The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Thursday, March 20, 2025
Episode Date: March 20, 2025This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 13:43)The Culture War Against Homeschooling: Why the Educational ‘Blob’ Wants More Oversight on... HomeschoolingThe Never-Ending War on Home Schooling by The Wall Street Journal (Matthew Hennessy)Part II (13:43 - 22:03)Teaching Fertility in Sex Education? The Experts Say You Should ‘Trust the Experts’ on This – But Don’t Buy ItShould teens be learning about fertility in sex-ed? Some experts say yes. by USA Today (Adrianna Rodriguez)Part III (22:03 - 25:00)Homeschooling Students are Not Behind the Educational Curve – Those Pushing That Narrative are Not Only Wrong, They Have Their Own AgendaSign 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, March 20, 2025. I'm Albert Mueller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news
and events from a Christian worldview. Well, here it comes again, recurringly, as if on some kind of almost
predictable cycle, stories emerge in the press in which homeschooling is identified as a problem
as a vulnerability for children, because after all, children who are being homeschooled are taken
outside the supervisory power of the state.
story there. We'll come back to that in a moment, but the latest headline and the latest
occasion for this kind of argument has come out of Waterbury, Connecticut, where just a matter
of days ago, on a welfare check, local authorities there discovered a 32-year-old man, severely undernourished,
held in what appears to be a state of captivity. And the reason homeschooling is brought into this
is because, as far back as 2005, persons were concerned when this individual, now 32, was a child.
and authorities had indicated that there would be some kind of a house visit.
But nonetheless, it turns out that, quote, a welfare check performed at the request of the State Department of Children and Families found nothing amiss.
Okay.
And so now that this man has been found, held captive, severely undernourished in this house, the accusation is this wouldn't have happened if you had some kind of state supervision over homeschooling.
Now, let's just state that that's quite a stretch.
when you're talking about a 32-year-old man, and we are talking about a situation that undoubtedly invokes criminal behavior.
There's just no question about that. That's why the police are involved.
But as Matthew Hennessy of the Wall Street Journal points out,
the people who want to jump on homeschooling and criticize homeschooling and point the finger at homeschooling
have found yet they believe another example of the kind of atrocity story.
They can haul out to say what we need is more government supervision of homeschooling and homeschooling families.
Hennessy starts his piece this way, quote, every few years something horrible happens,
and progressives rush to blame homeschooling. The claim is always the same, he writes,
quote, homeschooling enables abuse by removing children from the protective gaze of teachers,
administrators, coaches, and the broader community. Why would parents pull their kids out of a
traditional school environment if not to indoctrinate or abuse them? End quote. Now, Hennessy is exactly
right. That's exactly how this functions in the society. But it also,
something else, and that is that the educational establishment, the cultural powers that be
really, really hate homeschooling. When I say they really hate homeschooling, I mean, they hate
every dimension of it. And as we're thinking about this, Hennessy's exactly right. They're just
trotting out homeschooling. And by the way, if there's a failure here, it's a failure of the
government back in 2005 that had a complaint, went for a welfare check and found nothing amiss and
didn't follow up. That isn't a problem with homeschooling.
It actually is a problem with government.
Do we really think government would do a better job in these situations than parents will?
But okay, Hennessy's exactly right.
He says, quote, it's a tired question made more so by homeschooling's pandemic-induced popularity.
Teaching your kids at home or in a co-op with other families is no longer out of the ordinary.
That hasn't stopped, he writes, the education blob, teachers unions, bureaucracies, education schools,
and their media allies from trying to put homeschooling back in a box.
He points to a media story from NBC News that stated, quote,
Connecticut's lax homeschooling rules could have aided boys abuse, some education advocates say, end
quote.
So there you have the direct finger, NBC News pointing at homeschooling and Connecticut's
lacks homeschooling rules as the problem.
Let's do a little history here.
It's going to be really illuminating.
Because when you think about homeschooling in America, you think of conservative Christians.
That's exactly what the mainstream.
educational blob, as Hennessy calls it, wants you to think. They want you to think very conservative
Christians. Is that true or false? Oh, it's true, but it didn't start out that way. Hom schooling didn't
begin on the cultural right. It began on the cultural left. It was then sometimes called unschooling.
