The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Friday, April 26, 2024
Episode Date: April 26, 2024This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 06:53)Jontay Porter Receives Lifetime Ban from the NBA: A Necessary Move by the Commissioner, But I...sn’t It a Bit Hypocritical?Jontay Porter pays the price, as NBA and other leagues play with fire on gambling by The Athletic (David Aldridge)Part II (06:53 - 08:55)The Detrimental Professionalization of College Sports: How Big Money is Changing the Game of Intercollegiate AthleticsPaychecks, Drafts and Firings: The Possible Future of College Sports by The New York Times (Billy Witz)Part III (08:55 - 11:22)Organized Corruption at the Olympics? China’s Swimming Doping ScandalPart IV (11:22 - 13:30)If You Had to Preach a Mini-Sermon on the Work of Christ, What Text Would You Choose? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters from Listeners of The BriefingPart V (13:30 - 15:32)Should Christians Avoid Watching the Olympics Given the Recent Support for Paganism Behind It? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters from Listeners of The Briefing Part VI (15:32 - 17:58)How Do We Understand the Relationship Between God’s Promises to Israel and the Church? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters from Listeners of The BriefingPart VII (17:58 - 20:43)What are Your Thoughts about Forgoing College to Pursue a Trade? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters From Listeners of The BriefingPart VIII (20:43 - 23:25)How Do I Navigate Being a Christian at a School Whose Faculty is Made Up of Theological Liberals? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters from Listeners of The BriefingPart IX (23:25 - 26:35)How Do Voucher Programs Differ from Accepting Federal Funding? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters from Listeners of The BriefingSign up to receive The Briefing in your inbox every weekday morning.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.To write Dr. Mohler or submit a question for The Mailbox, go here.
Transcript
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It's Friday, April 26, 2024. I'm Albert Moller, and this is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
Well, every dimension of human life comes with deep worldview significance. There are issues we need to confront in every single human endeavor.
One of the most interesting is sports. And that's because in the concentration of human energy, curiosity, indeed, even devotion to sports, you find out a lot about what people really believe.
And furthermore, in the expression of sports in a society, you find out both by the rules that are kept and the rules that aren't how a moral universe reaches down into even the intricacies of sport and, frankly, at every level.
We're talking here about the NBA, as well as Little League.
Of course, in recent days, there's been a lot of conversation about the NBA, and in particular about Jonti Porter, who finds himself now banned from the sport for life for his involvement.
in betting. And what makes this particularly interesting is that he was found guilty of being involved
in sports betting in which basically it came down to the fact that he had to fail in order for
those with the financial interest to win the bet. It was organized corruption. It involved not only
his own team. It involved himself as a player. And he found out the hard way that involvement in
that kind of gambling is at least one line that the NBA says you can.
Cross. Adam Silver, the commissioner of the NBA, announced that just in recent days, he is now
banned for life from the sport. David Aldridge at the athletic suggested that what had happened
is that John Tay Porter committed the Cardinal Sen. And in this case, he said the commissioner
rightly not only through the book at this player, but through the whole library at him. His career
is over in the United States in the NBA. Now, just to state the obvious, what he did was wrong
at every level. Deeply wrong. What he did was dishonest and what he did was nonetheless motivated by gambling.
One of the remarkable things we need to see here is the hypocrisy of the commissioner of the NBA acting like
the NBA doesn't bear responsibility for the very problem that Jonte Porter here exemplifies.
The NBA has decided like so many other sports leagues and this includes also increasingly collegiate sports such as the NCAA.
How long is it before there are betting pools?
I mean, in this case, organized, orchestrated,
legalized, advertised when it comes to your son's little league teams
or your granddaughter's soccer team.
The reality is we're talking about gambling now infecting sport at just about every level.
And it couldn't happen in this case while the complicity of the sporting leagues themselves.
Big sports, big business.
Gambling, big business.
The intersection of big business sport and big business gambling,
it is going to be absolutely toxic.
One of the things that has proved to be true over time is that the sporting world is inherently
susceptible to absolute corruption by gambling.
And so one of the conceits, one of the false arguments that is made by many is, okay,
so we need to legalize it in order to control it, in order to legislate it, in order to regulate it.
But for every John T. Porter who is caught, how many others are not caught?
And it's not just that.
The gambling investment here, it begins to corrupt the entire system.
You actually never know why any player is doing anything, especially when there is an unexpected turn in a game, an unexpected turn in a match.
There is something that might be quite beneficial to some who are placing bets, but doesn't necessarily make any sense on the court or on the field.
