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The WallBuilders Show

Tim Barton, David Barton & Rick Green
The WallBuilders Show
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976 episodes

  • The WallBuilders Show

    After Lindsey Graham: South Carolina’s Sudden Senate Fight - with Chad Connelly

    07/13/2026 | 27 mins.
    A US Senate seat can reshape the country overnight and South Carolina is staring at one of the fastest timelines you’ll ever hear. We’re processing the sudden passing of Senator Lindsey Graham, what his career meant for the state and the nation, and why his absence creates real pressure on razor-thin margins in Washington. When every vote counts, conversations about major legislation like the SAVE Act stop being abstract and start becoming urgent.

    We walk through how South Carolina’s process works in real life: the governor’s quick appointment, the near-immediate filing window, and a primary and runoff that arrive in a matter of weeks. That speed changes everything, from fundraising and name ID to who can realistically build a ground game fast enough to win. We also talk through the political ripple effects of sitting members of Congress running for the seat, and how one Senate race can trigger multiple downstream contests.

    Then we get candid about what Christian voters should pay attention to. “Conservative” labels don’t always translate into consistent courage on the right to life, support for Israel, and the kind of judges who protect foundational liberties. Our guest, Chad Connelly of Faith Wins, explains why that scrutiny matters more than ever and shares the field-tested approach Faith Wins uses to engage pastors and communities. One striking data point drives the strategy: research suggesting 10% of Christian voters rely on their pastor more than ads or mailers, a margin that can decide close elections.

    If you care about faith and culture, leadership quality, and how ground-level turnout actually moves, this conversation is for you. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who follows politics closely, and leave a review to help more listeners find the show.
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  • The WallBuilders Show

    A Patriotic Night In Washington

    07/10/2026 | 26 mins.
    Eight hundred fifty thousand fireworks can light up the sky, but it cannot fix a country that forgets what it is celebrating. We start with the 250th weekend energy in Washington, D.C., including the heat, the crowds, and a fireworks display so massive you could feel it from miles away. Then we talk about one of the most moving parts of the celebration: a patriotic show-and-tell of historic American flags, from Revolutionary War victories to Iwo Jima, paired with the presence of veterans and Medal of Honor recipients.

    From there, we pivot to the week’s core “good news” theme: a Supreme Court term that, in several major rulings, nudges the nation back toward constitutional originalism and clearer separation of powers. We walk through immigration and asylum policy, why Congress can set limits on judicial review, and what it means when the Court actually acknowledges boundaries on its own reach. We also unpack the growing debate over the federal bureaucracy, including decisions that strengthen presidential authority to remove certain agency leaders and pull “independent agencies” back toward accountability.

    We close with a fast, practical roundup of other headline rulings touching free speech and religious liberty in counseling, parental rights, Second Amendment public carry restrictions, redistricting and race, campaign spending limits, and fairness in women’s sports. If you care about how Supreme Court decisions shape daily life and who holds power in government, this conversation connects the dots without the legal fog.

    Subscribe for more Good News Friday updates, share this with a friend who follows Supreme Court news, and leave us a review with your biggest takeaway.
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  • The WallBuilders Show

    America’s Freedom Works Only With Religion And Morality

    07/09/2026 | 26 mins.
    The detail most people miss says a lot about what we’ve forgotten: an open Bible sitting on the table in the iconic Constitutional Convention painting. From there, we follow a thread that runs through the Founders’ writings, early American sermons, and later statesmen who saw a direct connection between faith, morality, and a free republic.

    We talk honestly about a modern claim that sounds noble but collapses on contact with reality: “government shouldn’t legislate morality.” Every law picks a moral direction, so the real issue is whose moral framework wins and whether a nation can stay free without an objective standard. Along the way, we revisit John Winthrop’s “city upon a hill” warning, John Quincy Adams’ striking Fourth of July reflections tying America’s founding to Christian principles, and Alexis de Tocqueville’s observation that religion and freedom in America moved together instead of pulling apart.

    Then we turn to one of the most revealing moments from the Constitutional Convention: Benjamin Franklin, often labeled the least religious Founder, urging the delegates to pray for wisdom and help as they build a new form of government. We close with the “tavern” action plan from the Rebuilding Liberty course, focusing on limited government and clear jurisdictions: restoring parental rights, strengthening property rights, and challenging federal duplication that crowds out state and local responsibility.

    If you care about biblical citizenship, American history, the Constitution, and rebuilding liberty with a solid foundation, this conversation will give you language, stories, and practical next steps. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show and join the rebuilding work.
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  • The WallBuilders Show

    Rebuilding Liberty’s Missing Foundation

    07/08/2026 | 26 mins.
    A lot of people can celebrate America. Far fewer can explain it. As we head toward the 250th anniversary, we’re sharing week three of Rebuilding Liberty with Tim Barton to make sure the next generation knows what freedom is, why it matters, and what kind of foundation it actually requires.

    We start with a simple premise: you can’t rebuild anything without a foundation. Tim uses Psalm 127 and Psalm 11 to frame the question, then backs it up with primary sources many of us have never read for ourselves. You’ll hear John Adams describing the “general principles of Christianity” as the common ground that helped the founders achieve independence, plus research showing how sermons and clergy voices shaped the moral arguments that later surfaced in revolutionary documents.

    Then the history gets concrete: the first Continental Congress opening with prayer and Bible study, national calls to prayer and fasting, and the sheer volume of government prayer proclamations that complicate the modern “the founders were basically secular” storyline. Tim also brings in George Washington’s words on providence, the surprising religious language on the Peace Treaty of Paris, and Washington’s Farewell Address claim that religion and morality are indispensable supports for political prosperity.

    If you care about American history, constitutional perspective, biblical citizenship, or the faith and culture debate, this conversation gives you documents, context, and a challenge to act. Subscribe for the rest of the series, share this with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway: what piece of evidence hit you the hardest?
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  • The WallBuilders Show

    History Shows Religious Expression Belongs In Public Life

    07/07/2026 | 26 mins.
    The story we’re told about faith in public life is usually simple: religion belongs at home, and anything more is a modern political invention. The receipts say otherwise. We trace a straight line from the founding era through the 1800s and into the mid-1900s showing how biblical literacy and religious expression were woven into American civic culture, public education, and even the everyday tools students used to learn language.

    We talk about Benjamin Rush’s argument that virtue is essential to liberty, then look at concrete examples like an 1816 New Jersey public school report describing young students memorizing New Testament passages, Psalms, catechism lessons, and hymns. We also unpack Noah Webster’s 1828 dictionary and how often it points readers back to Bible verses, revealing how deeply Scripture shaped American vocabulary and education. Add in public statements from Presidents Zachary Taylor and Ulysses S. Grant, and you get a picture that feels nothing like the modern caricature.

    Then we bring it to the present with the legal shift many communities have missed: the Supreme Court’s emphasis on “history and tradition” and what that means for religious liberty today, including Bible courses taught academically, student-led prayer, and holiday programs that acknowledge the roots of Christmas. We close with clear, local action steps you can actually take, from displaying “In God We Trust” and pursuing Ten Commandments displays to restoring chaplains, released-time options, and Bible curriculum access in public schools.

    If you care about religious liberty, constitutional education, and rebuilding civic literacy with real history, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with the one point you want your community to act on next.
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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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