The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Monday, December 8, 2025
Episode Date: December 8, 2025This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:14 – 09:01)Stand with Speaker Johnson Against Expanding IVF in Military Health Coverage: Do Pro-li...fers Mean What They Say?Speaker Mike Johnson Working Behind Scenes to Slash IVF Provision From NDAA by Military.com (Nick Mordowanec)Part II (09:01 – 19:29)‘I Got Myself in Good Trouble’: Former President Biden Brags About His Contributions to the LGBTQ RevolutionBiden Slams Republicans for Using L.G.B.T.Q. Identity as ‘Political Football’ by The New York Times (Amy Harmon)Part III (19:29 – 24:31)The Battle for Your Entertainment Attention: Netflix and Warner Bros. Agree to Seismic Deal – This is a Battle For Much More Than Your EntertainmentSign 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 Monday, December 8, 2025. I'm Albert Mueller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
Sometimes there are issues with really big worldview significance that don't get a lot of national attention, and they should.
Because for one thing, today we're going to be talking about a national issue that is a very important pro-life issue.
This has to do with IVF, assisted reproductive technologies, IVF in vitro fertilization.
This is the process whereby the male and the female cell are brought together in a laboratory setting embryos are created.
And in the general process, the general application of the IVF procedure, multiple embryos are made.
And that's one of the big problems.
There's a fundamental problem I would argue with alienating the process from the conjugal act.
That is to say, from the act of marriage.
but the larger significance is the fact that pro-lifers have to look at the discarding and destruction of these embryos.
Also, the sorting and quality screening of these embryos, something that is deeply inherently, morally, murderously wrong.
And the IVF is right now a very crucial issue in one particular respect.
This has to do with TRICARE, the reauthorization for the medical coverage for military personnel in the U.S. armed forces, particularly from,
medical facilities outside of the military facilities themselves. Now, this is a big issue because you're
talking about millions of Americans within the U.S. military covered by this. And you had people in both
the House and in the Senate, Representative Sarah Jacobs in the House, Senator Tammy Duckworth,
in the Senate. They've been pressing for the full inclusion of IVF for all personnel. Now, this is
really a much bigger issue than it may even sound at first. And,
it was Speaker Johnson who pulled this out of the authorization bill last year out of the insurance
coverage for TRICARE. And he is doing it again, and he is under direct fire. He deserves our
support. There's a very important reason why at this juncture, this has to take place, and the
forces against the Speaker are coming out in full force. And quite honestly, this is a situation
that may well divide some Republicans. And indeed, one of the big questions is how President Donald
Trump will respond to this himself. President Trump has identified himself with IVF treatments and has said
that one of the goals of his administration is to make those treatments more available to American.
He always says basically to American couples who want to have children. What is not even acknowledged
in a lot of this conversation is that there are so many multiple issues and one of them has to do with
the fact that if you just put this out there available through, say,
insurance policies, or in this case, this policy, this entire program for medical coverage for
U.S. military personnel, then there are going to have to be some strictures. And the strictures
thus far when it comes to IVF has been that IVF was available only to heterosexual couples
when there was a military reason, an injury or some other reason for why the IVF was made
necessary. So it wasn't just blanket IVF coverage, even for married heterosexual couples.
in the military. It was for some linkage to a military cause. And that has left some couples very
frustrated, but it's not just couples. And I want to point out something that several military
advocacy sites have noted. For example, military.com, which is a news site, reminds us of this,
quote, a Biden-era Defense Department policy in March 24, expanded tricare eligibility for
infertility treatments to unmarried service members and those needing donated eggs or sperm,
adding onto a previous policy when the Department of Defense only offered such treatments
to certain married service members. So here's 2004, President Biden, the Biden administration,
enlarging that so that marriage isn't an issue. All right. So even then, however, there were some people
who didn't have access. And so listen to the next sentence, quote, eggs or sperm donated by a third party,
were also prohibited by the Department of Defense of that juncture, effectively barring same-sex couples from the benefit.
Okay. So the way that it would stand if blanket coverage is given is that it would be blanket coverage.
And that even means that individual service members, unmarried, who want to have a child by IVF, could call upon this policy and upon this semical coverage.
This is a very, very important issue.
This is where we either stand or fall when it comes to the pro-life movement.
And when pro-life conviction, when people who hold to those convictions say very clearly that our belief is that life begins at fertilization.
And life is to be protected from the point of fertilization.
And by the way, this is the only logical point.
It's the only theologically viable point at which we can possibly make the argument.
If you say it's at some point thereafter, then all you have is an argument about which point, which could take you all the way up to the point of birth.
And that's exactly the way this argument has operated.
This is the way the abortion argument has unfolded.
This is why we have to keep pressing back to an objectively true point when life begins, when God says, let there be life.
And that point is when the sperm and the egg come together.