We are really talking about something we all know is real.
And so what I'm saying here is that Adam Silver, the commissioner of the NBA, undoubtedly did the right thing in handing down what amounts to a ban for life to Jonte Porter for his absolutely egregious involvement in the gambling industry. But I think it's dishonest when the very same sporting enterprise seeks to make money off of organized gambling, knowing, by the way, that it's not just the corruption that comes with gambling. It's not just a thrown game. It's not just someone who says,
he's sick when he's not and goes off the court. Quite frankly, it's the other side of the gambling
industry that is where you have fathers who are putting the entire family's income at risk when
they go into a casino or they place a bet with a bookie or, for that matter, now when they do it
legally. As we know, the biblical worldview is very clear about this, making the link in terms of
economic gain between labor and reward. Those who are honored in scripture, just consider the
Apostle Paul, for example, when he's talking to Timothy, he talks about the example of a farmer.
He talks about the example of an athlete. He talks about the example of a soldier. They're all about
noble work, and they're rewarded for their faithfulness in that work. You have Jesus in the
parable speaking very clearly about a sower who goes out to sow, and you have constant examples in
the Old Testament and in the new of workers who are worthy of their hire. That is extremely. That is extremely,
important. Even in the parables of Jesus, there's a very clear understanding of the link between
investment and reward. Just consider the parable, the talents. The thing we need to understand is that
gambling upsets all of that. It turns the entire moral system on its head. Now, there are other people
are going to jump in and say, but you know, it's one thing if indeed you have a parent ruining the life
of a family in terms of a gambling addiction or a pattern of gambling. It's one thing. It's one thing.
thing if there are persons who like with drinking. They simply destroy their lives by it. It's another
thing if you have just a friendly betting pool or whatever. I've heard those arguments for years.
The problem is right now you have the open acknowledgement that there is a crisis in legal
betting when it comes particularly to young men. And we're talking especially about young men in
their 20s. We're talking about young men of college age, who by the way have been involved in this gambling.
in many cases when they are legally too young to do so anyway as if that should be the critical dividing line,
and you also have it now filtering down even into high school sports and among high school students.
Again, just because it's not legal doesn't mean it's not happening and you and I both know it.
So that's one aspect of how our worldview helps us to understand what's going on and the engagement between sports and gambling.
But there are other big issues as well.
for example, the New York Times recently ran a headline,
The Future of College Sports could be paychecks, drafts, and firings.
Billy Witts is the reporter in this case,
and it's really interesting because he's saying out loud
what a lot of people are talking about
as they discuss collegiate sports.
It is being transformed into another professional league.
It's being transformed into another commercial enterprise.
And quite frankly, it's being transformed
in a remarkably short amount of time.
You have the NIL issue in terms of name
image and likeness. You have income. You now have booster groups that are openly raising millions of
dollars to come up with income in order to get star recruits to come to a team. You have the recruits
that are acting like professional athletes moving from one team to another. And quite frankly,
you have the coaches who are adapting their entire business model as well as their athletic
strategy in order to meet this new reality. And quite honestly, you're looking at the fact that these
student athletes, as they have been historically defined, are increasingly acting like and being
treated as professional athletes and commercial agents. And whether anyone wants to acknowledge this
or not, we really are talking about the transformation of sport, particularly when it comes
to amateur sport and particularly when it comes to something like collegiate sports.
Because just about everyone knows that there's going to be a shifting out in this entire process,
and the winners are going to look a lot more like the NFL than the old NCAA.
And there's some people who would simply look at that and say, you know, it's inevitable.
Look how much money's involved.
Look at how much talents involved.
Look at how much opportunity there is for gain.
That's exactly the same argument that takes them into the gambling industry.
But at the very least, we need to recognize what is being lost.
And that's the entire idea of the student athlete.
The loss of that conception is going to come with an enormous price.
And understand, it's going to be done in the name of 18 to 22-year-olds,
but it's not going to be to the long-term gain of these 18 to 22-year-olds.
But, okay, while we're talking about this, let's just go to outright fraud.
And, of course, I'm talking about the Chinese swimming team that, it turns out,
had tested positive for a banned substance but had been cleared by Chinese authorities,
and they went on to win Olympic medals.
And the big question is, were they deserved?
Was this corrupt?
You have American swimmers who are now saying we were robbed.
You have others who are saying this is just another example of what went on for decades with the Soviet Union and its satellite nations such as Romania, routinely using illegal substances, routinely using growth hormones, routinely gaming the system.
