The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Monday, April 6, 2026
Episode Date: April 6, 2026This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 – 10:21)American Honor, American Life: The Dramatic Rescue of an American Fighter Pilot in Iran...Part II (10:21 – 15:45)A New Age of Warfare: Americans Want an Exit Strategy in Iran, But the Situation is Complicated and ChangingPart III (15:45 – 23:12)Calls for Peace, Lacking in Moral Clarity: Looking at Statements by the Pope and the Archbishop of CanterburyTrump is a sinner but by disarming Iran he could be doing the Lord’s work by The Telegraph (Charles Moore)Archbishop prays for Middle East peace in first Easter sermon by BBC News (Maia Davies)Part IV (23:12 – 26:16)Should a Woman Hold the Office of Archbishop of Canterbury? The Anglican Communion is Likely to Divide Over This Violation of ScriptureSign 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
Discussion (0)
It's Monday, April 6, 2006. I'm Albert Moller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
Well, at 1208 a.m. on Easter Sunday morning, that is to say, just this past Sunday, 12.08 a.m., the president of the United States, announced to a post on social media that that second F-15 pilot who had been missing after the plane was shot down over Iran had been rescued by American forces.
Okay. So it was a really big.
story. And it came as really good news to this nation. And I want us to think about this in geopolitical
terms and understand what we're really looking at, not just in terms of a military conflict between
the United States and Iran. We're looking at a clash of worldviews. So let me just make the
worldview issues a little more clear. When the United States announced that the F-15E strike
eagle had been shot down, that's an enhanced tactical version of the F-15. One of the most important
aircraft in the history of American defense aviation. And when it was announced that the plane had
been shot down over Iran, it was announced that one of the two pilots had been rescued, but the
other was missing. And this went on over the course of time between Friday, U.S. time, and Sunday
morning, U.S. time. Now, time was running out because it was also announced that Iran had advertised
a reward to anyone there within the nation who might be able to find the pilot.
And look, when you talk about Iran, you talk about this kind of situation, you're talking about
a hostage leverage situation.
That's exactly the way Iran has operated.
Just remind yourselves of 1979.
When the radical forces took control, took hostage, all those Americans there in the U.S.
Embassy and held them for 444 days and released them only after President Jimmy Carter left.
office, President Reagan was just newly inaugurated. It was really a horrifying situation. And it is well
known that that is how Iran has worked. If you have followed recent news stories, but they're not
big on the front page headlines in the main. Iran has kept up a business in hostages and in
ransoms and in using hostages as political leverage. It was a nightmare scenario for the White
House, a nightmare scenario for military planners and for commanders here in the United States.
because if indeed Iran had captured one of those American pilots and held him as a hostage,
perhaps even threatening torture or public trial or public execution,
any number of these things, it would have led to a disaster.
And it would have been in itself a disaster.
And that is one of the worldview issues we need to think about for a moment.
When we're looking at the conflict between the United States and Israel,
and it's a combined effort or at least a joint effort in some sense,
against Iran. We are looking at a clash of worldviews. Let me just state some of the obvious.
There's a free press in the United States. There is no free press in Iran. In Iran, you have a repressive
theocratic, Islamist government that basically is a combination of all the political power and all the
religious power and all the militant power into one massive political experiment. It's a repressive
political regime. It has led, of course, to the deaths of many, many people, many people.
within Iran. And it is because the regime carries out routine executions. It is a reign of terror.
It has involved the use of torture. You can just look at all these different things. And we're talking
about a very different political system based upon a very different worldview. So just to take
the comparison again, in the United States, why would this issue be different than in Iran? Well,
in the first place, in the most pragmatic level, is because the people in Iran know only what
they are able to piece together based upon whatever the government tells them or whatever other
news filters in one way or the other. And by the way, Iran has really cracked down on this in terms of the
internet. And by the way, we're being told that Iran and Russia are collaborating along with also
China, it's reported, in trying to figure out how to have an internet that's stable within their
nation, but can basically be isolated from the rest of the World Wide Web. So in other words,
where the government alone would have a monopoly in the control of.
information. In the United States, there is also a very deep residual Christian conviction concerning
the worth and dignity of every single human life. And thus, you're looking at a massive mathematical
imbalance. You're talking about all the people in the United States, all the people in Iran,
and you're looking at how political leverage could come down to one human being, in this case,
an American colonel who, if captured by Iranian forces, would have given Iran,
the opportunity to use him as a political bargaining chip.
