The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Friday, April 5, 2024
Episode Date: April 5, 2024This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 07:59)The Finitude of Human Scale: What the Ship Crash into the Francis Scott Key Bridge Reminds Us... About Theology and the Limits of HumanityPart II (07:59 - 11:14)Artificial Intelligence Has an Insatiable Appetite: Even the Internet is Not Big Enough to Feed AI DemandsFor Data-Guzzling AI Companies, the Internet Is Too Small by The Wall Street Journal (Deepa Seetharaman)Part III (11:14 - 12:42)A Tragedy with Multiple Lessons: Modern Protections Prevented the Damage and Death Toll of Taiwan’s Earthquake From Being WorsePart IV (12:42 - 18:37)I am a Palestinian Christian. I Am Concerned About Your Teachings about the Israel-Palestinian Conflict — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters from Listeners of The BriefingPart V (18:37 - 21:29) Is Hospice Care Passive Euthanasia? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters from Listeners of The BriefingPart VI (21:29 - 23:31)How Can God Be Omnipresent If He Cannot Be in the Presence of Sin? — Dr. Mohler Responds to a Letter from a 14-year-old Listener of The BriefingPart VII (23:31 - 26:40)What are Your Thoughts on the ‘Religion’ of Trump or Biden? — 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.
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It's Friday, April 5, 2024. I'm Albert Boller, and this is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
These days, very modern people are very accustomed to being thrown giant statistics.
We have a massive economy. We're a massively complicated society. We're able to do incredible things. We can send rockets into space.
We can look through the electron microscope and even other technologies. And we can look at the complexity.
of things that are just invisibly small.
But at the same time, sometimes the size of what we get into becomes quite a problem.
Just ask those who are looking at the wreckage of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore.
One of the things many people miss is that that particular accident is an accident of scale,
which is to say, yes, it happened because a big ship lost power and eventually drifted into a pier of a massively huge bridge
leading to the absolute collapse of the bridge, and yet the scale is a part of the problem.
And this is perhaps helpful for us to think about, because we are increasingly accustomed to things
getting way outside of human scale. And to be honest, we now talk routinely about things which are
so out of scale we really can't imagine them. We can talk about trillions of dollars, but we can't
imagine trillions of dollars. We know that's a matter of reality and accountability. We want
people to count those trillions of dollars rightly, but at the end of the day, we really can't get
our minds around, say, a trillion dollars, much less multiple trillions of dollars. And then you look
at other things. You look at, say, distances in space. Now, I know we know or can determine many
of those distances, but in honest terms, they boggle the human imagination. It's very hard for us to come up
with anything analogous to those kinds of distances on a human scale. And we also understand the way
our economy and the society's moving is towards bigger and bigger all the time. And the ship
bigness is now a part of the problem. Just to ask again, the folks in Baltimore who are looking at
that incredible disaster with a collision between a big ship, but not the world's biggest ships
and a bridge that was built at a time when ships of that size and that tonnage weren't even
imaginable. So the Francis Scott Key Bridge there in Baltimore, it was finished in 1977. So that's
not ancient history. I'll admit it may seem like I graduated from my school that year.
But we are talking about a term of life in which you have many living Americans who can say,
oh yeah, 1977. And that was the year the Francis Scott Key Bridge was opened. At that time,
you're talking about a big vessel in terms of cargo having 3,000 TEUs. Now, I know you're dying
to find out what a TEU is. Well, think of these container ships and think of the containers. And they
often look like, say, the trailer on a semi-tractor trailer rig. And you see these massive cargo ships
with all these containers stacked up. And that is now the measurement. It's a TEU is a 20-foot equivalent
unit. So you're thinking about one of those containers, 20 feet long. It is the TEU, the 20-foot equivalent
unit. If you go back to 1977, the Hamburg Express, and the Wall Street Journal lays this out
beautifully. The Hamburg Express carried 3,000 TEUs. Now, that's a lot because just going back, say,
10 years to 1968, you're really looking at a TEU limit of about 1,500. So 1,500, that's been doubled by the time
you get to 1977. Where are we now? Well, you can talk about a ship known as the MSC Arena, 24,300
TEUs. So we're not just talking about a bigger ship. We're talking about, frankly, a completely different
phenomenon. We're talking about
massive, massive
tonnage. You're talking about
dozens of these previous
big ships being bundled together
in one ship. In this case,
you could take eight of those ships
that were typical in 1977
when that bridge opened. You could put them together
in one ship, and that's just about
where you are with the ship
known as the arena.
