Everett Sileven moved to
Louisville, Nebraska in 1973 to become pastor of Faith Baptist Church. In 1977, under the leadership of Sileven, the Faith Baptist started a Christian school using the
A.C.E. curriculum. To run the school, they hired Edward and Martha Gilbert, who had both graduated from
Baptist Bible College. Sileven's daughter, Tresa, who graduated from
Hyles–Anderson College, was hired as head teacher. Sileven and others traveled to
Lewisville, Texas to receive training at A.C.E. headquarters. The school opened on September 7, 1977. However, Sileven and the church did not receive approval from the state. At the center of the issue was the fact that Sileven viewed the school as a ministry of the church, exempt from regulation by the state, while the State of Nebraska insisted that children must attend state approved schools being taught by state certified teachers. Because the school operated without approval from the state, the state ordered the school was ordered closed in 1979. This set off a series of court battles, ultimately leading to the Supreme Court refusing the hear the case. In September, 1982, Silevan was arrested, and On October 18, 1982, Judge Raymond J. Case of Cass county district court ordered the school closed. The church building, which housed the school, was ordered padlocked except for worship hours by the judge. Around 85 fundamentalist ministers from around the country came to protest by refusing to leave the church, and had to be physically removed by law enforcement. Cleveland pastor Roy Thompson along with
Greg Dixon, the
Moral Majority national secretary and pastor of
Indianapolis Baptist Temple, negotiated with authorities, seeking an end to the situation. Judge Cass eventually suspended his order to avoid continued confrontation between the out-of-state supporters and the local sheriff's office. The event was a public relations problem for the state of Nebraska with the
Christian right.
Pat Robertson covered the case on
The 700 Club, while Christian publications published photographs of Sileven and supporting pastors from around the country being physically removed from the church by the local sheriff's department. After serving four months in the Cass county jail for operating the school despite the state orders, Sileven was released on January 31, 1983. Meeting with reporters in front of the jail, Sileven proclaimed, "I do ask in the authoritative name of Jesus, the supreme law of the universe that God Almighty bind the officials of the state of Nebraska and Cass County from further interference with the ministry of God at Faith Baptist Church . . . by either converting them or restraining them or removing them or killing them". Sileven again reopened the school, and in November, 1983, a warrant was issued for his arrest. He left the state, giving speeches around the country but returned via helicopter to lock himself in the church for another standoff with the sheriff. In 1983, H. Edward Rowe, then president of the
Church League of America, wrote a book about the conflict titled
The Day They Padlocked the Church. The book included an introduction by
D. James Kennedy. The case was finally settled in 1984 when an exemption for religious schools was provided by the
Nebraska legislature, exempting registration and licensing as long as the school provided alternative evidence of meeting standards. Even as late as 2008, the case served as a point of discussion when the legislature again took up school regulation. Sileven considers himself a
Christian reconstructionist and his conflict against the state led many followers to seek training materials in reconstructionism, such as those produced by
Gary North. His stand against the government made him a folk hero in the
patriot movement as he continued to preach and speak about the evils of the American monetary system and the income tax while promiting the
unregistered church movement. == Campaign for governor ==