The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Monday, January 13, 2025
Episode Date: January 13, 2025This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 06:14)The LA Fires are Shaping Up to Be the Costliest Natural Disaster in U.S. History – And the ...Political Fires Are Just Getting StartedPart II (06:14 - 10:37)President Biden’s USA Today Interview: The President’s Cognitive Decline was on Display in the Interview – So What Will He Do in His Final Week as President?In exclusive sit-down, Biden reveals his biggest regret and the compliment Trump gave him by USA Today (Susan Page)Part III (10:37 - 14:05)The Commendation of One Inconsistent Catholic to Another: President Biden Awards Medal of Freedom with Distinction to Pope FrancisPart IV (14:05 - 15:55)The Pope Appoints Liberal Archbishop to DC: Watch as Legislation and Legislators Move Left as a ResultPart V (15:55 - 19:31)The Vatican’s New Guidelines Opens Door for Homosexual Priests: The New Guidelines Reveal Identity Politics Plus Moral and Theological IssuesSign 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, January 13, 2025. I'm Albert Mueller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and
events from a Christian worldview. Our hearts continue to go out to the people of California as we
watch the wildfires there, even expanding, and with higher winds expected, this could be a far more
deadly situation, even looking into the next several days. But already you hear a lot of calculation being made.
and even as folks are rightly understood to be grieving with those who've lost their homes,
the reality is that we're headed towards a death toll with something like 20 with far more people
missing and presumed dead.
And you have people already talking about the fact that this is the costliest natural disaster
in American history.
So let's be clear.
We're talking here about a financial cost.
In terms of loss of life, there have been natural tragedies that have been far larger in
terms of the casualty count, than these fires. But in terms of property damage, there is no doubt.
This will probably end up by a significant margin, the most expensive natural disaster in American
history. And of course, the fires are just partly under control where they are partly under
control. And that leads to another big consideration here. Already you have politicians, national and
state, and otherwise, who are posturing for the debate that is sure to come after the fires are
extinguished and then the costs are tallied. And that is because we are now looking at something
that is just a matter of brutal honesty in the United States. We have damages that no one is going
to be able to repay. And even though that sounds like a very stark statement, the reality is
that it is already turning out to be true. And the conversation nationally and statewide is also
becoming quite predictable. People are already asking, will the federal government pay to
rebuild these communities? Well, here's the reality.
even the federal government has limited resources when it comes to a disaster of this scale.
And then you also have people immediately saying, well, what about property insurance?
Well, for a matter of decades now, the state of California and property insurers have been at
odds. And a part of this is because the very progressivist democratic government there in California
has been putting so many regulations on the insurance business that several of the major underwriters
has simply moved out of the area. As a matter of fact, in Pacific,
Palisades, one of the major property insurers has simply stopped writing policies. And then you have
state initiatives, you have federal initiatives, you have disaster relief. But remember, disaster relief
is not, at least in terms of the intention, a promise to rebuild an entire community, to rebuild
thousands of houses that have been destroyed, thousands of churches, synagogues, and schools and other
structures, not to mention businesses. No, this is where, in the United States, property that is
in private hands. Private property comes with the responsibility of private insurance or some other
means of covering an anticipated loss. But then there are just so many issues that come to four here.
For one thing, what is fair and equitable in terms of rebuilding this kind of community?
Well, here's where you have plenty of evidence from the opposite coast, from, say, coastal Florida
in the aftermath of hurricanes, that one of the realities is that when you have escalating property
costs or property values, that sometimes you end up with a, say, low or moderately priced structure
that is destroyed on a piece of property that is inherently too valuable to build the same
structure upon again. That is to say, it just doesn't make financial sense to rebuild the house
that was destroyed or the other structure. It just doesn't make sense because of the escalating
value of the real estate. Well, is that fair or not? Well, if you own the real estate,
it's fair in one sense because you have an escalating asset.
asset. And then let's say you had a piece of property and the house was worth, say, $100,000,
the property was worth $100,000. Well, what if the property now is worth a million and a half and the
structure is still worth $100,000? Well, no one is going to give you a mortgage to put a $100,000
structure on a $1.5 million lot. Or let's just say it's going to be extremely difficult to justify
that kind of transaction. But you'll understand that that means that in the aftermath of this kind of
tragedy, this kind of natural disaster, almost never are communities rebuilt to be exactly what they
were before the disaster. And that's because if you have an opportunity to start something like this
over, you almost assuredly do not do it in the anachronistic and eccentric way so many communities
end up being put together over time. You already see some other very interesting and predictable
developments. For one thing, as I mentioned, Mayor Karen Bass of Los Angeles was actually
actually in Africa. When the worst of the fires began to break out, she did come back on a military
transport, but she wasn't there in the original hours of the tragedy in her own city. And then you also
have the governor of the state, Gavin Newsom, a very liberal Democrat, just like the mayor.