His life would basically have been worth whatever the Iranian regime decided at any point it was worth.
Now, when you talk about even the residual power, the Christian worldview, in terms of human dignity,
just realize no American president can say, hey, it's just one pilot.
What do we care? It's just the cost of war.
Now, every president has to do with the reality of casualties and military engagement,
but no American president can act like even a single life doesn't.
matter? And for instance, if you go back in American history, presidents, commanders and chief,
according to the Constitution, have often written handwritten letters to the parents or to the
spouses or to the families of fallen soldiers, airmen, sailors, wearing the U.S. military uniform.
That is how seriously every single one of these casualties is taken. And that, again, is not based
just in some kind of humanistic estimation of the worth of human beings.
It is by any estimation, and Christians have to understand this,
continuing evidence of at least the residual conscience shaped by Christianity when it comes
to human dignity and the worth of every single human being, every single human being made
in God's image.
Where the worldview is very different in human life is cheap.
And in terms of many nations around the world, many cultures around the world, many
worldviews around the world, it is apparent.
the human life is very, very cheap.
Now, one way to understand this is just to flip the equation.
Let's say that it was an Iranian pilot being held by the United States or by Israel or by
our allies.
What would happen?
Well, you have the rule of law and you have the Geneva Conventions and you have
civilized nations.
And I use that term intentionally.
You have nations committed to a civilizational moral structure that says you have to treat
prisoners of war with dignity.
you have to treat them as your responsibility, and you cannot abuse them, you can't torture them.
Now, has the United States ever made errors here?
Of course, every single nation has made errors, but the fact is that in the United States,
that is a matter of public interrogation.
In other words, the American people don't put up with that.
The American people would expect the American military and the American law enforcement and legal system
to treat even a captured Iranian pilot.
with respect. But then you flip the equation, it's just not the same thing. This has been true in many
other military conflicts, especially over the course of the 20th and into the 21st centuries. And so
the United States learned this in many other ways. The Allies learned this when it came to, for example,
the way that POWs were treated in various jurisdictions where they were caught one way or the other.
The worst case scenario for many Americans in uniform was to be caught by Imperial Japan during the
Second World War. There were other situations in which you had prisoners of war routinely abused,
as well as civilians, routinely abused, murdered, and massacred even. And so, again, it just
points to that distinction in worldview. And if you had one Iranian pilot held by the United States,
Iran would not take it nearly as seriously, as Americans would, even just one pilot taken under Iranian
terms and by Iranian authorities.
It is just a matter of great Thanksgiving that this pilot was indeed recovered.
It turns out that's a very interesting story.
So, for example, major media are reporting that it was a special forces operation
that involved both the Army Delta Force and navies famed SEAL Team 6.
And they were on the ground there.
It is also clear, and military forces have confirmed that American forces used a very
staged system of deception to try to buy time for this American pilot. It's also very clear that
training really matters. That training comes down, as the military will often say, to a matter
of immediately assessing the situation, immediately seeking to get away from the wreckage of an
aircraft, immediately seeking to evade capture, immediately seeking to allow time for the American
rescue to come. And by the way, that is based upon multiple
considerations. The plane is a very expensive plane. By some estimations, we're talking about planes
that are approaching $100 million, if not more, in terms of value. But the fact is that human
life is of infinitely greater value. Just to give you an economic comparison, they cost, just one of
these planes, the F-15E Strike Eagle, cost over $30 million back in 1998. It's not 1998. But here's
the Christian worldview again.
It's just a thing. It's just money. It's just a plane. It hurts to lose it. But the human beings inside are of infinitely greater worth.
Just to think about a distinction in worldview, just compare the Japanese imperial kamikaze pilots of World War II and the situation about the rescue of this pilot.
Just Sunday morning announced by the president of the United States.
It's a clash of worldviews to be sure, and one we ought to see, even as we are so thankful,
this particular American officer has been rescued.
Okay, some other very interesting things going on.