And that stretches all the way, not only back to the Soviet Union, but to today's Russia, where, of course, sanctions against Russia will continue even at the next Olympiad, beginning in just a matter of weeks in Paris.
You just have to wonder how dishonest can we be, not just in this case to each other, but to ourselves when it comes to sport.
The Olympics is supposed to be about the ideal of amateur sport, but in an increasing number of these sports,
you have people who are now being paid to participate in the Olympics.
You also have people who had been amateurs who would have been ineligible if they had begun working in professional leagues,
but increasingly that's untenable, at least in many sports.
And so you have people who are paid professionals who show up for a matter of days.
to play amateur. But I have to tell you, when I look at this, what is perhaps most depressing
is the fact that you have organized corruption at so many levels of sport, and just about everybody
knows it. And that includes the Olympics, but quite frankly, it can be filtered down to just
about every single level. And we'd like to think that at least, while we're watching a competition,
that it's an honest competition, if it's not honest, it's not even interesting. And yes, that's
That's as true on the Little League field as it is in the Olympic Stadium or at your local college or university or your local sporting league.
It is a sign of our times that all of this is becoming not less but more morally suspicious and morally corruptible.
Rather than putting limits on where that corruption can raise its head, it is now becoming an argument that we can't afford not to be in this.
So with the Paris Olympics coming up, well, just brace yourselves.
but frankly, you might need to brace yourself when you think about your next collegiate athletic event
or the game right down the street.
All right, next we're going to turn to questions, and the first question comes from Jack,
and Jack says that he's a sophomore in high school,
and he and his friends are hosting a three-day outreach to spread the gospel throughout the school.
How great is that, Jack? God bless you.
He says, quote, on one of the days, I am giving a 10-minute mini-sermon of what Jesus accomplished,
He says, I was thinking I would use John 19 and John 20. I was wondering what passage you would use
or how you would go about tackling this question in 10 minutes. Jack, what a fantastic opportunity.
I'm glad the Lord has opened this door for you. And you cannot go wrong. Of course, going to any biblical text,
you certainly can't go wrong in this case, looking for a summary of the gospel to go to the gospel of John.
But if you got 10 minutes, I'll just tell you one text that certainly comes to mind for me is 1 Corinthians chapter 15.
let's just say the first seven or eight verses.
Because what the Apostle Paul says there in 1 Corinthians 15 is that there are two things
we have to keep in mind as a first priority, that Christ died for our sins according to the
scriptures and that God raised him from the dead according to the scriptures.
So there you've got it.
What did Christ accomplish for us?
He died for our sins according to the scriptures.
And then you think of a passage like John 316, for God's love the world, that he gave
his only son, that whosovo really is and it might not perish, but have everlasting life. Christ accomplished
that for us. How did he do so? Well, he did it by dying in our place. He died for our sins,
according to the scripture. And then he was raised from the dead according to the scripture.
The Apostle Paul says, those are the two things we have to say if we're going to talk about what Christ
accomplished for us. If Christ died for our sins and was still in the grave, then we're still dead in our
sins and trespasses. The Apostle Paul says that right in this very chapter. But because Christ is raised,
then the forgiveness of sins is preached in his name. So Jack, God bless you. I would certainly look
forward to having you as a student at Boyce College. And I'm going to pray the Lord will use you in a
very clear way in the 10 minutes you have to preach the gospel. Stand up and do it. God bless you.
All right, very interestingly, we talked about the Olympics. We talked about sports just a moment ago.
and now we got a question. David from Oklahoma City asked, given the paganism that is behind the
Olympic Games and given the paganism that was recently cited evidently on Twitter or X from the
official Olympic Games account, and as David says, this statement, quote, featured a woman
calling on the Greek gods and goddesses to bless the city of Paris and all those involved with the
upcoming games. Well, you know what? That's exactly the kind of confusion I would expect from the
Olympic Committee. That's exactly the kind of nonsense. I would think that the modern Olympic Committee
and all of its secular confusion might cite when thinking about the 2024 games in Paris.
But you know what? I think we have the authority of Apostle Paul here, for example.
The fact that that doesn't mean you can't watch the games. You can't enjoy even watching
the Olympic festivities. Quite honestly, I think if we are candid,
an awful lot of what takes place at collegiate and at the level of professional sports in the United States is quasi pagan in itself.
Nonetheless, that doesn't mean that involvement in the sport is pagan.
