The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Thursday, September 26, 2024
Episode Date: September 26, 2024This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 11:26)The World is at an ‘Inflection Point’ — President Biden’s Final Speech at the UN Reve...als Global TroubleBiden Warns the World Is at an ‘Inflection Point’ Amid Global Crises by The New York Times (Sheryl Gay Stolberg and David E. Sanger)Part II (11:26 - 20:36)A High-Tech Death Machine: Controversy Erupts as Woman Commits Suicide in a High-TechAssisted Suicide Pod in SwitzerlandReported "suicide capsule" death of U.S. woman in Switzerland prompts multiple arrests, launch of criminal case by CBS NewsPart III (20:36 - 24:47)Canada and the Culture of Death’s Insatiable Appetite: Assisted Suicide is in the Top Five Leading Causes of Death in Canada – And It Will Continue to Grow If Not StoppedWelcome to Canada, the Doctor Will Kill You Now by The Wall Street Journal (Nicholas Tomaino)Sign 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 Thursday, September 26, 2024. I'm Albert Mowler, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
It would be very tempting to think, perhaps very attractive to think, that whatever happens at the United Nations is not of importance to most of us.
And, you know, most days, that's probably true. But sometimes things can happen at the United Nations, and in particular at the General Assembly, the higher level, of course, is the Security Council.
And in the UN General Assembly, you do have something like the Tower of Babel with the nations all gathered together.
And most of the time, it is absolute air and absolute nonsense and doesn't matter much.
It's a great experiment in globalism. And if you look at it, you'll understand why globalism can't work.
But it's also a bit of a show, especially during the sessions of the UN General Assembly when heads of state are speaking.
Heads of government, heads of state, they often prepare very highly scripted remarks.
for the UN General Assembly because they're trying to send a message to the world.
Now, one of those national leaders who spoke at the General Assembly this week was none
other than the President of the United States, Joe Biden.
And there was a particular sense of history, and perhaps particularly on his mind, because
he knew this would be the last opportunity in which he would speak to the General Assembly
of the United Nations.
And so he did so, suggesting that the world is at present in a very dangerous place and
even at what he called an inflection point with so many simultaneous global crises.
Now, the very first thing we need to note is that in that statement, the president can't be wrong.
It cannot be wrong to point to the crises that are now breaking out all over the world,
and, of course, shaping so much what we have to talk about, even on the briefing,
affecting so many lives around the world and injecting so many question marks into our understanding
of how the world works and what it's going to look like in the future,
you understand that all of these things are extremely relevant, but you also understand that declaring
that we are at an inflection point really doesn't tell us anything. In other words, it's the kind of
statement made by a political leader that isn't wrong, but even if it's not wrong, it's not
necessarily very telling, very revealing, or very important. We are at an inflection point,
but you know from a Christian worldview understanding, we are just about always at an inflection point.
And that is because at all moments, our decisions have meaning. Our policies will have effects. And when you are
looking at the kinds of crises that are shaping the world right now, just think of Gaza, just think of
Israel having to face Hezbollah as well as Hamas in Gaza. You think of the trouble in the Middle East,
and then you go to other regions of the world. You look at the threat of China. President Biden spoke to
that, by the way, in his address. You look at Russia invading Ukraine. You just go continent after continent,
twist to the globe after turn, and what you see is a pattern of crises just about everywhere.
Now, there are ebbs and flows in the urgency of these crises, in the number of these crises,
and quite frankly in the management of these crises.
