The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Thursday, April 25, 2024
Episode Date: April 25, 2024This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 10:37)America’s Elite Campuses Are in Chaos: Columbia University’s Protesting Students Are the ...Tip of the Leftist IcebergWelcome to Dearborn, America’s Jihad Capital by The Wall Street Journal (Steven Stalinsky)How Columbia University became the epicenter of disagreement over the Israel-Hamas war by USA Today (Zachary Schermele)Part II (10:37 - 14:02)Democrats are Going Back to the Future? The Democratic National Convention Faces Tumult in Chicago — And Deserves ItHow the Israel-Gaza Protests Could Hurt the Democratic Party by The New York Times (Jeremy W. Peters)Part III (14:02 - 16:17)What Exactly are Israel-Protesting College Students Demanding? Nothing Less than the Elimination of IsraelPart IV (16:17 - 25:11)‘Belief in God is Not Only False, It Should Be Made Shameful’: Daniel Dennett, One of the Four Horsemen of New Atheism, Dies at 82Sign 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 Thursday, April 25, 2024. I'm Albert Moller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and
events from a Christian worldview. Americans are accustomed to seeing those black and white images
of campus protests from the 1960s. And of course, you're looking at the protests against the Vietnam
War, and we pretty much know those images when we see them. But we're seeing them again right now,
and they're not coming at us from the 1960s. They're coming at us from the last 60 minutes.
We are looking right now at a resurgence of protest movements on the campuses of America's elite academic institutions, and at least a part of what we need to consider today is the fact that it is not by accident.
Much of this is deeply orchestrated, and we need to understand very clearly who and why this orchestration is taking place.
First of all, what are we looking at here?
Back in the 1960s, it was the political left that was protesting, pretty much the same thing now.
because as you are looking at those who claim they are protesting in the name of the Palestinian people,
and no doubt some of them have an actual honest concern that is being demonstrated on behalf of the Palestinian people.
But what we're looking at by and large is a highly orchestrated protest movement that once again shows us how the left works.
Now, if you hear me say that and you say, well, this could happen on the right and on the left, yes, of course it can.
but ever since the end of World War II, primarily in Western nations, this has been a phenomenon
of the political and cultural ideological left. You go back to the 1960s, that's exactly what was
happening in cities, in countries all over the Western world. And it's happening right now.
And once again, it's not just happening in the United States. But it is clear that right now
the U.S. is the epicenter. Now, Exhibit A of what's going on here, of course, is Columbia University.
We've discussed it already, but now we have to update ourselves on events.
The Speaker of the United States House of Representatives went to the Columbia campus yesterday
and directly addressed the issue, even calling upon the president of the university to resign if she could not immediately restore order.
The fact is that Columbia University President Nimat Shafik really is in no position to establish order
after she had appeared before a congressional committee and stated that her individual,
intention was to limit anti-Semitism, threats to Jewish students, and violent protests that would
disrupt academic affairs on her campus. And even as we now know, before she got back to New York,
she had to go to a law firm in order to have a huddle, a strategy session, in which she decided
to allow the police to go on and arrest more than 100 protesters. That, by the way, didn't stop
the movement. It basically accelerated the movement. Even as she might make the pledge that she will
handle this, I want to tell you right up front, she can't. Or to put it another way, she won't.
Because when you are looking at the president of a university like Columbia, you are looking at a
very powerful position on the outside. It is likely not so powerful on the inside. Like so many
among the most prestigious institutions in the United States, we're talking here about historic
prestige, especially as attached to the elite universities known as members of the Ivy League.
You look at the outside and those presidencies look very, very powerful.
and just consider the fact that at least two of them have been toppled in the course of the last few months and on related issues after congressional testimony.
So we are looking at the fact that on the outside view, these positions look very, very strong.
And quite frankly, President Chafeeke bears a lot of responsibility. But at the same time, you have conservatives like the U.S. Speaker of the House calling on her to resign.
But you also have the academic progressivist left filing official charges against her from the left.
