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. 7H AGO

    Faith, Freedom, And The Ballot

    What if the most important fight for your faith happens before November? We bring the energy and get practical about why primaries carry outsized influence, how to find trustworthy voter guides, and where small turnouts can swing big outcomes. Then we go deep on religious liberty with Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who chairs President Trump’s Religious Liberty Commission, to unpack what the hearings are revealing and what can actually change. You’ll hear the human side of constitutional rights: a Navy SEAL near retirement punished for a faith‑based vaccine objection, a fifth grader pushed to read a transgender book to first graders, a teacher sidelined for refusing to remove a cross, and a valedictorian told to strip God from his speech. These aren’t hypotheticals; they’re case studies showing how confusion about the First Amendment collides with daily life in schools and the military. Dan walks us through the Commission’s mission—clarifying when and where prayer and religious expression are protected, documenting violations across faiths, and shaping durable policy through DOJ action, legislation, and executive orders that stand beyond one administration. We also tackle a heated moment inside the Commission itself: an attempt to derail a hearing with anti‑Semitic rhetoric and political grandstanding. The swift removal of the member, and clear words from leaders like Franklin Graham and Cardinal Dolan, refocused the work on protecting people of faith—Christian, Jewish, Sikh, and others—without weaponizing theology against civil rights. Along the way, we connect the dots between America’s historic tradition of chaplaincy and conscience in the military and today’s need to enforce good laws already on the books. If you care about faith, free speech, and the ballot, this conversation maps the path from outrage to action—starting with your primary. Listen, share with a friend who needs clarity, and subscribe so you never miss a strategy that turns conviction into change. Support the show

    27 min
  2. 1D AGO

    Sharia Law At Our Doorstep

    What would you do if changing your faith made you a target—and the people sworn to protect you hesitated out of fear of a label? We sit down with a former Muslim from the UK who lays out, in stark detail, how harassment turned into arson, how isolation bred despair, and how a brutal street attack finally forced his family into hiding. His story isn’t shared for shock value; it’s a stress test of our core freedoms and a warning about what happens when public officials let accusations of “phobia” outrank evidence, threats, and the equal protection of the law. Across the hour, we connect personal testimony to broader civic patterns: churches sold and converted, local councils won through bloc voting, and police culture shaped more by public relations than public safety. We open the books—including the Reliance of the Traveller and a contemporary text on Islamic law—to show how apostasy is treated and why that matters for anyone who cares about freedom of conscience. Our aim is not to inflame but to inform: to give listeners a clear view of the stakes when doctrine is used to rationalize intimidation, and when communities go quiet as neighbors face escalating harm. We also get practical. How can cities protect ex-Muslims and other at-risk dissenters? What must change in policing, prosecution, and community organizing to make sure the law is applied evenly? We outline steps any listener can champion: document threats, insist on neutral enforcement, build support networks for converts, and show up—at council meetings, in courtrooms, and for families under pressure. Courage is contagious, but it needs structure. Want the full two-hour forum and deeper dive with our scholars? Watch on Facebook at Patriot Rick Green or at PatriotU.com. If this conversation moved you, share it, leave a review, and subscribe so more people hear what’s at stake—and how we can act together. Support the show

    27 min
  3. 4D AGO

    Texas On The Front Lines Against Sharia Law

    Freedom doesn’t vanish overnight—it erodes when we forget what we stand for and hesitate to defend it. We dive straight into the collision of Sharia law with constitutional liberty, outlining why abrogation matters, why enforcement beats rhetoric, and why Texas is uniquely positioned to set a national precedent. With Frank Gaffney, Bill Federer, and more voices at the table, we trace a strategy from “tavern talk” to the ballot box: make the threat legible, win a public mandate, and operationalize it through clear laws, candidate accountability, and focused law enforcement. We lay out the stakes with specificity: what Sharia means in practice; why later doctrinal interpretations shape governance claims; and how groups accused of advancing illiberal aims fit into a modern legal framework. Then we pivot to action—five words on the Texas primary ballot that could spark a wider movement: “Texas should prohibit Sharia law.” The message is simple but decisive: ask every candidate where they stand and make the answer consequential. We look to Reagan’s playbook for confronting totalitarian threats, turning principle into policy and public will into durable action. The most searing moments come from Nissar Hussein, a former Muslim who faced threats for apostasy. His story personalizes abstract debate: when leaving a faith invites violence, the bedrock of religious liberty crumbles. He warns that the gap between the UK and the United States may be smaller than many think, urging vigilance before norms reset. Alongside that warning, we return to first principles: restore civic memory, teach constitutional guardrails, and practice the habits that keep a free people free. If you care about religious liberty, constitutional law, and the practical steps that turn conviction into policy, this is your roadmap. Listen, share with a friend who votes, and leave a review to help more people find the show. Then ask your candidates—local to federal—exactly where they stand on Sharia and what they’ll do about it. Support the show