And we believe, let's remind ourselves of this, we believe that that should take place within the context, the conjugal context of marriage, the union of a man and a woman before God.
And at the very least, we should not be paying for.
You know, the very issue is to whether these things should be available legally.
you know my position on that. But to force the American taxpayer to pay for it, even beyond that, is really a stretch. And in this case, I think we need to acknowledge that Speaker Mike Johnson, who is already in a very difficult position just because of the small margin that Republicans have in the House and all kinds of political pressures from within the Republicans themselves. We need to support Speaker Johnson in this particular effort. And those on the other side are going at him full bore. And they are.
are also trying to work the Republican Party, and they're trying to work the White House into
forcing the Speaker to back down on this issue. It reminds us of how important elections are,
every single election. The Speaker of the House is elected to the House by his congressional
district there in Louisiana. He is elected by fellow Republicans in the majority to the
office of Speaker. If Republicans aren't in the majority, he simply becomes the Republican
leader. And what you're looking at in this case is the fact that this is incredible
political pressure at an incredibly delicate moment. And with so many other things piling on
in terms of big issues at the end of the year, this is one of those issues that should have the
attention of Christians. And Christians need to understand what is at stake. I have gone through
page after page of legislative and media material on this going into the background. And I think
most Christians would be, and most pro-lifers would be very surprised to know how long
advocates for the inclusion of IVF have been working in terms
of the U.S. military.
And sometimes from within the military, sometimes on behalf of military personnel.
But we just need to recognize that we have multiple problems here, and what of them is,
that once you even offer this, the question is, how do you exclude anyone?
And long term, I think we all know.
Just look at the people pushing this.
Everyone will be included, and everyone's going to mean everyone.
And so we're looking at multiple levels of moral collapse.
It's a subversion of marriage.
It's a subversion of sexual morality, and it's a subversion of the sanctity of human life.
And we just need to understand that on this issue, things are not moving in our direction.
And that's just something we need to recognize.
The culture is pressing really hard on this issue.
And I think of the president, for example, President Trump's speaking about this,
speaking of couples who want to have children, I understand.
He has the right heartfelt concern there.
But by the time this is put into law, by the way,
it won't even be restricted to couples, much less a man and a wife.
The Supreme Court's decision on same-sex marriage pretty much took care of that.
It's always been hard to have to show up all the time in defense of human life.
It's never been easy.
And things are getting more complicated all the time.
That just means we have to bring even more conviction and more clarity to these issues.
One other related issue, by the way, that's as much lower, frankly, in terms of moral significance, is the money.
because the cost of this, if it's approved as Senator Duckworth and others have pushed,
it will be astronomical. That's not my main concern. But you would think of nothing else that
we get the attention of some Republicans. It's a big concern. All right. So we just talked about
what the Biden administration had attempted to do on this issue in 2024. The former president is back
in the news. And he's back in the news because of an address he gave just in recent days to the
LGBTQ Plus Victory Institute. The New York Times defines that as, quote, an organization that supports LGBTQ people
and public office. The particular issue here is also the context. President Biden, former President
Biden, is in a very weak position at the president. He's in a very weakened political position.
Even people in his own party don't generally want to be seen with him. He's having difficulty raising
money for a presidential library. Democrats generally want to try to forget the Biden administration,
at least in terms of the end, and they especially want to try to forget the 2004 presidential
election. They want to just move on. And it's also true that the former president's in a
weakened physical condition. He's fighting a diagnosis of advanced prostate cancer, and he's had other
issues as well. And so his appearances in public have been fairly rare. That makes this one even more
important, more worthy of our attention, as Amy Harmon reports, quote, former President Joseph
R. Biden Jr. on Friday offered a defense of his support for transgender rights, addressing an
issue that has prompted debate and soul-searching among Democrats, some of whom attribute losses
in 2024 to a focus on identity politics. Well, okay, so a focus on identity politics, but you know
what? The way the article began was honest. It's not just identity politics. It is the specific
identity politics of the transgender movement. And there is no doubt that played out in a big way in the
2004 presidential election and also in other dimensions of that election. It played apparently a lesser
role in the 2025 off-year elections, but those elections are not necessarily a bellwether
of anything other than, say, a political direction, party by party. The point is that President
Biden was pushing the transgender agenda, just like he pushed the same-sex marriage agenda,
ahead of his own party. And so he was basically bragging to this group about the fact that he had,
in effect, pushed former President Barack Obama. He was serving at that time as President Obama's
vice president into support for same-sex marriage by mentioning it out loud before President Obama was
prepared to. He said he basically didn't regret that. He said, he, quote, I got myself in a bit
of trouble, good trouble, he said. But of course, all of this is reflective of the fact that you have to
consider that the former president also had a very long, very long tenure in the United States Senate.
And then he ran for president and ran for president more than once, had to withdraw.