Now, that's bigger than the Dolly.
The Dolly, the ship that crashed into the
bridge, is 10,000 T.E.
use because the bridge was at a certain height and many of those larger container ships couldn't get
through it. Now, that's the reason why, for example, they're talking in Savannah about a massive
project to lift the Talmadge bridge there by a significant factor in order to get these larger
ships through, but the Francis Scott Key Bridge would have allowed the Dolly at a certain point
in the bridge to have passed, but of course it ran into the pier. But the Dolly is little these days,
as compared to the ships that are often crossing the Atlantic.
and the Pacific. Now, shipping's had a hard time this year. You've got the Houthi rebels there in Yemen
who are a direct threat in the Red Sea. You've got water level problems in the Panama Canal
that have restricted commerce, and now you've got incidents like this. It's just a reminder of how
fragile our transportation system is, but I want to go back to where we started. It's also just a matter
of scale. We human beings can scale things up so far that we frankly lose control of how even to
handle what we have created. Now, I'm not saying that's what has happened with these ships in general,
but we are talking about this bridge being knocked down by a ship that no one could even have
imagined when the bridge was dedicated just a matter of a few decades ago. That, of course,
leads to some other questions, because now you have to ask if we have to replace that bridge in
Baltimore, how far do we scale up? It won't make sense to put the Francis Scott Key Bridge back in
place. That would make no sense at all. Frankly, it would not.
make sense to come up with a bridge that has a higher opening for, say, a ship just like the
Dolly. You know the way this logic is going. No, now that we have to build this bridge, we need to
build it big enough, not just for the ships of the present, but for the ships of the future. How
large may they be? Now, you'd say there might have to be some physical constraints because you do
have something like the Panama Canal, but in reality, it's a matter of economic scale. Some of these
shipping companies are deciding it might be to their advantage to have.
have far larger ships that may have to go even around the entire point in South America or, for
that matter, Africa in order to avoid going through, say, a canal the ship won't fit through,
because the shipping of this cargo on this scale will be financially rewarding enough.
You can just forget the canal.
Just stay in the Atlantic, stay in the Pacifics, stay in the Indian Ocean.
Just imagine how large these ships could one day be.
But my problem, frankly, is not the navigation of the seas.
my issue here really isn't the size of ships.
It is human scale, and it is just a reminder to us that human beings live in a human scale,
and that scale is not changed appreciably and isn't going to change appreciably
because this is the way the Creator made us.
And even as we look at basic measurements, we still have very familiar measurements
that are tied to the human body, including the measurement of something like a foot.
The more we abstract anything from that human scale, the harder it is for us to take.
the measure of it and understand it. I'm not against this massive shipping in terms of what it can
deliver for us. And the savings of cost and the gain that comes to the economy, it's great to be
able to order something and know that it will be coming in an affordable way from somewhere
all the way around the world. That's a great thing. But the human scale is still something
that shows itself as when you look at those very human workers now quite courageously working on the
wreckage of that bridge, and you look at that big bridge, and you look at that big ship,
and you look at these very small human beings by comparison, and we know that it is the human
beings who are the very point. But while we're thinking about that, just in terms of, say,
TEU's, 20-foot equivalent units, we think about feet, we think about yards, we think about
miles, it's a bit different when we think in digital terms. And I want to draw attention
to an article that appeared on the front page of the Business Edition in the Wall Street Journal this
week. The headline is this. The internet is too small to feed artificial intelligence ambitions.
Okay, this really is interesting. The reporter's deepest Atharaman and the reporter writes,
quote, companies racing to develop more powerful artificial intelligence are rapidly nearing a new
problem. The internet might be too small for their plans, end quote. Now, I don't know what comes
after this, but the point is that even when you exhaust the internet, artificial intelligence,
is still hungry.
Quote,
ever more robust systems
developed by open AI,
Google, and others
require larger oceans
of information
to learn from
that demand is straining
the available pool
of quality public data
online at the same time
that some data owners
are blocking access to AI companies.
Some executives
and researchers
say the industry's need
for high-quality
text data
could outstrip supply
within two years
potentially slowing
artificial intelligence
or AIs
development, end quote. So, the internet, which is so large, larger than most of us can even
imagine in terms of its reach, its content, its scale, the internet just isn't big enough for the
rapacious appetite of artificial intelligence. And if all this didn't sound threatening enough,
just listen to this, quote, AI companies are hunting for untapped information sources and
rethinking how they train these systems. Open AI, the maker of chat GPT, has to
discussed training its next model on transcriptions of public YouTube videos, people familiar
with the matter said, end quote. So yeah, you or your kid's YouTube video could be all
a sudden sucked up in order to train artificial intelligence. How's that for encouraging news
on a Friday? But maybe these big social media companies and platforms are going to find a way
to use, say, our content in order to feed this artificial intelligence. The Wall Street
Journal article says this, quote, meta-platforms see.