And it's easy to look at her position and say she really can't win. And in a sense, she can't. On the other
hand, she took the job. She knew what she was getting into, even as she's only been in that job for a matter of months.
She bears this responsibility. I'll just state right at front. It's hard to imagine how she does survive this turmoil.
on the other hand, it's even harder to imagine how Columbia can offer any kind of real corrective to its pattern set over the course of the last several decades, a pattern in which it is basically forfeited control of the university to the ideological and political, the cultural left. It has done that in a way that no one can really deny. It has done that in a way that historically has already led to a tradition of anti-Semitism on that campus. And yet at the same time, even as
Columbia was badly bruised during the 1960s because of the images of the student protests that took
place on that campus back during that strategic decade, you have to think that the leadership
of Columbia knows they're going right back into another period. It's like the same song and the
second verse. And yet, as you compare the 1960s and now, the faculty now is far more liberal than was the
case in the 1960s, and quite honestly, so overwhelmingly is the student body.
Speaking before the university's famous low library, the Speaker of the House yesterday spoke
of the commitments, the ideological commitments made by the founders of the university,
including some of the founders of the American experiments such as Alexander Hamilton,
John Jay. And he went on to say, quote, the founders and the great leaders who had come
through this institution in the past believed in religious liberty. They believed in democracy.
They believed in morality and virtue in the dignity of every human person.
They believed in the free exchange of ideas, and they detested mob rule.
End quote.
But even as the Speaker spoke those words, you have to know that he knew in his heart,
well, that was then, but this is now, as if to make the point.
The Speaker of the United States House of Representatives was basically drowned out by the protesters
shortly after he made those comments.
To be honest, one of the frustrating reasons,
realities of our age is that it is still very difficult to get many conservative evangelical Christians
to understand what and who we are up against when it comes to this ideological conflict.
There are far too many evangelicals who would be very glad to gain some social status
by sending their kids to some of these elite schools.
But quite honestly, once you understand what is taking place on those schools, it is absolutely
horrifying in ideological terms.
So what's going on right now at Columbia should come as a surprise to no-we-
one. Even the open anti-Semitism at Columbia right now and at other universities should come as a
surprise to no one. The antipathy towards the state of Israel as a Jewish nation should surprise
no one. The support for the Palestinian cause based on critical theory and leftist ideologies
should surprise no one. This is not a new development. It's newly on the lawn in tents. It is
newly on the headlines in terms of the words and the images. But if you're surprised,
by this, you simply haven't been aware of what's going on on these elite campuses for a long time.
So the first issue here is the abdication of the academic culture to this ideological left.
But there's more to it than that. As Steven Stilinsky makes very clear in the Wall Street Journal,
you're also talking about the direct involvement of Islamic groups, including Hezbollah and Hamas,
or at the very least, the agents and funders behind them. It's not an accident that some of the
slogans that are being heard in these protests or the slogans that have come from the Palestinian
liberation movement. It is not an accident that you have some of these students actually expressing
support for Hamas. Remember, this is an extremist, murderous, terrorist, Islamist organization
that carried out that brutal murderous attack upon Israel on October the 7th. And that's not the
first time Hamas had shown exactly what it believes had shown exactly where its ideology
leads, and as we're looking at this, you need just to take into full account that there are people,
and that means students in particular. There are students on these campuses who are now wittingly,
in many cases, or unwittingly, the agents of terrorist organizations. And honestly, this is where in the
1960s you had the neo-conservatives come to the clear understanding, and many of them were in New York
on campuses, such as Columbia University, and the majority of them,
were Jewish. They had been liberals, but in the words of one of those who designated themselves
neoconservative, the new conservatives, they were liberals who were mugged by reality. They were
mugged by reality when they found out that the ideologies of the 60s were not about human
liberation, but actually came down to the embrace of anti-Semitism and the destruction of permanent
values. And that was in the 1960s. That continued in the 1970s. Now we're talking about ideology
that are far to the left, ideologies that wouldn't have been imaginable in the 1960s and the 1970s,
and they are now mainstream.