Just as we think about shifts in the war in Iran,
one of the big questions is, what is the exit strategy?
And, you know, there is a lot of criticism
directed at President Trump for a lack of a clear exit strategy.
And yet, this is one of those situations about war
that is just proved over and over and over again.
Getting into it is infinitely easier than getting out of it.
One of the realities, and this comes down to very famous historians and theorists of war,
like von Klauschwitz, the German, or you could just look at many others.
And that is that strategy is one thing, the reality of battles, a very different thing.
And so one of the old maxims of war is that a war plan rarely survives first contact with the enemy.
That's just the way war goes.
Now, is it true that we would all wish that President Trump would be just absolutely clear about his aims
and absolutely clear about a deadline and absolutely clear about an exit strategy.
The fact is that, of course, honestly, we would all like that.
That doesn't mean that would be best for the nation.
And it doesn't mean that it would serve the cause of the nation's national interest and peace in the region.
It doesn't mean that it would serve that cause by having the president say outwelled what those
terms might be even at any definite time.
Those terms need to be made very definite and very clear to the Iranians.
but in terms of public announcement, we are looking here at a fast-changing, fast-developing,
international situation in which you have armaments all over the place.
And by the way, the armaments, just to remind ourselves once again, you did have President
Trump say that Americans were in control of the air.
And yet, just a matter of a day later, you had at least two American aircraft shot and shot
down.
One of them was the F-15.
Another was an A-10 whart hog.
was able to get back out of Iranian airspace. A couple of other planes were destroyed on the ground
by Americans because in the Special Forces effort to be able to rescue that pilot from the F-15,
a couple of planes had to be left. And we weren't about to let the Iranians capture those planes
or even come to understand the engineering of those planes. And so they destroyed them on the ground.
So we are looking at a very volatile situation. We're also looking at a situation in which the
Americans are saying rightly that Iran really doesn't have an Air Force any longer. It really doesn't
have a Navy any longer. But here's the way to call for everybody. It turns out that drones and
missiles, wherever they are and however they are launched, can actually make a difference.
This is that asymmetrical warfare we've often talked about. But I want to take it to the next
level. I just want to remind Americans, there's a big lesson here. I guarantee you everyone around
the world, every political leader, every president and prime minister, every general and admirals,
paying a lot of attention to this. And it is because it turns out that conceivably a teenage extremist
with a drone could bring down a military aircraft, even though sophisticated and most expensive
and heavily armed aircraft. We are looking at a new situation. And one of the big things going on
in the foreign policy world, in the defense world, the armed forces world, is an awful lot of
conversation almost immediately about how this world is changing and fast. One of the first ways the
change showed up was after Russia invaded Ukraine. And just by any conventional terms, Russia should have
been able, as it claimed, and as it thought, to basically wrap that up very quickly. But the Ukrainian
people have fought back with great valor. They've also fought back ingeniously using some of this
very kind of armament, in particular drones and other forms of rather simple weaponry ingeniously
deployed. And by the way, sometimes low-tech aircraft with high-tech components that turn out to be
absolutely deadly. Okay, here's another strange thing. What is the skill set for this? It turns out,
now don't take this the wrong way. And parents, you do with this what you will. But it turns out
that some of the skills in terms of coordination and understanding, they're actually honed by some
young men playing video games. In other words, it turns out that some of this actually is transferable.
Now, that doesn't justify your 15-year-old spending hours playing video games, not to mention
your 25-year-old, but it does mean that the entire technology of war is shifting. And by the way,
there's a double message in that. Okay, so it turns out that all of this is very different,
a very different interface, as they say, a very different technology. But it's also a very different
skill set. And it's a skill set that, at least in large part, it doesn't require some of the advanced
technological expertise that Western nations had presumed it might actually be something quite a bit
simpler. And sometimes in this new situation of warfare, simple can be exceedingly deadly.
I mentioned another irony in all of this, and that is that Ukrainians took what they had
obtained as a major drone that Ukraine wanted to use. It was an Iranian drone. And then the Ukrainians
gave it to U.S. defense officials who basically improved on the drone. And the drone is now being used.
Again, based on an Iranian drone, it's being used by the American military in Iran. Okay, I want to talk
about something else. And this is connected, but it's a related story. This has to do with statements
made by the Pope and by the Archbishop of Canterbury about the military endeavors there in Iran.