    27 min
  4. 5D AGO

    Why Defining Religious Freedom Now Shapes Our Future

    A packed room, a raised question: how do we safeguard genuine religious freedom while resisting a system that treats law, politics, and belief as one instrument of control. We gathered a unique panel—historian Bill Federer, national security voice Frank Gaffney, and advocate Nissar Hussain—to cut through noise and name the stakes. From the legal misunderstandings that haunted the First Amendment for decades to the recent course-correction in the courts, we explore why definitions matter. If liberty means anything, it must include the courage to say no to practices that violate equal protection, due process, and the dignity of women and dissenters. We trace the timeline many avoid: Muhammad’s early years in Mecca marked by persuasion, followed by the Medina turn where governance, warfare, and law fused into a total system—what we now call Sharia. This history isn’t theology class; it’s a user’s manual for understanding how political Islam advances, how it frames power, and why some societies struggle once parallel legal norms begin to surface. Europe’s arc—heritage to secularization to rising Islamist influence—offers concrete lessons: concessions stack, intimidation chills speech, and courts can drift when citizens are afraid to speak plainly. Then we get practical. Frank walks through a simple standard: if any religiously justified act breaches constitutional rights, the state intervenes—impartially, consistently, and early. We talk model legislation that keeps foreign legal codes from overruling American rights in family or contract law; civic education that teaches young people the First Amendment’s true boundaries; and real community safeguards against intimidation. Nissar’s experience underscores what’s at stake for those who leave Islam or challenge orthodoxies: without clear law and a culture of courage, the most vulnerable go unprotected. We close with a grounded optimism: Americans can defend both faith and freedom by returning to first principles—equal law for every person, no exceptions. If this conversation sharpened your thinking, share it with a friend, rate the show, and hit subscribe so you don’t miss the next chapter of this series. Your voice shapes the public square—what will you stand for today? Support the show

    27 min
  5. 6D AGO

    How Parent-Led, Faith-Rooted Schooling Fuels A Free Nation

    Is freedom built at the ballot box—or around the kitchen table? We open a lively, no-fluff conversation about education as discipleship, why parental authority is essential to a free society, and how churches can move from the sidelines to the front lines of formation. Joined by Stephen McDowell of the Providence Foundation, we explore his new film “Educated for Liberty,” a free, segment-based resource designed to help families and congregations reclaim the mission of shaping young hearts and minds. Across the episode, we connect founding-era wisdom with today’s realities. Early American schooling united literacy with virtue and self-government, producing citizens capable of stewarding liberty. As education drifted to bureaucracies, academics decoupled from morality and meaning, fueling cultural confusion. Stephen lays out a clear framework: parents have the right and duty to lead, the church is called to assist, and education that honors truth and character yields stable, flourishing communities. We also confront the hard outcomes of outsourcing formation—why “sending kids to Caesar” predictably harvests a secular worldview—and how to reverse course with courage and clarity. This isn’t just theory. We walk through practical pathways any family can start now: homeschool curricula that are turnkey, micro-schools and one-room models, co-ops for specialized subjects, and church-based schools supported by scholarships. The film features respected voices like Mike Farris, Carol Swain, George Barna, Alex Newman, and the Bartons, offering stories, tools, and a step-by-step on-ramp. Whether you’re curious, cautious, or ready to jump, you’ll find a roadmap for aligning method with mission so your children are truly educated for liberty. Stream “Educated for Liberty” free at ProvidenceFoundation.com or EducatedforLiberty.com, share it with a friend, and tell us your next step. If this conversation helps, subscribe, leave a review, and pass it along to someone who needs a nudge to start. Liberty grows where parents lead and truth is taught—let’s build it together. https://www.educatedforliberty.com/ Support the show