Was certainly not a leading candidate in the 2008 round, but ended up being chosen by Barack Obama,
who won the Democratic nomination as his vice president.
Former President Biden has always been gaff prone, and yet he's also changed a lot of his positions.
And you look at same-sex marriage, you look in an array of some of these issues, even some of the transgender issues.
He knows he changed his positions in his view to get on the right side of history.
And in this address Friday, he was speaking to a group that thought he was on the right side of history.
They're on the same side of this issue and pushing very, very hard.
It is really interesting to see what the former president had to say.
And when it came to transgender issues, it's really clear he was pushing them.
No less than 16 members of his administration were publicly identified as transgender.
In his address, the claim was made that about 15% of his appointees identified as LGBTQ.
Now, I just point out that that's a much higher percentage than activist groups have historically claimed for the LGBTQ percentage in the population.
So that's another way of saying.
We all knew President Biden was sending a message.
We knew that he knew he was sending a message.
and we and he both knew what message he was sending.
He came to this LGBTQ activist group on Friday to brag about that activism.
Biden was also proud of the fact that in 2022, he signed the Respect for Marriage Act,
which was an attempt to try to put in place federal legislation.
It was a successful attempt.
The legislation passed.
It doesn't guarantee a right to marriage in all 50 states,
but it says that every state must recognize a legally issued marriage certificate.
from a state that does approve of same-sex marriage, which means basically the same thing.
You might not be able to get a same-sex marriage in every state if the Supreme Court's decision
or Bergerfeld were to be reversed. Of course, that's out there in the future. The point is,
this was activism on the part of Congress, activism on the part of the White House, and they
got it through in 2022. I think it's also important to look at some of the comments made here in this
article, Evan Lowe, president and chief executive of this group, the LGBTQ Plus Victory
Institute, quote, said that Mr. Biden had been intentional about understanding that an historically
marginalized community can participate fully and openly in our democracy, end quote.
And what you need to note there is the doubling down on identity politics, because this is a group.
By the way, groups don't vote. Citizens vote. They may be members of any number of groups,
and they still have the right to vote. This is really not about the right to vote. When they say
participate in democracy here, they're talking about the affirmation of, of, of,
their sexual identity and their lifestyle. We also read this, quote, Mr. Biden's support for
transgender rights stands in contrast to the Trump administration's efforts to impose strict
limits on transgender people, including requiring the U.S. passports reflect the sex on people's
original birth certificates, a reversal of a decade of old policy. Mr. Trump has called
transgender teenagers mutilated and barred transgender people from serving in the military,
asserting that having a transgender identity is not consistent with the humility and selflessness
required a people who serve in the U.S. military forces. It's a very interesting point made here,
by the way, that President Trump has appointed a number of openly gay men to his administration,
but not transgendered individuals. It shows you something of a line in the Trump administration.
It's something of a line in the culture, and this is where it is clear that the culture, writ large,
is rethinking the T in LGBTQ and has been, especially when it comes to, say, private spaces such as locker rooms,
bathrooms, and especially when it comes to males in those spaces, and when it comes to, especially
minors, to children and teenagers, but also to women and women's sports, girls sports, you're looking
at, let's just say, very legitimate concerns, and they have resonated with the American people.
The Democratic Party, by the way, and this is also clear in the background to all of this,
the Democratic Party recognizes that the transgender issue lost them a lot in 2024.
they are at least claiming that they don't think it lost them so much in 2025 in the recent off-year
elections.
And yet they're not going to avoid having to deal with this issue in 2006 and in 2008, and especially
in 2008, the next presidential round.
And so they can say, we don't want to make this an issue.
We don't think the American people want to make an issue.
But it's going to be really interesting to see how this argument shapes up in the larger context,
the larger political and national context, because I don't think most parents are going to become
friendlier to the idea of boys on their girls' team, or boys in the girls' bathroom,
or for that matter, men beating women and women's sports. I just, I don't think that's going to get
better. Now, that doesn't mean that I think most Americans have a comprehensively healthy and
accurate understanding of these things. I'm telling you that Christians have a reason for explaining
there's a moral intuition. We believe it's put there by the creator. It's in creation
order that is at least, well, it's showing up in the resistance to the transgender agenda.
And it's showing up in a big way.
So much so that we see an interesting development.
We'll talk about more on briefings to come in which you have some gay men in particular
who are now openly complaining about transgender identity being lumped into one group.
We're not one thing they're saying.
And of course, they're not.
Many of us said that all along.
But they are united in rejecting biblical commands.
They are united in rejecting creation order to a greater or a lesser extent.
And they are united in terms of the moral agenda.
Before I leave this story, I just want to go back to the language that is just routinely used.
And it's a matter of heartbreak to notice this.