And there's a big story behind this. Let's just take the Pope first. The Pope, and of course,
this is Pope Leo the 14th, the first U.S. born Pope. The Vatican had been announcing that he was
going to make in connection with Easter observances. He was going to be making some statements
calling for peace. And he did, as a matter of fact. And so in his first Easter address,
delivered as Pope, he said such things as this, quote,
we are growing accustomed to violence and different to the deaths of thousands of people
and different to the repercussions of hatred and division
and different to the economic and social consequences they produce.
He also said, in his remarks in the Vatican,
quote, let those who have weapons lay them down,
let those who have the power to unleash wars, choose peace,
not a peace imposed by force, but through dialogue,
not with the desire to dominate others, but to encounter them.
He was speaking according here to the telegraph,
London to 50,000 Catholic faithful who had gathered there in St. Peter's Square. He went on to say,
quote, on this day of celebration, let us abandon every desire for conflict, domination, and
power, and implored the Lord to grant his peace to a world ravaged by wars and marked by a hatred
and indifference that makes us feel powerless in the face of evil. In statements that the Pope,
Pope Leo the 14th, had made on Palm Sunday the week before, he said that God, quote, does not
listen to the prayers of those who wage war, but rejects them. End quote. Okay, so let's just step back
for a moment. First of all, let's just remind ourselves, this is the Catholic Pope, the Roman Catholic
pontiff. We're talking about the Pope who is the head and recognizes the spiritual head, the
supreme head of the church on earth among all Catholics. And it is an office that Protestants,
to say the very least, do not recognize. And by the way, a part of the practical reason that Protestants
do not recognize the papacy is that popes tend to make comments like this.
The opposition to the papacy is actually grounded very much in theology.
It's an unbiblical office.
But here's the thing.
Why are these kinds of statements so absolutely predictable?
And when it comes to Leo the 14th,
he's really following the example of Pope Francis I, his predecessor.
And remember, this is Pope Leo the 14th's first Easter just yesterday.
And so that means that he's been Pope less than a year.
But the point is that when you're looking at all of this, we are looking at the fact that the Pope has been making statements that basically come down to be nice, be sweet, stop fighting.
Now, all of this would be less a matter of international affairs and international news if the Pope was not also recognized by so many around the world and didn't make the claim to being a secular leader of a secular state as well.
So the Pope is basically the crowned head, so to speak, of a state, or at least of a political unit, the Vatican state.
The point is this.
When you have a Pope making this kind of statement, we just need to wonder, how does he come up with this?
And what is the context?
Because insofar as he just comes out and says, let us abandon every desire for conflict, domination, and power and implore the Lord to grant his peace to a world ravaged by wars.
Okay, you can't be against that.
no Christian would be against calling upon the Lord to grant peace to the world, a world ravaged by wars.
But the fact is, what isn't recognized here is what, in truth, the Roman Catholic Church has recognized in terms of its official teaching.
And that is that there is evil in the world, and there are times when evil has to be restrained, evil has to be confronted, and evil has to be defeated.
And so that's a part of just war theory, which is also an official part of the teaching of the Catholic Church.
But over the course of now, especially the last two papacies, but you can also say that a succession of popes have made statements very much like this.
You're accustomed to popes stating in one way or another in one context or another that everyone should just stop fighting and seek peace.
But you know, there are times in which it is really clear that one side must prevail and the other not prevail.
That's just very clear. And that's what's missing from this moral context. And when it comes to Iran, there is not a Pope, certainly not this Pope, who has any excuse for not knowing what Iran really represents and the clash of worldviews that is involved here in the history, of course, in terms of violence and all kinds of things coming from Iran.
I was particularly interested when the Pope made the statement on Palm Sunday that the Lord does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war.
Well, I guess I can understand one sense in which he would say this.
The direct quote, God does not listen to the prayers of those who wage war, but rejects them.
Okay.
Does that mean that both sides are just morally equal?
Does that mean that God does not hear in a particular way of the prayers that are, we'll say, parallel with rights?
righteousness and with long-term peace and stability. I just, I don't think this is a coherent argument.