And that's why a specialist in these global affairs, Walter Russell Mead, in an article
published before President Biden addressed the General Assembly, an article in the Wall Street
Journal with the headline U.S. shrugs as World War III approaches, what he said,
is that the Biden administration has fundamentally fumbled so many of these affairs and crises and
problems around the world. And it is also interesting to note that when you look at the criticism,
you recognize that at times the criticism is that the Biden administration has done too much or assumed
too much. And at other times, it appears that the accusation is that there's just too much inaction
or inattention on the part of the administration. Now, to be fair to any president of the United
States. In the modern age, it is impossible to manage all of these crises. And so a part of what any
president has to do because of the stature of the United States and the exercise of office,
as the nation's chief executive and commander-in-chief, every single president has to decide
that he or, for that matter, potentially now she, will focus on particular issues and will give
attention to those issues, not ignoring the rest, but saying we simply have to rank these in terms
of importance, number one, number two, number two, number two, number two.
three. And that's where one interesting move on the part of the Biden administration has been to move
China higher and higher up that threat assessment, such that the Biden administration announced a
matter of months ago that it now sees China as a major challenge for the United States and our
interests and our allies and yes, for our military. And the administration had detailed in that
kind of threat assessment why China has moved up so fast. A part of it is the aggression of China
around the world, a political aggression, an economic aggression, and intelligence aggression.
And for that matter, also the fact that you look at Russia's invasion of Ukraine and you look
at a coalescence of powers opposed to the United States and our allies and Western civilization.
The most important three on that list would be Iran and Russia and China.
You could add to that North Korea.
And what you're looking at there is, let's just say four, a quarter.
of danger. But as the president of the United States was speaking to the General Assembly of the
United Nations, he was also making reference to other hotspots around the world. And let's just remind
ourselves, just think of the Houthi rebels there in Yemen. You could have an explosion just about
anywhere, any time. That's a reminder of the fact we live in a very dangerous world.
Now, this is where Christians have to come back and say, well, the world's always been dangerous.
Yeah, but the world's not always been dangerous in this sense, because it was not possible.
in previous times that you could have the kind of weaponry that could all the sudden leap across
an ocean and in a matter of minutes travel from one continent to another with deadly effect.
You also did not have the threats to national security that are now posed by high technology
with hackers and foreign intelligence services trying to compromise information or for that
matter shut down entire national systems. No, we are living in a unique moment and the threats do appear
to be more pressing. And the velocity of these events appears to now be considerably accelerated.
Now, also very interesting to watch is the fact that when President Biden was making what he knew
would be his last speech at the General Assembly of the United Nations, not only on the
national scene, but on the international scene, he wanted to make his own claim to history.
That's also something very interesting to watch. If this was his valedictory address,
his closing curtain address at the United Nations, what would he say? He said,
only that the world is a dangerous place at an inflection point, he also said, and you understand
the political context of this, he said, America is back. In other words, he was patting himself
on the back, congratulating his own administration for its handling of these international affairs
with a very clear criticism at the same time implicit on those who came before him. So if you say
America's back, you mean America wasn't there and had to be led back. One observer in the New York
Times pointed out in response, quote, America's back all right. He, meaning Biden can make that case,
but with severe limitations on its capacity to lead. That specialist was Aaron David Miller,
who is a longtime Middle East peace negotiator, according to the Times. He has advised,
the Times tells us, presidents of both parties, he went on to say, quote, Biden's administration
is a cautionary tale, I think, of just how complicated and surprising the international
environment is and the limitations of American power, end quote.
Now, those are also some good things for us to think about for a moment.
Let's start at the very end, the limitations on American power.
If you go to the end of the 20th century, the United States is pretty much full of itself,
thinking that with the fall of the Soviet Union and with the rise of American power and
influence in the world, we could pretty much have our way, or at least exert our influence
all over the globe.
But, you know, history didn't turn out that way.
It turns out that the United States has two things that have to be factored into the
equation. Number one, it has enemies. And number two, it has limited means. So you look at the military
of the United States and you say, that's the most powerful military on earth. And measure
comprehensively, it almost assuredly is. But you know what? It has limitations. It can't be
everywhere at once. It can't address every problem at once. It can't even be deployed in more
than say two or three places around the world in any meaningful sense at anything close to full force.
And that's not a criticism. It's just a fact. But then we go back to the even more urgent issue,
which is that the United States has enemies. Civilization has enemies. And one way to understand that
very clearly is to look at the threats to the world order right now that are not represented by
nations. You talk about Hezbollah, a militant Islamic group. You talk about Hamas, another terrorist group.