Just yesterday, USA Today put on its front page the headline, Columbia, meaning Columbia University,
a natural nexus of activism.
And in this case, the article on the front page simply documents once again that this is not new at Columbia.
And I just want to come back and say that ideologically, the only thing new about this
is how much further left the student body and also the faculty have gone.
I want to underline one other fact, and that is that when you have a university like this that
gets into trouble, this kind of public turmoil, this kind of campus unrest, it is quite likely
that this president will lose her job.
But no one on the conservative side should think that that means anything fundamental
will change.
The only way for real change to take place on that campus is not just to have a new president,
but a new board, a new faculty, and a new student body. You and I both know that's not going to happen.
And so the likely outcome of this is that they will eventually reach some kind of truce.
They will eventually clean up the lawn. They will eventually, and of course summer's coming,
so these students are, at least in the main, going home for a matter of weeks.
They will have worked this out by the time the students come back. I can't tell you who's going
to be president, but I can tell you that nothing fundamental is going.
to change. But next, I want to shift to a political dimension of this that you might not be thinking of,
but I'll guarantee you the Democratic Party is thinking of this. The Democratic Party in the United States
is traumatized more than anything else by one year. That year, 1968. Now, that was the year of horrifying
political assassinations, including Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy, the United States
Senator, the former Attorney General and brother of the assassinated president of the United States,
John F. Kennedy. By the time the Democrats met for their nominating convention in Chicago in
1968, the fuse had been lit, so to speak, and riots broke out. Protesters on the streets,
it was a humiliation to the Democratic Party, and the Democratic nominee in 1968, the then-Vice
President Hubert Humphrey, he really didn't have much of a chance after the unrest.
in Chicago. It was an absolute humiliation to the Democratic Party. Unfortunately, the lesson learned
by the party was not to shift to the right, but to shift to the left. The next nominee was the even
more liberal Senator George McGovern in 1972. This past Monday, the New York Times put on the front
page the worries of the Democratic Party. The headline is this, quote, for Democrats, an echo of 68
in war protest. Jeremy W. Peters is the reporter on the story, and he's absolutely right.
where the Democrats are going back for the nominating convention in 2024. You got that right. They're going
back to Chicago. The protesters on the ideological left, who are already protesting the president because of
U.S. support for Israel, they are likely to show up in numbers on the streets. The Democrats are
afraid that it's going to be back to the future right back to 1968. The article cites David
Axelrod, longtime Democratic strategist and senior White House staffer.
who, pointing to 1968 and then to 2024, said, quote,
we've got a big anti-war movement, lots of tumult, a convention in Chicago, what could go wrong?
The New York Times added, helpfully, but unnecessarily, that Axelrod was half joking.
One of the other things we need to recognize is that these campus protests have now spread all across the United States.
By one count, more than 200 locations were involved, and this includes more than 100 college and university campuses,
where, of course, the protesters were primarily students.
And so it's going to be very, very important to watch what takes place over the next several weeks.
In one sense, the timing is important in this simply because you have most universities and colleges
going into their summer break pretty quickly.
So this is not like a movement or a contagion that breaks out, say, in February,
and there's an entire semester ahead.
No, in this case, the scene is likely to change when the population changes on America's
elite college campuses. But that is not to say that it's going to go away. And in one sense,
it is likely that many of these students and others who on the left are protesting here against Israel,
it is quite likely that they are just going to move those protests. And I think many of these
protests are going to be not only relocated, but transformed in terms of the composition of the
protesting crowd. It's likely to be made up, yes, of students, but of others as well, including
some of the activists on the ideological left.
One final issue we need to talk about before we leave the issue for today,
and that is what exactly are the students on these campuses demanding?
Well, in general terms, what they're demanding is a break in America's historic relationship
in support of Israel.
What they are demanding also in general terms is that there be a shift in U.S. policy
away from Israel toward the Palestinian cause.
