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The WallBuilders Show

Tim Barton, David Barton & Rick Green
The WallBuilders Show
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  • From Revivals To Public Policy: When Faith Shapes Culture
    If spiritual fireworks don’t change the neighborhood by Monday, what are we missing? We take a hard look at a century of American revivals that stirred the heart but barely nudged the culture, and then we trace a different path: how revivals become awakenings when believers are discipled and Scripture is applied to daily life. Not just belief, but apprenticeship. Not just emotion, but formation that shapes families, work, and public decisions.We dig into the Great Commission’s overlooked command to “teach them to observe all things” and connect it to concrete civic questions. What does Jesus’ teaching on stewardship say about rewarding productivity? How does the vineyard wage story illuminate voluntary contracts? Why does “Where are your accusers?” echo through America’s due process rights to confront accusers and compel witnesses? Along the way, we surface sobering data on the behavior gap between professing Christians and the wider culture, making the case that conversion without discipleship leaves public ethics unchanged.History shows a better model. Early American pulpits spoke directly to the issues of the day—earthquakes, fires, education, deployment and just war, taxation, commercial crisis, health codes, addiction, and the injustice of slavery. Sermons didn’t dodge the news; they discipled people to think biblically about it. That habit formed moral reflexes that influenced law, economics, and community life. We invite you to recover that tradition: teach “all things,” support those serving in public office, and let Scripture inform both private character and public action.If you’re ready for faith that moves from pews to policy and from zeal to wisdom, press play, share this conversation, and join us next time. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell a friend who serves in your state legislature so they can be part of the ProFamily Legislators Conference next year.Support the show
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  • How Spiritual Awakenings Can Shape Public Life
    A billion people watched a memorial defined by bold forgiveness, and something shifted. Church attendance spiked, Bible sales soared, and campus arenas from Ohio State to Florida State filled with students lining up for baptism. We take that momentum seriously and ask the harder question history demands: when hearts change, do cultures follow?We walk through the evidence: record Easter services, mass beach baptisms, and stadium crusades drawing thousands. Then we hold it against the long arc of American revivals. The First and Second Great Awakenings shaped ideals of liberty and fueled abolition, yet later waves overlapped with the Progressive Era, when eugenics spread through state laws and media reframed faith as anti-science. The Scopes trial’s legal reality lost to a narrative that still echoes. Meanwhile, the Frankfurt School’s critical theory crossed the Atlantic, took root in elite universities, and helped redirect the formation of generations.Our aim is clarity and responsibility. Renewal is real when it transforms not only private lives but public life—schools, laws, media, and the habits of a free people. That means pairing conviction with craft: teaching doctrine and civic duty, mentoring Gen Z leaders, building durable local institutions, and telling true stories about human dignity, science, and freedom. If we steward this moment, today’s surge can mature into a culture that protects conscience and nurtures virtue.If this conversation sharpens your thinking, share it with a friend, subscribe for the next installments, and leave a review with one action you plan to take this week. Your voice helps turn momentum into a movement.Support the show
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  • From Minority Voice To Lasting Change In California Schools
    Change doesn’t arrive with a hashtag; it arrives with a name on a ballot, a calm voice at a microphone, and a chair at the school board table. We sit down with Joe Messina—who spent twenty-four years in the trenches of a California district—to unpack how a lone dissenting vote became a durable majority that actually moves policy. From pulling back the curtain on graphic curriculum to establishing clear flag policies and defending parental notification, Joe shows how local courage scales when it’s anchored in law, civics, and community.You’ll hear how a trades education fight led him into public service, why he lost twice before winning, and what changed once he was inside the room. We dig into the practical: reading questionable passages aloud to force transparency, leaning on legal allies to set guardrails, and equipping students to assert their rights without picking unnecessary fights. Joe’s approach is simple and repeatable—fill the room with thoughtful supporters, speak to policy not people, and keep going when the vote goes the wrong way. Over time, those habits flipped the dynamic: parents felt represented, students felt backed, and administrators learned that neutrality isn’t optional.We also explore the role of civic training and historical literacy in shaping arguments that stand up under pressure. Quoting Franklin’s call to prayer as history, not ceremony. Clarifying privacy and fairness in locker rooms without turning up the heat. Building TPUSA clubs so students know the rules and use them well. It’s a masterclass in steady, local leadership that protects kids and restores trust.If you’ve ever wondered whether your school board comment, yard sign, or volunteer hour matters, this conversation will recharge your resolve. Subscribe, share this with a neighbor who cares about schools, and leave a review with the one local action you’re taking this month.Support the show