And I think one of the ways we can see that is that in scripture, and I made reference to this earlier, having no idea this question was coming,
that you have passages such as Paul speaking to Timothy in which he uses the image of something like the Olympic Games,
of an athlete who is running, and he's running to win.
and that's not the only place the Apostle Paul uses that kind of language. It was available and accessible,
of course, to those living in the first century there in the Greco-Roman world that fully understood
what the Olympic Games had been and fully understood the role and importance of sports and athletic
endeavor in a society. So, yeah, I don't think you become pagan by watching the Olympics,
but you would certainly be pagan if you sacrifice to the pagan gods, which you won't. Okay, a lot of the
questions that come to Christians come down to how do we rightly read the Bible. And there have been
some very interesting arguments, of course, throughout Christian history on many texts and many
questions. One of those in, say, the last 200 years has been particularly hot at times,
and that is about how we understand the relationship between the promises made to Israel and the
promises made to Christians, promises made to the church, the promises of the old covenant,
the promises of the new covenant.
And so Luke writes in asking about the promises that are given to Israel and what he calls a gap,
and that is a gap between which promises are now extended by God's grace in the New Covenant
to Gentile believers in the Lord Jesus Christ and what of the promises are unfulfilled
when it comes, say, to some of the promises made to Israel, what's going to happen to those promises.
So, you know, Luke, I really think it's a good question. That's one of the reasons why I'm a
pre-millennialist, and it's one of the reasons why I believe that salvation, redemption,
the covenant of redemption, the new covenant is indeed the covenant by which we are saved,
the covenant of grace. I do believe that in that sense, the redemption accomplished by Christ
fulfills all of the promises and the covenant of old for salvation. I believe there were
particular promises given to Israel having to do even with territorial promises. And I believe
those will be fulfilled in God's good timing, many of them at the end of the age, because I believe
that God, faithful to His Word, is going to fulfill all those promises given to Israel as a nation.
But I think it's just abundantly clear that the covenant of redemption is the covenant whereby sinners
are saved by the grace and mercy of Christ, and that includes.
and fulfills all the promises of redemption and salvation given to Israel. And now, thankfully,
as the Apostle Paul says, we've been grafted onto those promises, and those are now promises to us as
well. So I will say to you, when it comes to many of the, say, territorial promises given to
Israel, historic promises and space and time and history, I believe that we should not worry,
because every single one of them is going to be fully fulfilled. That might not be great English.
I do think it's good theology. Okay, a fantastic question that some people may think puts me on the spot.
A 17-year-old young man writes me and says, I was curious of your opinion on not going to college.
I'm 17 years old and planning on working as an electrician right out of high school instead of going to college.
He's more or less asking, is that right or wrong?
I want to say, there's everything right about that.
And I'm really glad you addressed the question to me.
And I'm going to speak to you as a seminary and as a college president.
I'm going to tell you that if I didn't believe in a collegiate education, I wouldn't be president of a college.
I believe that it's a very important mission. I do not believe that it is for every Christian.
And so I will simply say, we need people who are electricians. We need people who are skilled in the trades.
And I think it's a very great thing for a lot of young men to go into those trades because I think it is just good, honest work.
And quite honestly, I'm not sure that I know exactly how that training should.
should work for you, but it sounds like you've already worked that out. My encouragement to you
would be that if you go into one of these trades immediately after high school, and by the way,
again, I want you to hear me say, I think that's a very good thing. It's not for every young man,
not for every young person, but for some, I think it's just a very good thing. And it's noble work,
and quite honestly, you can make a very good living in many of these trades. I would simply say,
I would encourage you to continue your education beyond the trade in order as best you,
can to be faithful in every dimension of life. And I'm not saying you need to go get a baccalaureate degree
in addition to say your certification and involvement in a trade. I'm just saying, you know what?
I think there are a lot of, I'll just say, young men in this case who really need the collegiate
education. Otherwise, it wouldn't be a college president. But you know what? They also need
someone to teach him how to drive a nail. And there are other young men who can teach him how to
drive a nail and yet also need to learn how, for instance, to participate fully in the community,
in the life of the mind, and frankly, in the leadership of a local church, and just in terms of
even lay involvement. So this encourages me, and I thank you for put me on the spot. If I didn't
believe in college, and I mean really believe in a collegiate education, and think that for most
young Christians, that is exactly the right path. If I did believe in that, it wouldn't be
president of a college. But I also want to be right up front and say, the big issue for
Christians is how you use the gifts and callings and interest God has given you for his greatest
glory. And I think for a lot of young men, for a lot of young people, young men and young women,
but particularly for young men entering a trade is a very, very good thing. And I believe you can
honor the Lord doing so. But next, I want to go to another young man who wrote me, in this case,
just a little bit older. And right now a student at what he identified.