And then you have President Joe Biden, also a Democrat, but he's going out of office in a matter
of a week. And then President-elect former President Donald Trump is going to be president, and he has
already established a pattern of conflict with Gavin Newsom, which is about as predictable as the fact
that the sun will come up in the morning. The political posturing is also interesting when you hear,
for instance, Governor Newsom, in response to questions about empty reservoirs, say, none of the state's
reservoirs was empty. Now, wait just a minute. There have been images of empty reservoirs. Well, it turns out
to what the governor meant was that none of the reservoirs under direct state control had been empty,
but that then begs a whole series of questions. And right now, the most important thing is to put the
fires out. But you can already see how you have all the political actors in motion getting ready for
the debate after the fires are out. But right now, that appears to be days away. Well, next, as we said,
we're coming up now on just the one week mark of the presidential inaugurations coming next Monday,
one week from today. And so we're going to look at it.
a change in presidential administration in the United States.
And in the days between the election back on November the 5th and inauguration day,
the current president of the United States, Joe Biden, who, after all, a year ago,
was considered for sure to be the Democratic nominee and turned out not to be because of a disastrous
debate and the revelations that made about the effects of age on him.
The reality is that he has given one major interview to a print publication, and that was
given to USA Today's Susan.
page. Now, one of the things to note, by the way, is that just about every major national newspaper
has had an article about this interview, but the interview was actually conducted by USA Today.
The headline on the front page, quote, Biden says he could have one re-election, but maybe not
served for more years, end quote. Now, one of the things you note in this particular interview is
the fact that the effects of aging and cognitive decline in Joe Biden are as clear in this
interview as they were in the debate, certainly if you're looking at the context. Because just consider
the two big things that we are told in this interview. Number one, Joe Biden says that he honestly
believes that he could have beaten Donald Trump in the November 5th election, if only he had remained
the Democratic nominee. Now, it is really interesting to note that Susan Page, who is conducting
the interview for USA Today, and she's been writing for an entire adult lifetime in terms of the
American presidency and presidential elections, there is no doubt that she saw through the statement
and even pressed the president on that statement. And he came back and said, well, you know,
you can't say for certain, but nonetheless, it is clear that he thinks that if he had been
the nominee, he could have won. But then he went on to say that he was not sure he could have
served for four years. Well, that is a massive revelation. As a matter of fact, it is such a big issue
that, once again, you have to wonder if the president is capable of hearing himself talk.
because if indeed he said that he didn't necessarily see himself serving at age 85 or 86,
how old does he think he is now? The answer is 82. So just do some quick math. If he's 82 now,
and he won a second four-year term, as dubious has his claim that he would have won had he been
the nominee, is on its face. Nonetheless, if he had won it, he's saying he's not sure that he could
have been an effective president at age 85 and 86, which, by the way, in terms of his own
projection would have been the third and fourth years of a second term in office. Once again,
the interview just demonstrates the kind of cognitive decline and confusion that is, well,
in large part, indicative of the kinds of things Joe Biden has said in interviews and in press
context going back to the beginnings of his political career. He has often mangled words.
Not a joke. But it is also true that President Biden at this point seems to have a particular
problem understanding the reality even of what he is saying when the stakes are so high.
So in any event, it is going to be very interesting, but President Joe Biden has one week left
in office, and that also raises a huge question of what he may do in these last several days
in office. Just consider the commutations, consider the pardons, consider the awards that were given,
the medals of freedom. More on that in days to come. And even today, we're going to talk more about the
fact that just over the last several days, he has awarded the Medal of Freedom with distinction
to Pope Francis. He had intended to do so over the weekend on a state visit to Italy, which would
have been the last of his foreign trips as president, but because of the fires in Los Angeles,
he did not make the trip, but instead had the medal presented to the Pope on his behalf. More
on that in just a moment. The point is, there are still things he could do and still might do over
the course of the last next few days. And just keep in mind that already he has issued executive orders
clearly trying to tie the hands of the incoming administration on many issues. At least,
if he doesn't understand what he's doing, those around him surely do. But next, as I said,
just over the weekend on Saturday, the White House announced that the president had awarded to Pope Francis
the Medal of Freedom with Distinction.