And it was an experiment undertaken predominantly in the Pacific Northwest back during the 1960s by those
who would be identified as hippies. They had their own liberal fears about the educational establishment.
Hennessy calls the education blob, they didn't want the government teaching their kids.
They were opposed to the very idea of government education. They saw the government as the
enemy, again, the cultural left, just think about the 1960s, into the 1970s, and they didn't want
their kids taught by the man. But going even a little bit further back, the folks who really
won the original legal precedence in the matter of parental authority here and homeschooling,
it wasn't on the cultural left in the case of the hippies. That's what really began the modern
homeschooling movement. It was before that the Amish, because the Amish also did not want to send
their kids into government schools for all kinds of reasons having to do with their Anabaptist heritage.
And they also traditionally have not educated their children, in particular boys, passed a certain age,
far earlier than the end of K-12 education. And so in some very significant cases,
including a case known as Yoder, the Supreme Court actually made very clear that parents have the right
based upon their own worldview and convictions to take into their own hands the education of their
children. Now, those decisions didn't stipulate fully whether there could be any government
oversight whatsoever, but that's where the conservative title wave of homeschooling comes in,
really beginning in the 1970s, but gaining a lot of speed in the 80s, 90s, and then gaining an even
greater momentum in the 21st century, just in the last 25 years. And this was largely driven by
evangelical Christians who had simply had enough with what was going on into public schools. Some of
them had an even deeper argument, and that deeper argument is somewhat like the hippies. It's an
alternative form of the same argument, which is against the man, which is to say government
exercising its authority over the minds and educations of children. And there were a lot of
conservatives who said. And by the way, that shows you something about.
the transformation of government. At one point, it was the left that saw government as the
repressive power. Increasingly, it is clearly conservatives who see the government as the repressive,
oppressive power. But then something else happened, and Hennessy's exactly right, it was COVID. COVID-19.
It changed so much. And of course, we're leaking now just about the fifth anniversary of all of that.
Five years later, there are a lot of things that we missed when they were happening, and in many cases,
couldn't even see that they were happening.
A vast resurgence of what is legally defined as homeschooling began then, not on the cultural left or the
cultural right, but particularly among intact families of a certain socioeconomic ability, a social
economic condition.
They had the ability to pull their kids out of school, and of course they didn't have any
choice with the shutdowns of COVID.
But once the schools went back into session, many of these parents and these families decided,
you know, we really like this.
We like the freedom.
We like being able to take our kids.
on trips and have experiences with them. We don't want to turn them back over to the educational
establishment. And many of them said, you know, our kids are actually learning more. They're doing better.
And furthermore, we kind of know them a whole lot better through homeschooling than by sending
them for so many hours in the government-run schools. So there's a lot going on here that has to do a
sheer panic in the bureaucracy. And that's a part of what's going on. Part of it's ideological. Some of it's
financial. So let's talk about the financial. We all understand money. You can count it. And you
have the public school systems that have lost a ton of money. And I mean a ton of money because of the
decrease in the census of the pupils in their schools. It has been a radical fall of. Some of that's
demographic. People just are having babies the way they should. And so the net number of children
coming in, say, to kindergarten and K through six education, it's smaller than it has been. And then
you have many districts in which people have been moving out and COVID accelerated that too.
And so you have a lower census, lower income from education.
education taxes, apportionment, really coming with a cost. And then you have homeschooling.
And quite frankly, a lot of that is simply tied to the failure of the schools.
I'm not saying every school everywhere is a failure. I am saying it's a pattern of failure
that's now undeniable. And it's a pattern of failure. It is hard to believe can possibly be
reversed. And that's because the educational establishment, the government powers that be,
they are absolutely, absolutely opposed to anything that might correct the situation.
but there's another development here.
And this is one we really need to watch.
It's the reconceptualization of the public schools into something other than a school.
Now, this isn't often discussed, but I think this is just the right time to do it.
The complaint that Hennessy is centering in on here, the NBC News story, said that its Connecticut's lacks homeschooling rules that could have aided the boys' abuse.