And I do think it's one that, I think even most thoughtful Catholics are in the world. And I have so
many Catholic friends, so many thoughtful Catholic friends. I think most of them are looking at this and
saying, well, that that's just not something that the world's going to pay much attention to.
And I know a lot of Catholic moral theologians who taking Catholic moral argument very seriously
would not pull back at all from calls for peace,
who would recognize sometimes peace has to be achieved
by some kind of action that can only be defined as war.
But now I want to shift to the Archbishop of Canterbury,
the head of the Anglican Communion,
not exactly the same kind of office claimed as the Pope,
but the highest cleric, the highest clergy person
in the Anglican Communion and in the Church of England,
Sarah Malali is the first woman to serve in that role in more than 1,500 years.
So you have headlines such as for the first time a woman becomes Anglican leader.
So this came just a matter of a couple weeks ago.
And so this first Easter yesterday for the new Archbishop gave her the opportunity to speak to these issues.
And in her comments, she said, quote, this week our gaze and our prayers have been turned toward the land where Jesus was crucified and raised from the dead.
today as we shout with joy that Christ has risen, let us pray and call with renewed urgency
for an end to the violence and destruction in the Middle East and Gulf.
May our Christian sisters and brothers know when celebrate the hope of the empty tomb,
and may all people the region receive the peace, justice, and freedom they long for.
I'm just going to say that that's not a wrongly worded prayer.
It's just in the context of understanding that it is not an equal moral context.
And there are all kinds of criticisms that can be of,
laid against the United States and Israel.
And by the way, in a free society, both of them are free societies.
People are free to make these kinds of criticisms.
But it is still categorically different than what we're talking about in Iran.
And there's plenty of history to prove this.
I mean, it's not like this isn't well attested and well known.
It's not like her own government doesn't believe this.
All right.
But I do want to go back to the last days in March when she was confirmed and installed, enthroned, is actually the word.
Don't you love that?
enthroned as the 106th Archbishop of Canterbury. And so this has led to a lot of debate and
discussion and even division in the Anglican Communion. And I'm going to say it's over a very
legitimate question. And that has to do with whether or not a woman is biblically qualified to hold
the pastoral office, to serve as pastor, to serve in a biblical sense in this way. And of course,
in this sense, she is a pastor to pastors, and even an enthroned pastor to pastors. And so
many people are looking at this. It's interesting to see some very liberal Catholic women lamenting
that the Catholics don't have a female priesthood, whereas the Church of England now does,
along with the Episcopal Church in the United States and many others in more liberal countries.
The split in the Anglican Communion is likely to come because you have some national churches,
such as in Africa, where they're just not going to accept a woman in this kind of role.
But it's not just that, and this is what I want to point out. It's never just this or just.
just that. Because when you look at a pattern of distinction in theology between conservatives and
liberals, it's not going to be just this. It's going to be several things together. Sometimes it's
just one thread. You pull on that thread and then you see the entire problem in the tear and the fabric.
So in other words, it's not going to be just as if you could say just. And I don't mean just a
woman, Archbishop of Canterbury. That's a profound problem in and of itself. I think it's a
violation of scripture. But that's a violation of scripture that doesn't start with the Archbishop of
Canterbury, I believe it starts with the pastoral office. But beyond that, it's also tied to LGBTQ
affirmations and other things that one way or another are all tied hermeneutically, that is,
in terms of the interpretation of Scripture and the authority of Scripture, to each other.
So it's just another sign of the fact that all of these things are tied together.
It's also interesting, and I'll just leave it at this for today, it's also interesting that
there are people saying it's high time that there's a woman serving as the Archbishop of Canterbury.
And for some, they're making the argument just in terms of their understanding of diversity and equity and all the rest.
Some are making the argument, however, by claiming that there is a distinction between the two genders and that women bring particular gifts that men lack.
And, you know, for instance, someone made the comment that it's good to have an archbishop who can giggle.
And I guess I'll just stop with this by saying, I guess if you think so, you think so.
Thanks for listening to the briefing.
For more information, go to my website at Albertmohar.com.
You can follow me on Twitter by going to Twitter.com forward slash Albert Moller.
For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbtsbtskleeu.
For information on Boyce College, just go to boysccollage.com.
I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