And that is a rare level of the nation's highest recognition, those words with distinction.
He was actually given the Medal of Freedom with distinction by President Barack Obama.
That is to say, the vice president, Joe Biden then as Vice President of the United States,
had received the same award from President Obama during his term.
Now he has awarded it to Pope Francis.
Pope Francis, your humility and your grace are beyond words, said the president,
and your love for all is unparalleled. You are a light of faith, hope and love that shines brightly
across the world. As I said, the president had intended to present this to the Pope in person.
Now, one of the things to note is that when you're looking at Pope Francis, the current
Pope of the Roman Catholic Church, and you look at Joe Biden, a Catholic president, you're looking at
two very similar men. They are similar in terms of their outlook. They're similar in terms of their
politics, they're similar in terms of, frankly, how closely they adhere to Catholic doctrine.
Now, remember, one of these is the President of the United States. The other is actually the
Pope, and the point of being the Pope is to protect and to teach Roman Catholic doctrine.
But when it comes to so many of the cutting-edge issues and the LGBTQ array are out there,
frankly, Pope Francis has said so many things on both sides of the issue that there is absolutely
no coherence to his position whatsoever. But then again, as I say, that's what's similar to
Joe Biden. When it comes to Joe Biden, here you have the famously pro-abortion president, and I mean
just the way I said it, at one point in his political career, he might have described to himself
as pro-choice, no longer. As of 2020, Joe Biden is on the record avidly pro-abortion. That's in
direct conflict, contradiction to the Roman Catholic Church and the Roman Catholic doctrine.
But it's really not a matter when it comes to Pope Francis. Pope Francis, so far as we know, has made no
public comment about the president's contradiction on this issue of Catholic teaching, but rather has
accepted him as a Catholic. And furthermore, he called, it is now documented, that he called
President Biden to put pressure on him in terms of commuting death sentences when it came to federal
prisoners. And then the White House turned around. The president did exactly what the Pope had
requested in just a matter of days. By the way, disastrously so. And we'll be tracking this in
future editions of the briefing. But the commutations in this case were particularly disastrous because
there were commutations of classes of crimes rather than criminals with a specific justification.
And this means that you have the commutations of some people who, quite honestly,
absolutely deserve the death penalty beyond question. And furthermore, here's the other interesting
thing. We'll have to follow it a future date. Two of the federal prisoners on death row didn't
accept the commutation because they intend to appeal their sentences. But anyway, going forward,
it's just important to recognize that in Pope Francis and in Joe Biden, you have a certain Catholic
type. And it's the Catholic type that is loudly Catholic, but not particularly consistent when it
comes to Catholic doctrine, Catholic moral teaching, Catholic positions on issues like sexuality and
abortion. Now, when it comes to abortion, Pope Francis is unquestionably pro-life, but in terms of how he looks
that, for instance, the appointment of bishops and archbishops and cardinals in the United States.
He has been moving the bishops in the United States by his own appointment process in a more
liberal direction, and a part of that is away from pro-life politics and pro-life policies.
There is no doubt that, as a matter of emphasis, Pope Francis does not put abortion at the top
of the list.
The president's inconsistencies on this issue, and nonetheless, his insistence of
identifying publicly as Roman Catholic, it has aided and abetted his political role. And quite honestly,
Catholic leadership in the United States has largely allowed him to get away with it. When it comes to the
Pope, a couple of other big stories. The Wall Street Journal reports on the first one, quote,
Pope Francis has named Cardinal Robert McElroy, a critic of Donald Trump as the next Archbishop of
Washington, D.C., two weeks before the president-elect takes office, quote,
the Pope is installing one of the country's most progressive Catholic leaders to oversee the more than 600,000 faithful around the capital.
Cardinal McElroy has been an ally to the Pope and a supporter of migrants and LGBT people.
He has been the Bishop of San Diego for nearly a decade, and the Pope named him a cardinal in 2022.
I can assure you that conservative Catholics in Washington and beyond are extremely disappointed, indeed even frustrated by this appointment.
but this is the kind of appointment a Pope gets to make unilaterally, and there it is.
But it certainly points to the fact that in Washington, D.C., you're now going to have a liberal
cardinal archbishop rather than a conservative.
And you can count on the fact that that's going to make a lot of difference, because you're
going to have Roman Catholic legislators and political leaders who are going to claim the cover
of the Roman Catholic cardinal there in Washington as they move left.