You talk about the Houthi rebels? Again, you're talking not about a nation state. You're not talking
about a government. You're talking about a terror organization, an extremist group. You're looking at a
militia. And in this case, what distinguishes a militia from an army is that an army represents a
government, a militia. That's something else altogether. But you know what? In deadly effect,
they can be pretty much the same. But I want to point out one other thing that the Christian worldview clearly
speaks to here, not just war and peace, not just to mayhem in the world, not just to the way history
unfolds, but to a more personal issue. You know, the President of the United States arguably
represents and holds the most powerful position not only in the world, but probably in the
history of the world. There have been those who had more, say, raw power in a totalitarian sense,
but in terms of the combination of power and influence, personality, and just constitutional and
international heft, you can't come up with anyone on the world stage more powerful than a
president of the United States. So, following that logic, when Joe Biden spoke to the
General Assembly of the United Nations, you would think that the entire world would drop everything
and listen to him and then hang on every word. But that's not the way it works. First of all,
because most people around the world not only were not in that meeting of the General Assembly
of the United Nations, but secondly, didn't care. But the second issue is this. Power ebbs and power
flows. And there is no one who looks more powerful, but is actually, in truth, less powerful
than an elected official on his way out, whose term is about to end. And so everyone listening
to Joe Biden speak, they probably knew this was an interesting historical moment. But
as for the future of the relationships of those nations with the United States, that's not going to be
based upon a relationship with Joe Biden, and everyone in the room knew it. That's not a criticism of
President Biden. It is just an understanding of how power works in a fallen world. And I can assure you,
that is the way power works. But next, we need to turn to a very dark issue, and this is assisted
suicide and a big headline news story that came out of Switzerland. It's complicated, but it's really
important. The complicated part is that Switzerland has arrested persons for having used a device known as the
suicide capsule or the Sarko capsule. And a woman identified as in her 60s, an American woman had brought
about her own death inside this machine, which is absolutely macabre. It looks like some science
fiction invention. It is a capsule with a lid. The person gets in and reclines. And then the lid comes
down on the capsule. And then after answering just a limited number of questions, the person
hits a button and the atmosphere inside the capsule turns absolutely deadly. Nitrogen is piped
into the capsule. And of course, that pushes out the oxygen. Eventually, it brings about a loss of
consciousness. And then it brings about unquestionable death. And that's exactly what happened in this case.
The Swiss authorities then moved in to arrest the persons who were involved in this,
charging them with various crimes, but, as I say, it's complicated because Switzerland is a place where
assisted suicide is fully legal. And Switzerland, a very liberal society in this sense, is one of the
European nations involved in this very, very unethical practice, but it is singular in the sense
that it allows non-Swiss citizens to travel there in order to bring about their own assisted suicide.
so it's basically an international market for assisted suicide.
Now, there are Christian worldview considerations here that just loom so large before us.
For one thing, it's a reminder to us that when we talk about the dignity and sanctity of human life,
we are talking about the unborn, but we are also talking about the dignity and sanctity of human life
from the moment of fertilization until here are the key words, natural death.
Natural death. This is not a natural death.
this was a death brought about by intention. It was a death brought about by technology. It was an
event brought about by the politics of Switzerland. Now, one of the complications here is that the folks
associated with this company, with this technology, with this capsule, they were arrested for
allowing its use. Now, that raises a very interesting question. Why would the Swiss government
arrest persons for doing what Switzerland has notoriously declared to be legal? Well, they said they
were inadequate precautions taken, inadequate safeguards that were in place. It was an assisted suicide
that was unauthorized. And not only that, the criticism coming from the Swiss government is even
weirder. And this is incredibly revealing. Switzerland's health minister, Elizabeth Baumish-Snyder,
she was asked by the Swiss Parliament, what had taken place here? And she said, speaking of the
Sarko assisted suicide capsule, she said, quote, on one hand, it does not fulfill the demands of
the product safety law, and as such, must not be brought into circulation.