    27 min
  6. FEB 17

    When Executive Orders Meet Biblical Principles

    Power without principle corrodes, but principle without power accomplishes little. We set out to bridge that gap by examining how executive orders work, where their legal boundaries lie, and how a biblical framework can help citizens evaluate them with clarity rather than heat. Pastor and author Jim Garlow joins us to unpack his new project auditing more than 200 of President Trump’s recent executive orders against Scripture-based criteria, grouping them into practical themes like border policy, religious liberty, DEI, and government efficiency. We start by demystifying executive orders: they implement existing law and cannot create new statutes. That matters in court, where well-crafted orders cite authority, anticipate challenges, and often prevail on appeal. It also matters for durability; a new administration can reverse much of what isn’t codified by Congress. With that foundation laid, we move to the heart of the conversation: can faith-informed principles—justice, ordered compassion, equal weights, protection of conscience—offer a reliable lens for modern governance? Jim argues they can, and shows how a topic-by-topic approach makes dense policy readable for leaders, pastors, students, and everyday voters. Immigration becomes a case study. We explore biblical categories that distinguish lawful residents, temporary guests, and those who enter with harmful intent, mapping them to modern visas, naturalization, and unlawful entry. The goal is not to license cruelty or naivety, but to pair welcome with responsibility and the rule of law. From there we touch religious liberty, where safeguarding conscience and limiting state coercion remain nonnegotiable if we want a healthy civic culture. Throughout, we emphasize method over marching orders: learn the principles, apply them consistently, and judge policies—anyone’s policies—accordingly. If you care about constitutional boundaries, moral clarity, and practical tools for evaluating policy, this conversation will sharpen your thinking. Grab the book at wellversedworld.org, share this episode with a friend who loves both history and Scripture, and subscribe to get future deep dives. Have a question we should tackle next? Leave a review with your toughest policy puzzle and we’ll take it on. Support the show

    27 min
  7. FEB 16

    Safeguarding Sunday

    A sanctuary should feel safe—and that takes more than good intentions. We sat down with John Bradshaw, founder of Valor Defense Consulting, to map out a step‑by‑step framework any church can implement to protect people while keeping a warm, welcoming culture. From leadership’s duty of care to on‑the‑ground tactics, we dig into what real preparedness looks like when faith meets risk. We talk through why written policies matter, how to align with your state’s laws, and how to give designated team members clear authority for trespass decisions, de‑escalation, and emergency response. John shares why the force continuum starts with presence and words, not weapons, and how a ministry mindset changes everything. You’ll hear why greeters and parking volunteers are the front line of prevention, how to spot red flags without profiling, and why early, friendly engagement can defuse most situations before they reach the sanctuary. Training goes beyond a handful of volunteers. We explore tabletop drills that sharpen decision‑making, practical exercises that build muscle memory, and medical readiness that includes CPR, AED, and trauma care for bleeding control and airway support. Then we tackle the overlooked phase: post‑event operations. Learn how to secure facilities, coordinate with law enforcement, manage media and social communications, support victims and families with pastoral care, and activate a continuity of operations plan if your building becomes unusable. If you’re a pastor, elder, usher, children’s leader, or a concerned member who wants a church safety program that is both compassionate and capable, this conversation delivers a clear, comprehensive playbook. Share it with your team, then take the next step with a written plan and regular training. If this helped you, subscribe, leave a review, and pass it to a friend who leads—safety is a ministry we build together. Support the show

    27 min
  8. FEB 13

    Accountability Wins And Culture Shifts

    A surprising wave of accountability is reshaping the week’s biggest stories—and it actually feels like momentum. We open with a malpractice verdict that forces a hard reset on medical ethics, especially for irreversible procedures on minors. It’s not about gloating over penalties; it’s about restoring a physician’s duty to biology, informed consent, and moral responsibility. From there, we head to Texas, where a new law targets the mail-order abortion pill pipeline by empowering harmed women and families to bring civil action against out-of-state providers. The focus is harm reduction and accountability, not punishing women—an approach tailored to today’s tactics. Free speech gets a full-throated defense as courts strike down sweeping bans on “deceptive” political media in Hawaii and California that threatened satire and parody. The message is clear: elected officials don’t get immunity from ridicule. That segment sparks a broader reflection on civic literacy—why ignorance inside public office breeds bad law—and a practical reminder that turnout in primaries and general elections remains the hinge of real change. Favorable polling is meaningless if we don’t show up. We also lean into a cultural bright spot: Tim Allen publicly finishes a 13-month, word-by-word read through the Bible and commits to starting again. It’s a sign that serious, thoughtful faith is gaining public respect, not as a trend but as a disciplined pursuit of truth. On the political front, immigration numbers tell a story the headlines often miss: Hispanic support for stronger border enforcement is rising, and Border Patrol ranks reflect that alignment in lived experience and values. Finally, we examine the military’s pressure on Scouting America to step away from DEI priorities and return to God and country—a nudge toward institutions that build character and allegiance to enduring principles, with a nod to groups already on that path. If you value clear thinking on faith, freedom, medicine, and speech—and you’re ready to channel that into action—tap play, share the episode with a friend, and leave a quick review to help others find the show. Then tell us: where do you want to see accountability land next? Support the show

    27 min
4.8
out of 5
2,136 Ratings

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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