Washington State rarely dominates the headlines, but Pastor Josh McPherson says that silence is part of the problem. Tim Barton sits down with Josh for the conclusion of their conversation about faith and culture, Christian civic engagement, and why a constitutional republic only survives when people of conviction refuse to opt out. Josh makes the case that inalienable rights come from our Creator, yet still have to be politically protected if we want to actually enjoy them in real life, in our families, schools, and communities.
From there, we get specific. Josh describes Washington as a testing ground for policies that later spread nationwide, and he challenges the church to face hard numbers about voter disengagement and its consequences. That urgency feeds a bold plan for Father’s Day weekend: the American Congress of Christian Men at the Gorge Amphitheatre, starting June 19, with a goal of gathering 15,000 men to worship, rally, and leave with concrete action steps. The story gets even wilder when the date lines up with George Washington signing his commission on June 19, and the venue sits in a town named George Washington.
We close with a needed heart check. Josh’s central encouragement is simple and disruptive: submission to spiritual authority unleashes spiritual authority. We connect it to the call to commit to a local church and to the Roman centurion in Matthew 8, where real faith is tied to understanding authority. If you care about religious liberty, biblical leadership, and practical ways to engage culture without becoming lawless or arrogant, this conversation will sharpen you. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find it.