She said, on the other hand, the corresponding use of nitrogen is not compatible with the article
on purpose in the chemicals law."
Okay, let's just understand for a moment what's going on here.
This representative of the Swiss government, the Swiss government's health minister,
did you catch the irony?
Speaking of a technology of a death capsule intended only to bring about death, said that
it fails to meet the nation's product safety laws? Product safety laws? How in the world can you talk
about product safety laws and a death device in the same breath? What sense does that make?
But it just reveals the illogic and frankly the immorality of the assisted suicide movement.
It's just made abundantly clear with that very language. Just imagine the bureaucratic response to this.
Yes, we have full legalization of assisted suicide, but only after the technologies or the mechanisms pass a product safety test.
But then again, the deadly element in this case was nothing other than nitrogen, in this case nitrogen gas.
That's a naturally existing gas.
Yes, but when you concentrate it and you put it in a capsule that presses out the oxygen, what you end up with is suffocation and death.
but remember that the health minister said that, quote, the corresponding use of nitrogen is not compatible
with the article on purpose in the chemicals law, end quote. In other words, not speaking of the death of a human being,
but rather to the chemical laws in the country, she said, you know, that was not an allowed use of nitrogen,
as if this is basically a matter of chemicals. By the way, on the Sarko device is a quote from
the late astronomer Carl Sagan who said, quote, we are made a source.
Star Stuff, we are a way for the universe to know itself."
End quote.
You have to be of a certain age to remember that Carl Sagan of Cordell University was infamous
for his PBS television program, and it was known as Cosmos.
And he began by saying the cosmos is all that is or was or ever will be.
He said that at the beginning of the series, and at the end, I've often described that
taxpayer-supported PBS program as a form of secular evolutionist, materialist,
televangelism. But you know, I think that's an appropriate quote to be on this kind of machine,
because it just reduces human beings to nothing more than chemicals, or more romantically
described here, Star Stuff. According to CBS News, about 1,300 people died by assisted suicide in
Switzerland in the year 2020. Now, the reason those figures are old and out of date is because we always
get these a matter of, say, a year, two, three years later. So that must be the last year of
accurate documentation that's available. But nonetheless, you look at that, 1300 people. That's
1,300 human beings brought about the end of their life by what is euphemistically called
assisted suicide in Switzerland. But, you know, interestingly, Switzerland allows assisted suicide,
but not euthanasia. And the distinction is this. An assisted suicide, there is an agent who
allows or helps someone to make a decision and invoke a technology or take a pill or whatever it is
to end that person's own life. Euthanasia, that's a macab, ironic word, meaning good death, going back to the
Greek. Euthanasia involves another party actually taking action to bring about the death of an individual.
So that's the distinction with assisted suicide. Both of them from the Christian worldview are horrifying acts.
Both of them are acts that defy the dignity and sanctity of human life.
Both of them embrace death rather than life.
And this is where Christians have to understand.
This is the way things look.
And once you go down this road, once you go down this road, you look foolish for saying
this machine is illegal.
And you look especially foolish for saying this machine is illegal because it hasn't yet
passed product safety laws when the entire function is to bring about death.
And from a Christian worldview perspective, you just need to understand.
understand that that illogic is actually pointing to a deeper moral truth. We should not do this.
Furthermore, what we have seen on the issue of assisted suicide and euthanasia, what we have seen
is that the logic moves from A to B to C to D with breathtaking speed. You go to a nation like
the Netherlands, which allows legalize euthanasia that's bringing about by action the death of another
human being. It now allows it. It said, well, it would it allow it in the beginning only in a case of
excruciating pain with a terminal diagnosis of an adult, and that had to be a conscious decision.
But then very quickly, they said, well, let's lower the age. Exactly what they said they wouldn't do.
They did in very short order. And you have the distinction between passive and active euthanasia.