They are also demanding, though often without specifics, the recognition of a Palestinian state.
Some of them, as we have said, have gone further and have identified with Hezbollah, with Hamas,
and with others in actually calling for the abolition and demise of Israel.
But one of the demands that has gained prominence just in the last few days is the demand that the universities themselves divest from holdings in their endowments
and in their financial reserves that are connected to Israel.
The funds, the investment funds, have to do with Israeli financial interests.
And without going into detail about how exactly that works,
the point is that this is a continuation of the divestment logic
that fed so many protests in decades past.
And even as many Americans would hear that demand,
they might think, well, that's not such a big deal.
It is a very, very big deal.
It would effectively put Israel in the position of being a pariah state as, quite frankly, South Africa became during the period decades ago when it was under the reign of the apartheid government.
That is, strict racial segregation. South Africa was exposed as a racist state, a racist government.
That's exactly what these protesters want to do to Israel.
But then again, that's what they're demanding today.
you know this is not even where this will end. And as fast as this story is unfolding, by next week,
we may be dealing with an entirely different set of demands. However, we do know what the ultimate aim is.
And that aim is the severing of the relationship between the United States and Israel.
Eventually, that end is the disappearance of Israel. But next, I want to turn to an obituary with vast
worldview significance. In this case, the obituary is a large piece published in the New York Times
about the death of Professor Daniel C. Dennett of Tufts University. Professor Dennett died last Friday.
He died at age 82. Now, it might sound strange that we would be discussing at this level,
the obituary of a scientist professor at Tufts University who has died. It might seem like
there must not be much to this story. But I probably...
you there's a great deal to this story. Daniel Dennett is not just known as a famous scientist at Tufts
University. He is not just known as a scientist as he was described of human consciousness. He was one
of those described as the four horsemen of the new atheism. Along with others, including Christopher
Hitchens and Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett was one of the four figures, and Sam Harris was the
fourth, of those who pioneered the attack upon theism that was re-referred. Daniel Dennett was
reframed and repackaged as the new atheism, especially in the 1990s. I wrote a book entitled
Atheism Remix, Engaging and Refuting the Arguments of Those Four. Daniel Dennett was, if anything,
the most candid of the four. And Daniel Dennett saw himself as a man of intellectual honesty
and a man who saw things clearly. And what he thought he saw is the human consciousness
itself is a mere product of evolution. When you are talking about,
about the theory of evolution based on an essentially materialist worldview, which is to say the
only reality that exists is a material reality. Daniel Dennett was one of the most strictly
observant materialists of all time. He believed that human consciousness had nothing to do with
anything beyond the interaction of units that evolved over time. There's nothing more to it. The human mind
was simply an accumulation of biological materials that operated according to biological laws and
biological processes. He said not only is there no soul, he said human consciousness is just
simply a material thing. Now, eventually that meant that he would even deny free agency,
because if you understand what he was saying, he says basically you have no control over what you
think. It's just a matter of the interaction of materials in the human brain and the accumulated
experiences that evolution has taught the brain to learn by. Back in the 1990s, Dennett wrote a book
entitled Darwin's Dangerous Idea, and in it he began with a parable. It's a very powerful parable.
He said that as a boy about junior high or middle school age, he had imagined something that
might be like a science fiction nightmare. It was a universal acid. So as a boy, he envisioned
whether it would be possible one day for some scientist, perhaps a mad scientist, to develop
an acid that was so powerful that it would dissolve everything. And you can see exactly how
this would work in the mind of a teenage boy. Here's how it would work. You would have this acid
that is developed and it's so powerful that before you know it, it has dissolved the test tube. It has
dissolved the laboratory. It's dissolved the scientists. It dissolves the city. It dissolves planet
Earth, eventually, it dissolves the entire cosmos. That notion of a universal acid is what Daniel
Dennett applied to Darwinism. He said that Darwinism rightly understood is the universal acid. It dissolves
everything. You claim the human consciousness is something special? Evolution dissolves that.
