PodcastsHistoryThe WallBuilders Show

The WallBuilders Show

Tim Barton, David Barton & Rick Green
The WallBuilders Show
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  • A Federal City, Faithful Troops, And A Rebuke Of Socialism
    A live nativity in America’s premier arts hall, a courtroom win that restores order in the nation’s capital, and a rare bipartisan rebuke of socialism—this is the kind of good news that actually moves the needle. We open with a surprise from Washington: the Kennedy Center hosting “Noel, Jesus Is Born,” complete with Scripture readings, a children-welcoming live nativity, and performances by respected Christian artists. For a venue long seen as culturally distant from faith-forward audiences, that programming signals a real shift toward family friendly, values-centered spaces in the heart of D.C.From culture to policy, we unpack a federal appeals court decision lifting the block on National Guard deployment in the District. Beyond the headlines, we walk through why Washington, D.C. is constitutionally different, how executive authority applies in a federal territory, and what happened when enforcement returned: murders dropped and streets calmed. It’s a practical case study in how clear authority and coordinated security can deliver safety without the rancor. We also spotlight a vote you may have missed: the House passed a resolution denouncing the horrors of socialism, citing the Founders and the historical record. Symbolic? Yes—and symbols matter when they correct the narrative and remind us that economic freedom, property rights, and the dignity of work are not abstractions.We round it out with data and history. New research shows the U.S. military growing more religious even as the broader public secularizes, with weekly worship rates in the ranks roughly double civilian levels. That resonates with stories and artifacts we share from Washington’s chaplains to Patton’s prayer card—evidence that faith has long sustained service members. We talk candidly about past policies that chilled religious expression and what it looks like to restore baseline liberty for chaplains and troops today. If you care about cultural renewal, constitutional authority, religious freedom, and public safety that actually works, this conversation brings receipts.If this resonates, subscribe, share the show with a friend who needs real good news, and leave a quick review to help more listeners find us. What moment stood out most to you?Support the show
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  • Pilgrims, Kings, And Aiken Bibles
    What if the Founders didn’t reject the King James Bible at all—but rejected the politics that tried to own it? We open the archive and walk through the real story: why early American leaders printed Bibles in King James language while stripping the king’s name from the title page, how the Aitken Bible won congressional endorsement during the Revolution, and why Noah Webster’s 1833 update aimed to make Scripture plain for everyday readers. Along the way, we spotlight the Geneva Bible’s enduring appeal—not just for its translation, but for the reformers’ commentary that empowered laypeople to measure rulers by the Word, not the other way around.From Pilgrims packing both Geneva and King James aboard the Mayflower to Witherspoon and Isaiah Thomas selecting KJV language for major printings, the thread is consistent: clarity, access, and self-government in the church. That posture shaped a culture where Scripture informed civic life without bowing to royal branding. Then we pivot to another contested narrative: slavery’s end in Britain and the United States. We read the secession documents that placed slavery at the center of the split, track Lincoln’s move from preserving the Union to emancipation, and explain why America required both war and constitutional amendments to finish the work.This conversation doesn’t dodge the cost. We weigh Lincoln’s sobering reflection that national bloodshed might match the blood drawn by the lash, and we situate America’s abolition within a global timeline—acknowledging that slavery still persists in various forms today. If you’re ready to trade myths for evidence—from rare Revolutionary Bibles to primary-source secession texts—this episode brings receipts and context in equal measure.If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who loves history, and leave a review telling us which source or takeaway sparked new insight.Support the show
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  • Read, Gather, Pray