Passive euthanasia meant not employing medical treatment to try to prevent death. Active euthanasia means
actually taking actions that bring about death. The slide from passive euthanasia to active euthanasia,
Asia. It came with almost lightning speed. The very people who said we'd never do that were the people
just very shortly thereafter doing that. And then there was the argument, well, if this is made available
to people who are at the very end stage of a terminal disease, it should also be made available to
those who are in deep suffering by their own diagnosis, whether or not it is a terminal disease.
Then it was, well, what about a psychological torment? It's not enough that you just limit this to a
physical torment. If someone psychologically or psychiatrically,
tormented, they should be able to demand the very same thing. And then the next step was,
well, what about younger people? What about teenagers? Well, certainly not children, but teenagers.
And then very quickly, what about children? And that's where we are looking at the problem
squarely in the face. The culture of death has an absolutely insatiable appetite.
It will not be satisfied until death is the universal reality. And we have nations that are
actively serving the culture of death. And by the way, we're not just talking about some of these very
liberal and secular. By the way, those two things go together. We're not just talking about some very
liberal and secular European nations. We need to recognize that another nation that is on the
fastest slide when it comes to euthanasian, assisted suicide, that nation is Canada, right across our
northern border. Not too long ago, Nicholas Tomeino wrote a piece in the Wall Street Journal with
the headline, Welcome to Canada. The doctor will kill you now. He summarized in this paragraph,
quote, Canada has undergone a crash course in what the country calls medical assistance in dying or M-A-I-D.
He says the experiment began in 2015 when the Canadian Supreme Court ruled in Carter v. Canada that laws prohibiting physician-assisted dying interfere with the liberty and security of people with grievous and irremediable medical conditions.
Parliament codified the decision in the following year.
The very next sentence is this. Lawmakers thought they were imposing limits.
Yeah, they thought they were imposing limits.
The limits didn't stand.
Tomato then goes on to say, you know, first they came back and said it doesn't have to be an irremediable medical condition.
It can just be one in which death is reasonably foreseeable, by the way.
That could cover an enormous amount of territory in the medical world.
And then they opened the door even wider to this kind of assisted death.
They dropped some of the safeguards.
And of course, what happened is the numbers just went up.
According to the Wall Street Journal, in 2022, assisted death in this sense medical assistance in dying represented, and I'm quoting here, the fifth leading cause of death in Canada.
Get that. The fifth leading cause of death. And here we're not talking about Belgium. We're not talking about the Netherlands. We're not talking about Switzerland. We're not talking about a suicide capsule that is somewhere there in the Swiss Alps. No, we are talking about Canada. Very close to us. And there are.
states where assisted suicide is already legal in some sense, and that logic is spreading among us as
well. According to this documentation, 44,958 people have been put to death between the years
2016 and 2022 in Canada. Again, that's virtually 45,000 people. That is a decent size city. Now,
completely gone and not by natural death. This underlines a reality we have to keep ever in mind
and that is that if you begin to subvert the dignity and sanctity of human life,
you begin to deny the value and the objective status of human life.
If you do so in the beginning of life, say in the womb,
very quickly, you're going to do so at the end of life.
And then, here's the big warning, you will find a way to do so at every point of life.
First of all, only those with a terminal disease.
The next thing you know, well, the disease can be psychological as well as physiological.
The next thing you know, not just adults, but teenagers, then not just teenagers, but children.
This is the culture of death, and it doesn't get more deadly.
So, okay, I'm going to come back to the first issue of our consideration.
I'm going to go back to that statement made by President Joe Biden, and I'm going to say that taking it in that context is one thing.
I want to put it in this context and say, I'm in total agreement with the President of the United States.
And his remarks at the United Nations General Assembly, we are at an inflection point.
But I'll end by saying that this consideration about assisted suicide and this machine in Switzerland
reminds us that there are inflection points in more ways than one.
And some, such as what we just documented in Switzerland and in Canada, turn out to be incredibly deadly.
Thanks for listening to the briefing.
For more information, go to my website at Albertmuller.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 sbtsbts.
for information on Boyce College, go to Bois College.com.
I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