In other words, had Connecticut had stricter rules, government.
oversight of homeschooling, maybe this abusive situation wouldn't have continued.
So there you see, this really isn't about education. It's about a transformation in the
mission of the schools into social service agencies. And to some degree in a way that people
on the far left saw in the 60s. So they were wrong about most things, but, you know,
like a stopped clock, they're right on some other things. One of the things was that where
government comes, it comes with its own agenda. And government would like
to get our kids faster rather than slower. And the transformation of the schools into,
this is where the far left was very concerned in the 60s, it's just an extension of the police
state. Well, in some ways, it sort of is. And in some practical ways, kind of has to be.
On the other hand, the social service agency aspect of it is also just absolutely massive.
An army of social workers and others with particular social welfare designations and professions
and job assignments, they populate the schools.
Now, a part of this, let's to be honest here, a part of this is because of a very real crisis
among children, particularly in many situations, such as the inner cities of many of America's
major metropolitan areas.
But the problem there is the breakdown of the family, and in many ways, the most pressing
problem is the disappearance of marriage, which means the disappearance of fathers.
And so looking at that, you do see a lot of pathologies, you see a lot of behavioral problems.
You see a lot of crime problems.
And that's why the most, say, drug-assisted hippie back in the 1960s, seeing the schools
transformed into an extension of the police state, they can hardly imagine now when you go
to a major high school and you see how many people are visible in uniform in many cases,
with police cars often outside.
And that gives parents a sense of comfort, but it also, you need to understand, gives government
a real sense of control.
Now, one of the issues in homeschooling parents need to be very aware of this.
There are some really good homeschooling defense organizations, legal defense funds, and other groups such as ADF, very much on this.
And that's absolutely necessary.
And that's because there are those who say, you know what we need to do in the name of the children as a responsibility of the state, the government.
we need to have more oversight when it comes to homeschooling.
And what would that oversight look like?
Well, we need to find out which parents are qualified to teach.
We need to find out whether the curriculum their teaching is really substantial or not.
We need to know exactly what is the health and, say, the vaccination status of the children in these homes.
If you think that's not an issue, I guarantee you, just know that this is what the government's going to be concerned with when the government comes.
And the government will come.
and I'm not saying that all these issues are illegitimate. I'm simply saying I don't trust government to deal with them. I don't trust government to be able to be more competent than parents and families and extended kinship in pulling this off. I am not saying that there are no situations in which government intervention is not called for. Clearly, there are such cases. But you need to know that what government will try to do.
and what the educational blob will try to do is to transform those incidents into an argument
for what amounts to a government takeover of homeschooling.
Hennessey concludes his piece by saying, quote,
bad people will do bad things,
restricting legitimate freedoms in hope of preventing rare or unusual crimes
is a terrible approach to public policy.
Unless you're the education blob and you have your own reasons for wanting to limit
homeschooling, then it makes perfect sense.
End quote, well, he nails it there.
That's exactly right.
if you are the education blob, then intervening makes perfect sense.
Okay, one final issue just in terms of ethical responsibility here.
I know there are people in the educational establishment who are believing Christians,
faithful Christians, very much committed to the teaching of children and their welfare.
I think it's important that we all recognize that such persons are there, brothers and sisters in Christ,
and we love them and we honor them.
At the same time, that doesn't make the educational block.
Any less a blob.
Okay, next while we're talking about education,
you know, USA Today, when it came out,
was sometimes known as McPaper.
You know, it's not the most influential newspaper
in the United States, but it doesn't mean to be.
It means to be a fast read.
And it doesn't do as much reporting.
It doesn't have the kind of reportorial staff
that a paper like The New York Times has,
but USA Today is more well known
for being a cultural barometer.
And they do some investigative reporting.
And, you know, their attention is directed to some things
that you wouldn't see in the Wall Street Journal
in the New York Times or elsewhere.
And in this sense, from the very beginning,
it's been a little bit more like television news
than print media.
And that means the topics are a little bit different.
And the headlines are too.
So recently, USA Today ran a piece.