CEO Mark Zuckerberg recently touted his company's access to data on its platforms as a significant
advantage in its AI efforts. He said meta can mine hundreds of billions of publicly shared
images and videos across its networks, including Facebook and Instagram. End quote. Oh yeah,
artificial intelligence has an appetite. And somebody's going to feed that appetite.
This gets back to one of the primal stories of fallen humanity, and that is the story of technology
that gets out of control.
To the ancients, that power might be fire.
In more recent days, it might be out of control artificial intelligence.
Back when I was a boy, the danger in terms of an earth-created problem
that would turn on humanity was robots or computers that turn violent and malevolent.
But then we need to realize that the power of those stories
is not based in the fact that they're impossible,
but our fear that in actuality, they're not.
But just before we turn to questions on a similar theme, we are reminded of how small we as human beings are.
When you look at the scale of what it means to be a human being up over against the power of something like an earthquake,
and we saw that tragically enough in a very powerful earthquake this week in the island nation of Taiwan.
And of course, even as human beings throughout time have heard the tales of such earthquakes,
we're the first generation to be able to see these, if not in real time, then very close to it.
with the hundreds of videos that became very apparent very, very quickly.
Thankfully, given architectural and engineering planning there in Taiwan,
even as in previous decades, an earthquake of this scale would have killed perhaps hundreds
or thousands of people, there is a death toll, but at this point, thankfully, it is remarkably
low compared to those other previous earthquake disasters.
The people of Taiwan live with many dangers, frankly, and not all of them from earthquakes.
they're also all too close to China, and of course we've been talking about the military threat there.
But the threat of an earthquake just reminds us of human scale and how small we are
and how little control we have over such things.
So as we get ready for questions and go into the weekend, we'll be praying for those in Taiwan,
and we will remember a basic Christian truth, and that is that even though the ground under our feet
seems so firm, it is not something we can just take for granted and assume we'll
always be firm. Okay, now let's turn to questions. A man wrote in and he asked that his name not be
used and he made a very serious statement that I think deserves a serious response and frankly
a compassionate response. This man identifies as a Palestinian and he wrote in that he feels threatened
by my teachings. He says, quote, your lack of compassion toward the Palestinian people is very
sad. Thousands of innocent people are being starved and killed and you do not address it as wrong
He goes on and says he's a Palestinian Christian.
He speaks of living in the United States and saying that there is hatred expressed towards Palestinians.
And at least in this context, he says sometimes coming from Christians, he then asked the question,
is it possible for you to start teaching love and respect to all human race, regardless of religion or ethnic background?
I want to say, first of all, that it is entirely possible for any Christians speaking to any of these issues to sin by failing to express adequate.
for that matter, comprehensive compassion when it comes to stories like this, to unfolding realities
like this, to horrors like what is taking place in Gaza. I've tried not to do that. And it's
simply impossible in every single episode and every single conversation covering these issues.
It's impossible to speak of all these things simultaneously. But, you know, this listener has raised
a point and I want to dignify the point and I want to respond to it as compassionately and honestly
as I can. And that's to say, yes, I may not have adequately, certainly at some point when you were
listening, spoken of the suffering of the Palestinian people. That is a very pressing moral reality.
But in this situation, I want to say it's very, very difficult to extricate the fact of Palestinian
suffering and what we should do about that or even what the international community should do about
that from the context of the savage attack by Hamas on Israel and the fact that Israel
defending itself against Hamas is now undertaking a military action that, quite frankly, is very
similar to actions taken by the United States and the war on terror and other similar historical
developments. I believe that there are a few people on planet Earth who have been as besieged
and maligned and misused as the Palestinian people. I don't want to state that. But I think the main
abusers of the Palestinian people have been in many cases those who have sought to use their cause,
for instance, in order to argue for the non-existence of Israel, or to make claims that, quite
frankly, just don't align with history. It is true that the Palestinian people lost a very
great deal with the establishment of Israel as a state in 1948, 1949. No honest person denies that.
