America’s 250th birthday is more than a party date, it’s a stress test for our national memory. We ask a blunt question: what actually made the United States free, stable, and resilient, and why are so many cultural gatekeepers determined to tell the founding as a story of nothing but oppression. From a biblical, historical, and constitutional perspective, we dig into the principle that shaped the Revolution: rights come from God, not government, and the purpose of government is to protect those God-given rights.
Then we’re joined by Eric Metaxas to talk about his new book, Revolution. Eric explains why he set out to tell the whole Revolutionary War story in one place, without the modern “meh” tone that drains courage and meaning from the past. We explore the founders’ own spiritual framing, the repeated references to Providence, and the Exodus and Sinai covenant imagery that even the more secular founders understood. Whether you share that worldview or not, Eric makes the case that we owe the founders the basic honesty of seeing the founding the way they saw it.
We also get specific about the war’s moral stakes, including brutality that pushed fence-sitters toward independence and sobering facts about prisoner of war conditions. Finally, we connect the past to the present: how a nation drifts when memory erodes, why this moment feels like an existential crisis, and what ordinary citizens can do to recover the American spirit with truth, prayer, and civic action.
If this conversation helps you, subscribe, share it with a friend who loves history, and leave a review so more people can find it. What part of the founding story do you think Americans most need to relearn right now?
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