Just watch and see and understand.
The second big development came in a report in the New York Times. The Vatican has now stated that seminaries in Italy may be open to gay men. In fact, the headline in the article in the New York Times is simply this. Seminaries in Italy open to gay men. Vatican says, well, there's a big story here. It begins this way. Quote, the Vatican has approved new guidelines for Italy that say an applicant for a seminary cannot be rejected simply because he is gay if he remains celibate.
the guidelines say that seminary directors should consider sexual orientation as only one aspect of a candidate's personality.
Speaking of the guidelines, the most important section is this, quote,
they do not change the Roman Catholic Church's teaching that homosexual tendencies are intrinsically disordered
and that men with deep-seated gay tendencies should not become priests.
But they clarify that if a candidate remains chaste, his sexual orientation should not disqualify him from entering the priesthood.
end quote. Now, of course, this is the kind of news that's going to make the big secular newspapers
here in the United States. And, of course, the left in the United States is going to think that
this is exactly the direction the Roman Catholic Church should go. But when you look at this in the
context of the Roman Catholic Church and recent developments over the last several years,
it is not clear that this is as big a story as the New York Times would have us to think.
For one thing, there are an awful lot of conditionals in this paper. There's an awful lot of
conditionality written into these guidelines. And so it is a matter of may and should and might under
certain circumstances. But nonetheless, it is an opening of sorts, but it does indicate that at least
some in the Roman Catholic Church here, even in the process of, say, selecting young men to go to the
seminaries to become priests, have bought into the idea that you can be chased and still identify as
LGBT. Now, here's one of the problems that, well, at least as evangelicals,
would understand the identity politics side of this, the identity claim in this, is itself a huge problem.
And so even as we're talking about patterns of temptation, yes, there's some very real things,
and we understand that as related even to this issue. But when you identify as LGBTQ,
that is a particularly important step morally and politically. And it comes with consequences.
And the Roman Catholic Church has dealt with such an avalanche of controversy and lawsuits and
scandals over this issue, you would think that the Pope and the Vatican will be holding a very clear line
on this issue. And as you look at the guidelines, it is not clear that they have significantly
retreated from the position of the judgment of homosexuality being intrinsically disordered.
But at the same time, the very fact that they have written this ambiguity into the guidelines
and produced this kind of story in the New York Times tells you that this is exactly what
religious leadership should not do. This is exactly what? Just watching as a lesson, looking at the
Roman Catholic Church as an evangelical, this is exactly the kind of thing we must not do. It completely
confuses the situation. If indeed there's a material change in doctrine, then own it. But there isn't
a material change in doctrine here. And this is where you also have many evangelicals, squishy,
leftist evangelicals who don't want to admit they're changing their position on the biblical
teaching on homosexuality. On the other hand, they don't want to hold that position too firmly either.
And so you end up with a lot of people who want to claim evangelical identity, who, quite frankly,
begin sounding like Pope Francis on this issue. But then sadly, we have to turn to the story of the
death of Richard B. Hayes, former dean of the Duke Divinity School, a very prominent New Testament scholar,
and listeners to the briefing will recognize we discussed Richard Hayes just in recent months
because of the book he wrote with his son, Christopher Hayes,
and it really represented an absolute reversal of his position
on the compatibility of Christianity and homosexuality.
And it was the same Richard Hayes,
who years ago had written a book entitled The Moral Vision in the New Testament
that was 1996, in which he made very clear
that the clear teaching of the New Testament
is that homosexual relationships cannot be affirmed by the church.
In that 1996 book, he had written, quote,
the New Testament offers no loopholes or exception clauses that might allow for the acceptance
of homosexual practices under some circumstances.
He went on to say that the New Testament, quote, requires a normative evaluation of homosexual
practice as a distortion of God's order for creation, end quote.
But in the book that he and his son released the widening of God's mercy,
he did something very interesting.
He did not change his understanding of how the New Testament,
presents homosexuality. As a matter of fact, he goes on to say that the New Testament position on
homosexuality is absolute condemnation. But then he made the astounding argument with his son that God
has changed his mind on the issue. And he did this by simply asserting that an evolution in the
widening of God's mercy means that those who are involved in homosexual activity can be
involved in relationships that should be blessed by the church, in behaviors that are at
accepted by the church. And as I pointed out,
theoretically, this is abject disaster. It is total unconditional surrender.