The headline is, experts say sex ed should include fertility.
Okay, so back to experts.
Who in the world are experts?
I think one of the things we need to keep in mind is that whenever we see experts in a headline
or we see the citation that experts say all our intellectual worldview defense mechanisms
should come right out.
And we should recognize this is an alarm.
Let the bell go off.
Who in the world are experts?
What makes them experts?
Even by the middle of the 20th century, you had people like Daniel Borseton, who was the
librarian of Congress and a wonderful award-winning American.
historian, just very much a man of the cultural elites. However, he was very honest and he said,
look, a part of what's going on here is that everybody has to be an expert in something.
And the experts certify themselves as experts. And in order to be experts, another expert has to say
you're an expert. And thus you have the society in this kind of expert. But the fact is,
over time, that word just becomes so discounted. No one knows who an expert is. But you should
suspect that when a newspaper on a controversial issue says, experts say,
you better look at who the experts are and what exactly is their expertise.
All right. So here's the headline nonetheless.
Experts say sex ed should include fertility.
Now, okay, I know what some of you are thinking.
Okay, we're not going to go into anything too graphic here.
Don't worry.
But I am going to talk about sex education, and this is in the context of the schools.
And now you have experts, according to USA today,
who are arguing that in a strange turn, maybe, maybe, maybe in the sex education,
in the schools, the sex educational that the mainstream blob the establishment would bring,
maybe we actually need to tell people not just how not to have babies, but actually how to have them.
Okay. Why? Well, the demographics are a part of the problem here. There is a radical decrease in the
birth rate in the United States. And you also have the fact that at least many people are looking at this and going,
okay, we have genuine problems because there's so many people who are delaying marriage,
they're delaying parenthood, and then they're running into all kinds of fertility problems and all the rest.
But it is also based on the fact that evidently experts say that maybe in the sex educational curriculum in the schools,
you need to tell people how babies are made rather than prevented.
But I also want to alert us to the fact that when you see sex education, all of your worldview alarm should go off.
So this headline is just pretty much one giant alarm because you have the expert.
expert alarm, now you've got the sex ed alarm. What in the world is sex ed? Because the experts in the
government and in the establishment, they will tell you that sex education is this, when that's exactly
what I think most Christian parents would say it better not be. And by the way, all that's addressed in here.
Wherever you have sex education, you have a worldview war. I can just guarantee you, wherever you
have sex education, you have a war over what it should be, what it should contain, what kind of
worldview, what kind of morality is going to be taught. And the clash of morality is seen in the
distinction in the different states on the question of sex education. And so you have an appreciable
number of states in the union that are actually committed to abstinence-only sex education.
Okay, so abstinence-only sex education, which means they are not, at least not supposed to be
teaching about birth control, contraceptives, abortion, certainly not pushing that. And of course,
absence-based sex education is based upon the idea,
that it should be to prevent what they would call premature sexual activity rather than to encourage it.
Now, on the other side of that, is what's called comprehensive sex education, and this is the norm in many liberal states and in many liberal school districts,
where, honestly, it's just about downright pornographic. And let me just say that its goal is not to tell teenagers and school students not to have sexual activity, but rather how to do so.
safely. And safely, of course, put quotation marks around that because that's the entire regime
and ideology of safe sex. The assumption is coming from the left, it is oppressive and morally
wrong to say, you just shouldn't do that. So instead, you tell people how to do it without unintended
consequences, which, by the way, kind of starts with a baby. Now, over against that is the abstinence
base, but I want conservative Christians to understand just because it's supposedly abstinence base doesn't
mean that it's in any way consistent with Christian morality and the Christian worldview.
But here's a paragraph toward the end, and the person cited here is Robin Jensen, Professor
of Communication at the University of Utah. We are told that Professor Jensen specializes in health,
science, sex, and gender. Okay, here's the statement. It's a quote from the professor,
quote, in abstinence-based states, which tend to be red states, you're seeing less information
about what fertility is and how to plan out sexual activity in light of your fertility goals, end quote.
Now, Jensen, we are told, is the lead author of the study that prompted the article.
