A pastor leads his church out of the sanctuary, marches them to a city wall where unwanted infants are left to die, and starts ripping the bricks down with his bare hands. That forgotten story becomes a mirror for modern America and it is one reason I wanted you to hear Tim Barton’s conversation with pro-life advocate and filmmaker Seth Gruber.
We talk about The Last Stand event in Denver and the premiere of Seth’s new film, also called The Last Stand, along with the broader work of White Rose Resistance. Seth makes the case that the church has spent 1,900 years resisting evils that keep resurfacing: abortion and infanticide, the sexualization of kids, blurred gender lines, and the state stepping into the parent-child relationship. He brings history to life through Athanasius, the Nicene-era church leader who preached the Incarnation at the “infanticide walls” and helped spark a new legal imagination for the sanctity of life.
We also connect the dots to America’s own foundations. Tim points to Founder James Wilson and early legal reasoning about the protection of unborn life, then asks the question many listeners are thinking: are we being “too extreme”? Seth answers with a warning from civilizational history and cultural sociology, including J D Unwin’s Sex and Culture, and a hard look at 1973 as a hinge point for abortion, pornography, and the broader sexual revolution.
If you want a biblical worldview lens on pro-life convictions, Christian citizenship, and how history can fuel courage, this one is for you. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review with the moment that challenged you most.
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