So just even trying to take this out of politics for a moment,
it's the former president who's making the statement former president Biden he said as the the story comes
to a conclusion quote because of our national debate on LGBTQ issues he said there are young people
sitting alone as I speak scrolling through social media wondering whether they will ever truly be
accepted for who they are the former president said evidently as if he were addressing those
young people, quote, you are heard and you belong. And we're told he said that to a standing ovation.
Okay, so here's the thing. The crucial language is they're wondering whether they will ever truly be
accepted for who they are. Okay. That is a seismically important statement for who they are. It all
comes down to who they are. It all comes down to who determines who they are. It all comes down to whether
or not their bodies, by God's intention, tell them who they are. And in this case, we know what the former
president's point is. We know he's trying to say that whatever they feel themselves to be, that's what
they are. We have to resist that. We have to resist the idea that it is those who hold to a biblical
worldview who are not telling people they're free to be who they are. That is exactly the point
we are trying to make. It's the question as to where in the world they can.
come to know, how in the world they come to know, who they are. There is simply no way that Christians
can come to a biblical understanding that says that who they are is separate from the body that God
gave them. All right. Finally, there were some really big business news also breaking over the weekend,
and that is that Netflix announced that it is going to buy Warner Brothers, the famed Hollywood
studio, and much of that Warner Brothers Empire for $83 billion. Okay, so that's $83 billion. Okay, so that's
$83 billion.
According to most reports,
Netflix had never made a purchase of even a billion dollars.
Now, $83 billion.
Now, why in the world would a streaming service,
this vast platform Netflix,
why would it want to buy Warner Brothers?
And a part of the deal is that they're not buying
some parts of Warner Brothers,
including some parts of the empire like CNN,
but they are agreeing that they will continue
in the theater,
they don't say for how long, of Warner Brothers movies. And, you know, that something is quite
unexpected because the leadership at Netflix had actually made fun of theater saying that that was
much a part of the past and not so much of the future. Well, now I guess they're counting on it
being a part of the future, at least for some term, because they're putting $83 billion on the line.
Now, this is going to have to go through review process. It's going to have to go through
antitrust review and all of that. And there are enemies of this of this plan. But the fact is that these two
giants wouldn't have agreed to this unless they think it's going to go through. Now, I want to bring up one of
the issues that I think will come up in that kind of antitrust challenge. And that is whether or not
this reduces the number of companies that are operating in terms of entertainment media. And there's
that it does mean that. There's no doubt it means that. And, you know, if they weren't trying to
economize, this deal wouldn't make any sense. They're going to try to cut down the cost at Warner
Brothers and they're going to try to bring in more profits to Netflix. Otherwise, there's no purpose
to the deal. That's the only way the deal works. But you can hear some people saying, look,
this is too much consolidation in the hands of one company. And this gets into some very deep
waters and antitrust matters. But I just want to point it from a Christian perspective,
this shows further consolidation in these giant companies of the entertainment
attention of the American people. And at the very least, this ought to have some attention from Christians.
We ought to be more thoughtful about the media we consume than others are. We understand more is at stake.
We understand that what we let in our eyes, what we let in our headphones, we're also effectively
letting into our brains and effectively letting into our hearts. And we need to know that others are, too,
including the little kid with the iPad screen and the teenager with the earpods. This is a huge,
problem. And we are huge consumers of entertainment. For most of human history, think about this, for most of
human history, people saw very little entertainment. They consumed very little entertainment. They might
see a play, maybe somewhere. They might see some work of art in public, somewhere. But their access
to entertainment was basically members of their own family, their own extended community, and in their
neighborhood. That was basically it. And entertainment had a place, of course, in every society. That's why you
have surviving plays from ancient Greece. And you've got artifacts and cultural products from, you know,
ancient peoples all over the world. But now we're talking about an entertainment world that is 24-7.
It's all around. This is everywhere. It's all accessible. It's privatized. It's no longer in the main,
a group experience. That's why Netflix made fun of the theaters. My guess is they're not going to
fun of them anymore, but nobody thinks theaters are the wave of the future. Everybody knows that the
streaming platform is hungry for more content and it's hungry for more contracts. It's hungry for more
customers and for more contact hours. That's what's behind all of this. It's a battle for your eyes.
It's a battle for your ears. It's a battle for your attention. It is a battle for your hearts.
It's an $83 billion deal. Just let that settle in. 83 billion dollars. This company,
is putting its own existence at risk. Netflix is basically putting itself at risk in an
$83 billion deal. They wouldn't be making it if they didn't think it was pretty much a sure
fire win. We need to know and think about the fact that someone's paying $83 billion just for
a bit more chance to have our attention. That ought to have our attention. Thanks for listening
to the briefing. For more information, go to my website at albertmuller.com. You can follow me on
X or Twitter by going to Twitter.com forward slash Albert Mola. For information on the Southern
Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbtsk.edu. For information on Boys of College, just go to
voicecollege.com. I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