So I just wanted you to hear the words. It's coming right out of the professor's statement here
that in essence-based states, which tend to be read states, quote, you're seeing less information about what fertility is
and how to plan out sexual activity in light of your fertility.
goals, end quote. Your fertility goals. You know, folks, we can be talking here about 10-year-olds.
Okay, you're also going to love a statement made by Emily Oster, identified as Professor of Economics at
Brown University, and the author of the book entitled, Expecting Better, Why the Conventional
Pregnancy Wisdom is Wrong than what you really need to know. Well, that's an interesting thing.
Number one, it's interesting that it's a professor of economics who's writing this. That's just an
interesting fact to this. But the article cites the fact that,
there are those who argue that, quote, teenagers are less likely to retain the information because
most of the material isn't relevant to them yet. But Professor Oster had a response to that,
and her response is that the same principle could apply to other subject matters taught in school,
end quote. Well, you've got to love that. And so at the end of this, you've got someone making
the point that maybe, maybe these teenagers aren't going to know exactly what to do with this
information and aren't going to think is relevant to them yet. And then you've got the economist
writing a book about fertility who comes back and says, yeah, but that's true about a lot of the
subjects they're taught. I'll just say that as an educator, I thought that wasn't particularly
the strongest response you might imagine. Yeah, that's kind of true of a lot that they're taught.
True, however. Then the article concludes this way, quote,
Jensen says a comprehensive plan about fertility should include the reproductive lifespan for both
men and women. When fertility is at its peak and when it starts to decline, it also should discuss
when people are typically having their first child, quote, to situate their own choices in what's
possible and options for people who have fertility issues, end quote. Now, my main concern with
government-sponsored establishment sanctions, sex education curriculum, the entire approach,
is that it's mostly out of bounds. But when you see this kind of statement, I think it tells
this, this is not only morally in worldview terms.
of bounds. It's also being pushed by people who are, oh, I don't know, out to lunch. Well, all right,
I didn't pot this either. But I do want to say something going back to the homeschool issue.
You know, many people in the critique of homeschooling say that homeschooling students just don't
perform academically as well as those from other schools. I want to say as a college president
that that's not true. It's just fundamentally not true. And I want to tell you that if you take
the students at our college, for example, at Boyce College, you're going to find an awful lot of
them were homeschooled, a very large percentage. You're going to find another large percentage
where in Christian schools or Christian school educational consortia, and the big growth, of course,
is in classical Christian schools. And I am thankful for all of those movements. But I just want to
tell you, we also have kids who come from families that have made other educational choices,
but who are looking for an absolutely committed Christian worldview college education for their kids.
You know, I just want to tell you the good news is don't let anyone scare you about, you know,
the fact that homeschooling will set your kids back academically.
That's just fundamentally not true, and those who are pushing it have their own agenda.
And all of that is why I want to issue again, as I did a few days ago, a very warm invitation
to Christian young people considering college and to Christian.
families looking for the right college for their son or daughter at Boyce College,
we believe that following Christ faithfully means equipping young people in every dimension of
Christian faithfulness. And of course, that's centered in an unapologetic Christ-centered
education that is firmly grounded in the Christian worldview. One of the best ways you can find out
about this is to come visit us on a preview day. And there's going to be a new Boyce College preview
on March 27 through 28.
So there's time still for you to come.
And so it's just a couple of days.
It's the best way to experience Boyce College.
You'll tour the campus.
You can sit down on classes.
You can meet our Christ-centered faculty.
I'll look forward personally to meeting you.
And these are very encouraging events to me.
And we want them to be encouraging
to Christian young people and their families.
The Boyce College Preview Day registration includes two nights
of complimentary lodging.
And we'll provide you some food.
We'll provide your meals, and your registration fee is waived if you just use the promo code briefing.
So register at boyscollege.com slash preview.
Remember the code briefing.
I'll look forward to seeing you there.
Thanks for listening to the briefing.
For more information, go to my website at Albertmobler.com.
You can follow me on Twitter or X by going to Twitter.com forward slash Albert Mowler.
For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbtsd.u.
For informational on boys' college, just go to voicecollege.com.
I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