You believe that human beings, homo sapiens, are somehow separate from the rest of the animal world?
Well, Darwinism dissolves that. You believe that love between a mother,
and a child is something real and transcendent beyond just the engagement of one human consciousness
that is simply material with another human consciousness that is simply material. Again,
Daniel Dennett said, you are fooling yourself. At one point, when Daniel Dennett was asked about the
existence of the soul, he simply responded, quote, I don't believe in the soul as an enduring entity.
Our brains are made of neurons and nothing else. Nerve cells are very complicated mechanical systems.
you take enough of those and you put them together and you get a soul. Got it? End quote.
Whereas even among some of the atheists, it was considered bad form to attack religious believers
and in the United States. That means, of course, predominantly Christians didn't feel no such
reluctance. He said that belief in God was not only false, it should be made shameful.
Speaking of religious belief, he said, quote, far from being honorable, it is not even excusable.
it is shameful, end quote. So you might ask, given the rather chilling consistency of Dennett's worldview,
let's ask the professor where religious belief comes from, where does belief in God come from?
And he says, without breaking a sweat, it is simply evidence that sometimes evolution goes astray.
It has to eventually work it out in order to make the correction.
A corollary and inevitable question is whether Professor Dennett believed in religious liberty,
Basically, he did not.
He said this, quote,
A faith like a species, must evolve or go extinct when the environment changes.
It is not a gentle process in either case.
We preach freedom of religion, but only so far.
He said this, and I quote,
It's nice to have grizzly bears and wolves living in the wild.
They're no longer a menace.
We can peacefully coexist with a little wisdom.
The same policy, he said, can be discerned in our political tolerance in religious freedom.
You are free to preserve or create any religious creed you wish,
as long as it does not become a public menace, end quote.
But of course, so far as Daniel Dennett was concerned,
the moment it took on public significance,
it was a public menace.
Dennett was, I think, a fundamentally consistent thinker
or he sought to be.
He was absolutely consistent in his materialism.
He didn't believe that anything beyond the material world actually existed.
He believed in the theory of evolution
so much that he saw it eventually
as exactly what he had imagined as a,
boy, the universal acid. Later he would reflect saying these words, quote,
little did I realize that in a few years I would encounter an idea, Darwin's idea,
bearing an unmistakable likeness to universal acid. It eats through just about every traditional
concept and leaves in its wake a revolutionized worldview with most of the old landmarks
still recognizable, but transformed in fundamental ways. End quote. So this meant that the challenge
for Daniel Dennett was talking about morality when actually morality doesn't exist, only evolution.
exists. It meant talking about the responsibility of human beings, say, as citizens and as neighbors,
but it was all just a fiction in order to serve the larger purpose of evolution.
He drew the line, of course, at accepting that there was any plausibility or respect to be given
to religious belief because it was so far outside his system that those who believed in it
weren't even worthy of having a seat at the table. Now, you might also not be surprised to know that
Daniel Dennett made several enemies in the scientific field and in the field of human consciousness
as well. And it's because he basically picked a fight with almost everyone. But as tragic as it is
in eternal terms, thinking about the death of Daniel Dennett, it is an opportunity for us to
recognize that he gave us something we need to recognize, and that was he gave us a consistent
argument for atheism and for evolution and for Darwinism, even as others, including many on the
evangelical left want to act as if you can reconcile biblical Christianity and evolution.
Daniel Dennett saw what I believe we must see, and that is the absolute incompatibility of those
two worldviews. Daniel Dennett's death last week reminds us, once again, of the sobering truth
that ideas have consequences. And we understand, as Daniel Dennett understood, at least in
material terms, that ideas have consequences. But we understand as Christians that I,
Ideas have consequences, that truth has consequences, not only in this material world in a temporal
frame, but eternally. Thanks for listening to The Briefing. For more information, go to my website at
Albertmuller.com. You can follow me on Twitter by going to Twitter.com slash Albert Moller.
For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbtsketech.edu. For information on
Boyce College, just go to voicecollege.com. I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