    Culture is loud, busy, and bossy—and too often it sets the rules in our homes. We talk with Pastor Alan Jackson about a quiet rebellion built on three simple habits: read the whole Bible, reclaim a weekly family table, and make one-sentence prayer as normal as saying hello. No theatrics, no heavy programs—just clear steps that put Scripture back at the center, return authority to parents, and invite God into everyday moments at work, school, and the grocery line.We unpack how a daily Bible rhythm can reshape a leader’s instincts in under fifteen minutes a day, why a device-free meal each week acts like a spiritual wellness check, and how hospitality becomes the back-up plan for empty-nesters. Alan challenges dads to move beyond the bleachers and step into spiritual leadership, pushing back on secular schedules that outrank discipleship. He shares practical language for setting boundaries with coaches and schools, and offers a deceptively simple prayer practice: hear a need, say “Let’s pray,” speak one sentence in Jesus’ name, say amen, and move on. It’s faith in public without the weird—and it builds a reputation that draws people when crisis hits.We also talk about the power of the Holy Spirit to do what our effort cannot. The early disciples were told to wait for power; modern families and public servants need the same help. Along the way, Alan shares unforgettable stories—gym-floor prayers, long drives for truth, and signs that God is moving when ordinary Christians take small, faithful steps. If you’re ready to lead at home, influence your community, and see practical change without burnout, this conversation gives you a plan you can start today.If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review telling us which habit you’ll start first.Support the show
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  • Faith, Israel, And America’s Shaking
    What if the rising chaos isn’t a detour but a diagnosis? We sit down with Pastor Alan Jackson to examine the “birth pains” rocking culture—October 7 and its aftermath, the eruption of antisemitism on elite campuses, and the widening gap between America’s Christian heritage and our present choices—and we ask a harder question: what actually holds when everything rattles.Alan lays out a clear case for beginning with Scripture, not geopolitics, when we think about Israel and national purpose. He walks through the changing security map—Hamas weakened, Hezbollah constrained, Syria fractured, Iran diminished for a season—without losing sight of the deeper spiritual currents that outlive any headline. We contrast the brutal silencing of a young campus advocate with the providential sparing of a president, and we talk honestly about God’s sovereignty when outcomes aren’t symmetrical. The takeaway is not rage, it’s resolve: use your voice, defend open debate, and refuse to normalize intimidation.From there we confront a leadership vacuum that mirrors a values vacuum. What happens when a major city elects a Muslim socialist, not merely as a political shift but as a spiritual statement? Alan challenges the church to look in the mirror: would we rally with wisdom if a bold, untested Christian were chosen instead? We turn to 2 Timothy 3 to frame why these days feel fierce—character failure, not just policy failure—and we name the danger of keeping a form of godliness while denying the cross’s power.We close with a practical path forward: build spiritual muscle memory through systematic Bible reading, prayer, accountable community, and a public witness that pairs grace with courage. Technique won’t save us; truth will. If this resonated, share it with a friend, subscribe for more conversations that mix history, Scripture, and civic life, and leave a review to help others find the show. Your voice matters—how will you use it today?Support the show
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  • Shaping Culture With Courage
    When the ground moves under your feet, what do you hold onto? We sit down with Pastor Alan Jackson at the Pro Family Legislators Conference to tackle a hard but hopeful thesis: the church is meant to shape culture, not drift behind it. With candor and care, we revisit how faith retreated from boardrooms, classrooms, and civic life—and why that retreat let rival worldviews set the terms. This isn’t a partisan rant; it’s a call to bring a clear, biblical worldview back into public conversations about marriage, family, authority, and moral courage.We trace the inflection points that changed the landscape. COVID didn’t just close buildings; it exposed foundations and cracked our trust in institutions that asked for deference while shifting standards. Hebrews 12 reframes the moment as a shaking—painful, yes, but purifying—so what cannot be shaken remains. Jesus’ image of birth pains adds urgency: intensity and frequency rise as delivery nears. That perspective moves us away from escapism and toward readiness, training believers to run through the tape with steady conviction.Pastor Jackson presses into practical steps. Tell the truth even when it’s unpopular. Equip congregations to apply Scripture to current life, not just ancient history. Support leaders who carry a biblical worldview into policy without treating politics as a savior. Confront moral fog with moral clarity, from pandemic policies to the horrors of October 7. Our heritage shows that Christian ideas once shaped law, liberty, and civic virtue; recovering that influence requires humility, courage, and collaborative action across churches and statehouses.If you’re hungry for a plan that blends conviction with compassion and gives you steps you can take this week, you’ll find it here. Listen, share it with someone who needs courage today, and subscribe to stay with us as we build a community committed to truth, service, and cultural renewal. And if this moved you, leave a review so more people can find the show.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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