But when you look at the situation of the Palestinian people over time, and that means even before
and after 1948, 1949, quite honestly, the Palestinian people have been more about,
abused by other nations, and that means other than Israel. And so you look right now at the
situation, where are the Arab nations coming to the relief of the Palestinians, inviting the
Palestinians to come and to seek refuge in their nations? You just don't see that. And that's a
hidden part of this story. And also you have the fact that Hamas is in control in much of this
territory and was actually elected there. Now, one of the difficulties for Christians is
that when you look at, say, the occupied territories, there have been a lot of Christians,
a lot of Palestinian Christians in those territories, a lot of Christian work in those territories.
They're on the West Bank and in Gaza. And so there's a lot of legitimate Christian heartbreak over this.
By the way, one of the very sad things taking place, and this is not because of the Israeli military
action, but rather it is because of longer trends and the Islamification of much of this territory
and of much of the Palestinian community,
you're really looking at a fast decreasing Christian presence there among the Palestinians.
I want this listener to know that I appreciate the fact that you wrote.
And once you wrote, I felt like I was really morally responsible to discuss this on the program today.
And I want to do anything I can to express all the compassion that I think Christians should muster to the Palestinians.
And that means seeking for an end of violence as soon as possible.
but I want to say that's not a one-sided equation because you are looking at the embedding of Hamas
there in the Palestinian population. Now, I know there are many, many innocent victims. You look at the
children, you look at the women, you look at the families, and you just have to wonder in a broken
world, how can any of this continue? But you also look at the fact that Israel, for its own
self-existence, is undertaking this action against Hamas, and Hamas has deliberately, strategically embedded
itself in a civilian population in order to bring about as much civilian loss of life and suffering
as possible. And by the way, that is an official tenet of Hamas. Hamas has actually officially said
that the use of the suffering of the Palestinian people furthers its cause. I find that
absolutely reprehensible. It leads me to have even deeper concern, care for, and I hope compassion
for the Palestinian people. But you know, as I conclude here, I want to say, I think at times
Christian sympathy means we have to put ourselves in the position of another. And if I were in the
position of being a Palestinian, seeing my people suffer so greatly, seeing Palestinian men, women, and
children suffer so greatly, I would want that suffering to end as soon as possible, and I would
want righteousness to prevail. And I need to say to my Palestinian brother in Christ here, that is my
prayer too. Sometimes in a situation like this, quite honestly, we just have to pray as Jesus taught us to pray.
thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. I want to thank this listener for
listening and also for the respect in sending this question. You made some very hard statements,
I hope I have responded to them truthfully. I hope I've responded to them rightly.
Next, you know, as Christians, sometimes we just have to deal with matters of life and death,
and the scripture makes that so abundantly clear. A listener wrote in, and she refers to the briefing on
March the 18th. And she says, quote, I was wondering if you consider hospice care to be passive
euthanasia. My understanding of hospice care is that it is palliative care only to keep the patient
comfortable and out of pain as much as possible, but not doing things to treat their illness.
Well, you know, this is a really smart question. And this is where we need some real care
and thinking these things through. And sometimes it requires more honesty than we often get
in some medical situations. And so I'm going to argue, it's a very smart.
question. I'm going to argue that hospice care is not always passive euthanasia.
Euthanasia means bringing about death. And so one of the things that is supposed to mark
hospice care, now I say supposed to, at least as classically defined, hospice care is for those who
are dying. In other words, they're in an active process of dying. Euthanasia refers to someone
before an active process of dying. In that time before the active process of dying, active euthanasia
means just bringing the life to an end by some action.
Passive euthanasia means someone who is not at the point of dying,
someone who is not in the process of dying,
who nonetheless says, I'm going to just stop medical treatments.
Or when you have, say, medical practitioners to say,
let's just cut off nutrition.
And that's why there's such deep Christian concern about that.
But in the period of active dying, well, euthanasia is now off the table.
Now, there are still moral considerations,
and this woman very kindly referred to the past.
of both of her parents under hospice care. And you know, frankly, I think hospice care has to be
carefully defined because it's not always the same thing, not always the same approach or policies
place to place. But at least in classic form, hospice care is to be invoked and to apply only when
active dying has started. And here's something that is also true, the Christian worldview.
We are not obligated morally, according to the Christian worldview, to try to forestall the
active process of dying indefinitely. And so we're the people who understand that death is one of
the realities that God tells us we are to face honestly. And no one should consider any of these
decisions easy when it comes to matters of life and death, especially with the death of a loved one.
