The WallBuilders Show

Tim Barton, David Barton & Rick Green

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.

  1. 12 hr ago

    Good News From Washington That Points To Renewal

    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. Support the show

    27 min
  2. 1 day ago

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

    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. Support the show

    27 min
  3. 2 days ago

    America At 250

    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? Support the show

    27 min
  4. 3 days ago

    America 250 And A Comeback In Patriotism - with Nate Schatzline

    Fireworks are easy. Remembering what made America worth celebrating is harder, and that’s where we go for America 250. Rick Green, David Barton, and Tim Barton talk through the surprising wave of renewed patriotism we’re seeing right now, why it rattles the cynics, and how learning the stories of the Declaration’s signers brings “lives, fortunes, sacred honor” back into focus. We also dig into the idea that gratitude for America is not blind pride, it’s a commitment to protect the freedoms we’ve inherited. Then we zoom out to a cultural moment you might not expect: FIFA visitors flooding social media with awe at American freedom and abundance. From the simple stuff like free refills to the deeper stuff like safety and liberty, those reactions become a mirror for Americans who have grown numb. We talk about why outside eyes can reignite appreciation, and why this season feels connected to a broader spiritual hunger that’s pulling people back toward truth, clarity, and faith. Our guest, Texas State Representative Nate Schatzline, gets intensely practical about what happens when pastors and churches stop sitting out the public square. He shares what he’s seen bringing pastors to Washington, DC, what wakes leaders up, and why local races like school board and city council are where the culture actually turns. Nate also breaks down the For Liberty and Justice blueprint that has helped flip 137 seats in Texas and explains how his own campaign, backed by his church and family, led to real legislative wins on issues like women’s sports, protections for minors, border and fentanyl enforcement, property tax priorities, and human trafficking crackdowns. If you’re ready to move from anger to action, listen, share this with your pastor or a friend who cares about the next generation, then subscribe and leave a review so more people can find the conversation. Support the show

    27 min
  5. 4 days ago

    The Bible Behind America’s Founding

    July 4 gets all the fireworks, but our actual independence vote landed on July 2, 1776, and that one detail opens the door to a much bigger reset of what we think we know about America’s founding. We walk through the real timeline from Richard Henry Lee’s motion, to Jefferson’s draft, to the edits Congress made, to why July 4 is better understood as Declaration Day, not the day the vote happened. Then we tackle the argument lighting up headlines: Bible passages in public school curriculum. We explain why studying the Bible as literature and history is not the same thing as preaching it, and why so many classic American texts assume biblical references. If students read Martin Luther King Jr’s Letter From Birmingham Jail but don’t know who Paul is or what the fiery furnace story refers to, they miss the point. We also get specific about the “unconstitutional” claim, including what the 1963 Supreme Court decisions actually allowed in history and literature classes. Finally, we bring it back to the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence and the question underneath everything: can you understand the Founding Fathers without biblical literacy when Scripture was so commonly quoted in their political writing? We cover the Dunlap broadside printing, why signatures come later on August 2, and we share a simple reading list you can use with your family this week, from John Adams’s letters to John Quincy Adams and Calvin Coolidge. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves history, and leave a review with the one Independence Day fact you wish you’d learned in school. Support the show

    27 min
  6. 26 Jun

    The Week’s Biggest Wins For Faith And Freedom

    The news cycle trains you to expect bad headlines, so we decided to spend this Good News Friday hunting for proof that courage still exists and that good ideas still produce good results. We start close to home with a major release for American history lovers: our new book “Lives, Fortunes, and Sacred Honor,” profiling all 56 signers of the Declaration of Independence. If you care about the Founding Fathers, the American Revolution, and clearing away lazy modern myths, this is a practical way to rebuild civic memory with real biographies and real stories. Then we widen the lens to a surprising economic and political shift: Cuba approving sweeping free market reforms to avoid collapse. When a system that calls itself communist starts allowing private enterprise, independent investment, and ownership-like incentives, it’s an accidental confession that socialism can’t deliver. We also dig into religious liberty and compelled messaging in sports, including the MLB controversy tied to Bible verses on Pride-themed hats and why it matters when institutions try to police viewpoint while permitting other slogans. Along the way, we give credit to the Texas Rangers for choosing Faith and Family Nights and show how “voting with your dollars” still sends a message. We close with big-picture policy and power: the fallout from slashing USAID funding and the argument that cutting off money streams shifted election outcomes across Latin America, plus a cultural flashpoint where a minor league team forfeits rather than wear Pride Night uniforms. And yes, we talk about Elon Musk’s stated intent to counter George Soros’s influence and what that signals about money, protest movements, and elections. If you like biblical, historical, and constitutional perspective with your headlines, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review. What’s the most encouraging win you’ve seen lately, and why? Support the show

    27 min
  7. 25 Jun

    The Pledge Myth

    People can make almost anything sound sinister if they start with a scary premise and end with a confident conclusion. We slow down and do the unglamorous work: dates, documents, and plain context. That’s how we handle a question we keep hearing, especially in Christian civic circles, about whether repeating the Pledge of Allegiance is “idolatry” or a socialist setup. We trace the real history of the pledge, including why it was created in the 1890s, who actually drove the idea, and how the words and the salute changed over time through public use and Congress. Then we pivot from civic myths to practical policy questions listeners are asking right now. Transactional gold and silver sounds like a niche topic until you connect it to constitutional money, the gold and silver language in the Constitution, and the everyday reality of inflation. We talk through the basic concept of gold-backed spending, why people are pushing for state-level options, and why experts like Kevin Freeman have become go-to resources for understanding how these systems work in the real world. We also take on a claim popularized by documentaries and modern “history” narratives: that the Iroquois Confederacy significantly shaped the U.S. Constitution. We challenge the evidence people cite, explain what Franklin actually meant in his Albany Plan comments, and put the spotlight back on what the founders themselves quoted and relied on, especially Madison’s role in the Constitutional Convention. If you care about faith, culture, and the Constitution, subscribe, share this with a friend who loves a good debate, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What’s a civic claim you’ve heard lately that you want us to fact-check? Support the show

    27 min
  8. 24 Jun

    Lives Fortune Sacred Honor And The People Behind The Declaration

    A Declaration of Independence signature looks heroic from 250 years away. In real time, it can put a target on your back. We dig into what that kind of courage actually costs, why the signers weren’t instantly celebrated, and how a nation’s memory changes once the fighting ends and the stories finally get told. We’re also marking the run-up to America’s 250th anniversary by sharing practical ways to celebrate Independence Day with purpose: get your friends, family, or church together, read the Declaration out loud, and sign it as a public pledge to preserve liberty for the next generation. Along the way, we talk about our new book, Lives, Fortune, Sacred Honors, built around short, story-rich biographies of all 56 Declaration signers so you can stop thinking of them as a faceless group and start seeing them as men with specific risks, careers, families, and convictions. You’ll hear standout stories like Oliver Wolcott hauling the torn-down King George III statue from New York back to Connecticut, melting it down, and turning it into tens of thousands of musket balls. We also spotlight James Wilson, a signer of both the Declaration and the Constitution, a key voice for the rule of law, and a founder whose fight in Pennsylvania shows what happens when people throw off tyranny but forget to build lasting order. If you care about American history, the American Revolution, constitutional principles, and the role of faith in public life, share this with someone who’s skeptical, curious, or simply tired of shallow takes. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us: which Declaration signer do you most want to learn about next? Support the show

    27 min

About

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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