vitale and Lemon v. Kurtzman changed the rules for schools and government spaces, why the Lemon test got cited thousands of times, and how it fueled everything from nativity scene battles to challenges over crosses and the Ten Commandments. If you’ve ever wondered what the First Amendment really says about church and state, this conversation puts the legal story in plain English and ties it to the culture you see today. 

    Then we shift to the modern reversal: the Bladensburg Cross case and the Coach Kennedy prayer case. We talk through how the Supreme Court moves away from Lemon and toward a “history and tradition” standard that presumes long standing religiously expressive monuments, symbols, and practices are constitutional. That change has real implications for religious liberty, public school policies, and the future of Establishment Clause cases, especially when communities can point to deep roots in American law and practice. 

    We also dig into early American education to test the claim that the Founders wanted a secular public square. From colonial school laws and the New England Primer to the Aitken Bible recommended by Congress, the episode follows the paper trail and asks what our history says about faith, literacy, morality, and civic life. Subscribe for the rest of the series, share this with a friend who cares about constitutional history, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.
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  • The WallBuilders Show

    Good News From Washington That Points To Renewal

    2026/07/03 | 26 mins.
    July 4 isn’t just a summer holiday, it’s a living inheritance, and we’re feeling that up close from Washington, DC. With America approaching the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, we zoom in on a wild detail most people miss: Congress once debated Jefferson’s draft line by line, shaping the words that would define American freedom. That historical moment helps explain why a resurgence of patriotism can’t be shallow. It has to be rooted in truth, faith, and the ideas that made liberty possible in the first place. 

    From there, we share Good News Friday stories that point to cultural renewal. David Barton recounts an unexpected encouragement from inside the federal government: a large group of federal employees asking to hear why religion and morality must undergird education if we want a free nation. We also look at fresh polling that shows a gradual shift away from support for abortion through all nine months and talk honestly about what still needs to happen through law, persuasion, and clear church teaching. 

    We hit major headlines too: the World Bank backing off climate-loan rules under US pressure, and a Supreme Court Second Amendment decision involving marijuana use and gun rights that raises questions about inconsistent enforcement and the meaning of “law-abiding.” Then we end with a hopeful challenge for the church: Gen Z is showing up, but they need mentors and discipleship. John Adams had a blueprint for Independence Day that still cuts through the noise: celebrate boldly, and pair it with “solemn acts of devotion to God Almighty.” 

    Subscribe for more conversations at the intersection of faith and culture, share this with a friend who loves history, and leave a review with your favorite July 4 tradition and why it matters to you.
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  • The WallBuilders Show

    Pastors, Power, And The American Founding - with Pastor Josh McPherson

    2026/07/02 | 26 mins.
    The Declaration of Independence didn’t just come from brilliant men in a room, it came from a culture shaped by pulpits, sermons, and a belief that our rights come from God, not government. From Washington, DC during America 250 events, we sit down with Pastor Josh McPherson to connect the founding era to the pressure points we’re living through right now, and to name what many people felt during COVID but couldn’t fully explain.

    We talk about the often-missed influence of pastors like Jonas Clark, Samuel Davies, Jonathan Mayhew, and John Wise and how their preaching helped form both the founders and the very language that made its way into America’s founding documents. That history matters because it reframes today’s debates about faith in public life: the question isn’t whether Christianity influenced America, it’s how deeply it did, and what happens when that foundation is ignored.

    Then Josh shares what it was like in Washington State when government restrictions turned worship into a legal target, including the moment he had to sue the governor to open his church. We unpack the difference between possessing God-given rights and being able to enjoy those rights without penalty, plus why lawful courage, deep research, and clear thinking are essential when leaders push beyond their lane. We also discuss FreedomCon, the “George Washington Declaration of Freedom,” and why putting your name on the line can wake a man up like nothing else.

    If you care about religious liberty, Christian civic engagement, constitutional rights, and what America 250 should actually celebrate, you’ll get history, strategy, and a challenge you can act on. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with one takeaway you want more people to hear.
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  • The WallBuilders Show

    America At 250

    2026/07/01 | 26 mins.
    America is turning 250, and we refuse to let it be just fireworks and food. We’re on the road meeting leaders, pastors, and ministries who are helping people reconnect with the nation’s founding principles, the Declaration of Independence, and the biblical worldview that shaped early American culture. That hunger is real, and it shows up in the renewed interest in founders’ history, original sources, and the kind of teaching that actually explains why liberty works.

    Then the headlines hit. We walk through a fast-moving set of Supreme Court decisions and call it what it is: a mixed bag. We talk about clear wins, confusing rulings, and the ugly reality of how legal reasoning can drift away from the U.S. Constitution. The biggest focus is birthright citizenship and why Clarence Thomas’s dissent matters, including the historical purpose of the 14th Amendment and how courts should treat original intent instead of importing outside frameworks.

    We also get practical about what can still be done, from enforcing laws already on the books to passing clarifying legislation and staying engaged through elections. Along the way we unpack a powerful idea many people miss: “federal” is rooted in covenant language, meaning constitutional government is a defined agreement, not a popularity contest. If you care about American history, constitutional interpretation, religious liberty, and the future of citizenship, this conversation is for you.

    Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves history, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What part of the 250th should the country focus on first?
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About The WallBuilders Show
The WallBuilders Show is a daily journey to examine today's issues from a Biblical, Historical and Constitutional perspective. Featured guests include elected officials, experts, activists, authors, and commentators.
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