In the obituary of Richard Hayes published in the New York Times, they cited my words to that effect.
But I want to make very clear that death of Richard Hayes is a tragedy, and we grieve with his family,
but we also have to grieve the fact that the headlines about his death are talking about the fact
that in his last months, the big story is how he came to the argument that God has changed his mind,
homosexuality, changed his mind after the closure of the New Testament. And I do not have time today
except to say that is absolute disaster. It is absolute theological surrender. If you can say that
on LGBTQ issues, you can say it about anything. And it's not just that. Eventually,
you will say it about everything. If not you yourself, then your children and your grandchildren.
This is the way Christianity is absolutely lost and lost in an instant, just with the change
of a few words. But finally, I have to end with the related front page article just in recent days
in the New York Times. The headline is this, entertainer whose opposition to gay rights derailed
career. It's about Anita Bryant, who in 1959 was catapulted into stardom as Miss Oklahoma
and the second runner-up to the Miss America contest. Anita Bryant was a singer, and she became known
for several hits, including Paper Roses and In My Corner of the World. But
Anita Bryant also became very famous in the 1960s and in the 1970s for being the spokesperson and the
celebrity for the Florida citrus industry. And she was known for commercials shown all over the
nation in which she invited people to enjoy Florida orange juice. But she really catapulted
into the front page stature of this article by her opposition to a gay rights ordinance,
It's one of the first in the nation adopted by Dade County.
Now, that includes Miami, Florida, by Dade County,
and the Dade County Commission back in the mid-1970.
She responded by calling for a reversal of the ordinance
that eventually was reversed
and by leading a movement called Save Our Children.
This led to a 1977 rally that was held in the Miami Beach Convention Center
that became a turning point.
Many people say it was, at least in large part,
the birth of what has been dismissed on the liberal side.
as the new Christian right. I was 17 years old at the time, and I went to that event with my parents
and with others from my church. My church was just a few miles up the road from Dade County,
but we went out of Christian concern, and I remember the event very clearly. I remember hearing
Anita Bryant sing, and she most famously sang the Battle Hym of the Republic. But I also remember
that a preacher I'd never heard of before was the speaker for the event that preacher was Jerry Falwell,
and of course all of America would hear about him quite quickly.
But the point I want to make is this.
When you consider the obituaries for Anita Bryant,
and by the way, she lived a rather tragic life,
particularly after the 1970s, a divorce, breakup of her family.
You can just imagine the kind of stresses.
And quite honestly, there were many evangelicals
who didn't know what to do with Anita Bryant
after, say, the 1970s into the 1980s.
But I'll tell you this, the gay rights movement
knew what to do with her,
and that is to make her the poster child, so to speak,
in terms of opposition to the gay rights movement,
to turn that into an engine for their own political purposes.
And that's why you have headlines, such as the one found that Slate,
quote, she launched the modern anti-gay movement.
It went differently than she expected, end quote.
And one of the things you have to take into account
is that when you go back to 1977, I can assure you,
there was an overwhelming consensus about the morality of homosexuality
at the time. And that was reversed over the course of the next several decades in a stunning reversal
that quite honestly still staggers the imagination, reversing thousands of years of human experience
and moral judgment, 2,000 years of the influence of Christianity. It is still difficult to account
for how this shift could have happened so quickly if indeed it happened at all. But it has happened
and it is utterly reshaped to the world around us,
right down to talking about the President of the United States
awarding the Medal of Freedom with Distinction to Pope Francis
and how on this issue both of them represent a position
far at odds with at least a consistent application,
even of Catholic moral teaching.
And then you look at the rest of the country,
and you can see where the gay rights movement,
as it was called in the beginning,
and what is now the LGBTQ movement,
sees itself as in the driver,
in this culture and to a considerable extent. It appears that they are. One of the techniques used
to marginalize Anita Bryant was to treat her as a freak show. And quite honestly, that's the way it went.
And that's the threat that same movement would try to apply to every single person who would stand
in its way. And if you dare to stand in opposition to that movement, guess what? You will end up
on the front page of the New York Times as an obituary. And the movement will claim that you
deserve the ridicule. But let's remember this as we come to a conclusion for this edition of the
briefing. The LGBTQ movement is not going to have the last say. Thanks for listening to the briefing.
For more information, go to my website at Albertmohler.com. You can follow me on Twitter or X by going
to Twitter.com forward slash Albert Moller. For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary,
go to sbtsketech.org. For informational on Boyce College, just go to Boiskech College.com.
I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