But this is a good question. And I think it's just key to make that distinction between when someone
is in the process of active dying and before that, euthanasia applies to any kind of intervention,
active or passive, before that phase, in that phase, euthanasia is really not the moral question.
There are other moral questions. And by the way, I want to say to this listener, the way you have
described the situation of your parents as one familiar, I think, to many, many Christians,
and it looks like you handled it absolutely faithfully.
Next, another interesting question asked by a 14-year-old boy in Georgia. And he says,
my question to you is, how can God be on the present when the Bible says he cannot be near
sin. He goes on to say, we live in a sinful broken world and all are in need of a Savior,
but if we are all sinners, how can he be near to us on earth? Well, another smart question,
and I'm not certain. I've been trying to think of what particular biblical text Carson may be
thinking about here. But Carson, let me just step back for a moment and say, what we affirm
with the omnipresence of God is that he is in all places all the time. He is everywhere,
all the time, 24-7, you might say in our temporal terms, but he is eternally present in all reality, period.
Now, that most importantly means that there's no place where God is not.
But when you talk about sin, you're talking about a moral category.
And again, I'm not sure what particular biblical text you might thinking about here,
but it is true that God's character is infinitely distant from sin.
it is true that God does not know sin as we know sin. Obviously, he knows all things in terms of
knowing about them, but he is morally separated from sin in his absolute holiness to the extent that
the Bible even says he does not know sin as we know sin. So I want to say also to this young man,
look, we are sinners. All human beings are sinners. So if God could not be close to us in our
sin, God would be close to no human being. And I think that's one of the reasons.
reasons why it's so precious that we're told that God was in Christ, reconciling the world to
himself. In other words, this is the great truth of the incarnation of Jesus Christ, which is at the
very center. He is God with us, Emmanuel. So, you know, Carson is a really good question,
and I'd be very interested in what Bible verse in particular you might have in mind, but just in general
terms, we're not talking here about a spatial reality, but a moral reality in terms of God's
infinite distance from sin. Okay, we're going to have to bring today's episode to a close,
one more question, and this is another one that comes with a certain kind of edge to it,
and I appreciate it. This listener writes in and says, quote, you mentioned that Joe Biden
tries to appear as a very religious, although he is not, what are your thoughts on Trump?
End quote. Well, I got a lot of thoughts here. I'll simply say that I think both candidates
seek to manipulate religion each in his own way. The distinction here is that throughout his
life, Donald Trump has never particularly claimed a very deep religious commitment. Now, I realized
all of a sudden he's showing up on television, even selling a Bible, but let's just get to the bottom
mind here. Politicians do with religion what politicians do with religion. I think the distinction
I'm trying to make is that no one with a straight face is arguing that there's any longstanding
deep theological commitment that is represented by Donald Trump. I think that's not a part of his
longstanding brand. But when it comes to Joe Biden, I'm frustrated by the fact that the mainstream media
and others continue to just refer to him like he's some kind of faithful Catholic when he is actually
living and acting in contradiction to Catholic teaching. But if we're going to talk about politicians
and the misuse of religion, and I'm saying all politicians misuse their religious identification
or Christian claims, and it's simply going to say that more often than not, what you have in the
collision of a politician and religion is something that turns out to be, at least to some extent,
a wreck. All right. So as we close, I'm going to let you in on something.
when you go to the website at Albertmuller.com and you post a question, you will see there's now the option of asking the question or posing it in audio or video terms.
And we need to bank some of those in order to be able to use them in future programs.
So let me just invite you to do that.
We're glad to get your questions however you want to send them.
I'm happy to tell you that Southern Seminaries next preview day is coming up, and it's coming up fast.
It's going to be on Friday, April the 12th.
In our secular age, we see an increasing need for those who are called to ministry, and we see the need for them to be trained with the highest level of biblical and theological education for a lifetime of faithful service and faithful conviction.
That's why Southern Seminary is committed to providing rigorous theological education that you and the church can trust.
That preview day, April the 12th, you'll tour our beautiful campus, meet our world-class faculty, and learn how God is using Southern Seminary to train faithful ministers of the gospel.
Listeners to the briefing, now get this, can register for free at sbts.edu slash preview by using the code.
Now, you've already figured this out, the briefing.
I look forward to seeing you there.
Once again, as always, thanks for listening to the briefing.
For more information, go to my website at Albertmogler.com.
You can follow me on Twitter by going to Twitter.com forward slash Albert Mowler.
For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbtsbts.org.
For informational on voice college, just go to voicecollege.com.
I'll meet you again on Monday for the briefing.