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  • Seeds To Laws: Turning Revival Into Change
    Stadium altar calls, campus baptisms, and a surge in Bible sales are stealing headlines for all the right reasons—but the real story is what comes next. We dive into the data pointing to a national spiritual renewal and challenge ourselves to aim higher than momentary inspiration, asking how to turn revival into a durable great awakening through deliberate discipleship and principled policy.We share the energy and outcomes from the Pro Family Legislators Conference, where more than 400 lawmakers and spouses compared notes, traded model bills, and left with a playbook of 150+ policy ideas. From privacy and parental rights to education reform, we walk through how one “what if” can spread across dozens of states and become law. Along the way, we revisit history’s best teachers—George Whitefield and Charles Finney—who coupled evangelism with action, showing how spiritual conviction can guide civic courage.The conversation shifts to the long game: why faithfulness outruns quick wins, how school board persistence in a tough California district led to a governing majority, and what it means to keep planting even when results are slow. We also tackle today’s budget reality, explaining why rising federal health care costs demand state innovation, market discipline, and a constitutional approach that brings decisions closer to the people. Compassion and responsibility are not opposites; together they make reform work.If you care about seeing faith shape families, schools, and local governments, this is your roadmap. Subscribe, share with a friend who leads, and leave a review with the one change you think would most help your state take a step toward renewal.Support the show
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  • From Nigeria’s CPC Status To Campus Revivals And A Sealed Border
    Headlines have trained us to expect the worst. Today we chase what’s actually moving the needle: international pressure for religious freedom, a youth movement catching fire on campuses, a surprising recalibration in the climate debate, and a clear turn in border enforcement that’s reshaping incentives on the ground.We start with Nigeria’s designation as a Country of Particular Concern by the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, led by former Congresswoman Vicki Hartzler. That CPC label isn’t symbolic—it can trigger cuts to foreign aid and other diplomatic levers when persecution spikes, and the data from recent years has been devastating. Naming the problem is step one; signaling consequences is step two. We unpack why this matters for believers, minority faiths, and anyone who thinks human rights should mean something beyond resolutions.From global policy to local momentum, we head to Texas where Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick pledged one million dollars to launch Turning Point USA chapters on high school and college campuses. With Oklahoma making similar moves, the state-level strategy is clear: invest in young leaders where ideas form. That theme continues as we highlight Greek InterVarsity’s surge—fraternities and sororities hosting Bible studies so large they outgrow their spaces. Students are discovering purpose, community, and courage, and the ripple effects across campus life are striking.We also explore an unexpected shift in climate conversation. Bill Gates and other prominent voices are tempering earlier catastrophe narratives, acknowledging real warming without forecasting civilizational collapse. That recalibration opens space for practical stewardship, energy affordability, and technological innovation without fear-driven policy whiplash. Finally, we review border policy updates: targeted removals of violent offenders, incentives for voluntary return, and a sharp reduction in crossings that suggests enforcement clarity changes behavior upstream. It’s a complex picture, but the throughline is simple: principles, backed by action, produce results.If you’re ready for a hope-forward, facts-first take on faith, culture, and constitutional thinking, hit play and share with a friend. Subscribe, leave a review to help others find the show, and tell us: which story gave you the most hope?Support the show
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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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