as a large Baptist university. He identifies as a conservative Christian, and he says there is a
conflict because what is happening in the classroom is not compatible with conservative Christianity,
but is rather evidence of theological liberalism. He asked me, quote, any thoughts on how to navigate
this? Well, I want to tell this young man, the goodness for me is that you know the Bible's the
inerrant and fallible word of God, and I don't think it's likely you're going to be shaken from that
conviction by a rather weakly presented liberal theology. The sad thing is, there are so many students
who do not have your convictions and do not have your maturity and do not know that what they are being
given is disarmed over theological liberalism and, quite frankly, is subversive of Scripture and the
truth of the Christian faith. And by the way, there's nothing new here. You mentioned that some professors
talk about the supposed contradictions in the scripture. Others ask whether Paul actually wrote his
letters and others accused the Bible and even as you say here they accuse God of being anti-women.
Well, I'll just tell you there's nothing new under the sun in terms of the modern age.
I confronted the very same things as a very young man.
I'm going to pray that you come out of this with your faith in scripture and your commitment
to Christ, your commitment to live to the glory of God, ever more evident.
I'm also going to pray that confronting these teachings in the classroom, you are ardently
steeled not only to resist them, but quite frankly, to understand what's at stake. And so you will
understand what's going on in these universities, in the classroom context. And you can be prepared to
give good advice to others about how they should see such things. But of course, the big issue here
and this young man's question helps us to face this head on is the fact that there are too many
institutions that claim to be Christian higher education and their Christianity. It's just not
biblical Christianity. They put off the signals of conservative Christianity while in the classroom
is being undermined. It's just really important that you understand what an institution actually
believes, what it teaches, what it requires of its faculty, what it does with faculty who teach
something contrary to what is true and what is confessional and what is right. And honestly,
it's quite infuriating to know how many schools get away with this generation after generation.
And I'll simply come back to the point I made earlier. It's inexcusable, but I'll tell you,
I worry less about the students who understand what the problem is. I worry more about the students
who don't understand the problem. Finally, today, I was very glad to hear from a mom writing on behalf of a family
and having to do with voucher programs, having to do with education, and especially at the state level.
And the question from this mom is based upon the fact that I've been really clear that the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Boyce College
don't participate in any federal funding, any student funding programs.
That puts us in a very small number of schools that reject all taxpayer funding.
But we do so, and I'll just come back to this, we do so.
I want to say this, Mom, to maintain the integrity of the institution.
I don't want to put this institution within the reach of Caesar's regulations.
I'll just put it that bluntly.
But I want to go back.
You mentioned the voucher situation, and that's a little bit different.
In other words, when you talk about taxpayers being given vouchers or the voucher money being channeled to taxpayers based upon the investment that those taxpayers will make in the education of their children, I think it's a very different thing.
You're the deciding factor.
You don't have to sign on to anything ideological.
No one's going to come in and give you an ideological test for receiving that voucher.
And you're also a taxpayer.
So in one sense, that money is just coming back to you.
and I think in a very helpful way that assists us in offering educational choice, which I think is a very,
very good thing at every single level. So unless the government says you have to play by these rules,
you have to adopt these principles, and we can interrogate you on your beliefs, I don't think
the voucher system is wrong. I think that's actually an example of what conservative Christians
should understand is a rightful government understanding of parental responsibility in education.
The moment those voucher systems become ideologically committed, well, then we'll all have a problem.
And state by state, I will simply say that a part of, I think, increasing the liberty of Christian families and respecting the responsibility of Christian parents, one clear sign is the educational choice programs that are in place in several states, and that includes sometimes the voucher programs.
And so I want you to hear me to say, I don't think it's the same thing at all.
I think for an institution that requires an official relationship with the state, and by extension
you become to some degree an agent of the state. That's very different when it comes to parents,
because I believe your responsibility, by the way, is not given to you by the state. It's merely
recognized by the state that authority is given to you by God. And I'm thankful for every Christian
parent who exercises that responsibility in making the right educational choices for children,
our children, your children. Thank you for your questions, and thanks for listening to
the briefing. For more information, go to my website at Albertmuller.com. You can follow me on Twitter
by going to Twitter.com forward slash Albertmoler. For information on the Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary, go to SBTS.org.org. For information on Boyce College, just go to Boiscolle. Always glad
to hear from you, questions or otherwise, at Mail and Albertmuller.com. I'll meet you again on Monday
for the briefing.
