The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Tuesday, February 25, 2025
Episode Date: February 25, 2025This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 09:53)The Power of the Natural Family: New Research Shows Importance of the Two-Parent Family and Q...uality Time Dads and Moms Spend Together with Their ChildrenThe Family Way by Hoover Digest (Paul E. Peterson)Part II (09:53 - 19:06)What About Marriage in Rural America? Falling Marriage Rates Make It to Rural AmericaIn rural America, more women are saying ‘I don’t’ by The Washington Post (Shelley Clark and Matthew M. Brooks)Part III (19:06 - 26:20)A Federal District Court Judge Deems Trump’s Gender Policy ‘Biologically Inaccurate’ – Are Federal Court Judges to Instruct Us on Biology?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 Tuesday, February 25, 2025. I'm Albert Moeller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news
and events from a Christian worldview. Paul E. Peterson is the Henry Lee Shattuck Professor of Government
and Director of the Program of Education, Policy, and Governance at Harvard University. He's also
Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution. I want to introduce you to Professor Peterson today
precisely because of an article he recently wrote as published in the most recent edition of the Hoover Digest.
That is the Digest, the official journal of the Hoover Institution at Stanford University.
More on that in just a moment.
You're going to be encouraged by the article he wrote.
It is entitled The Family Way.
The subtitle in the article is this.
Of all the things that help students achieve success in economic mobility, the two-parent family is the most powerful.
So here you have a professor at Harvard University, the Henry Lee Shattuck professor of government.
You have a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution who says if you're really concerned about student success in schools,
if you're concerned about children succeeding in schools, what is the most important predictor?
It is whether or not they are living in a home with a mother and a father married to one another.
Professor Peterson begins by writing,
Let's take a moment to celebrate the economic and social power of families.
The prevalence of two-parent families in communities predicts their average level of student achievement
and social mobility rates for those from disadvantaged backgrounds, even after adjusting for income,
education, ethnic composition, racial segregation, and other community factors.
He continues, quote, children learn more if they have two parents, and they benefit as well
from living in places where two-parent families are the norm, end quote.
He cites recent research undertaken by academic economists, and that's on both sides,
of the Atlantic, by the way. And he goes on and says, quote, I discovered the importance of families
after digging into the county level data on social mobility for children from lower socioeconomic
backgrounds. He goes on to say that this data has been made available by opportunity insights at Harvard
University. He continues, quote, we find that having two adults in the home creates more opportunity
for success than otherwise, even when money and other factors are taken into account. As important as
dollars is time, the scariest resource of all. Adult time is needed for a child to learn words and
numbers, to receive emotional support, to learn about learning resources, and to get a ride or walk to
school. An opportunity for children to have twice as much time with a parent counts for a lot.
End quote. Now, as you look at this article citing the report that is beneath it,
you understand that what we see here is a massive affirmation of creation order.
What we see here is a massive affirmation of the importance of marriage and family.
And what we see here shouldn't surprise Christians, nor, frankly, do we take this imperative
about marriage and family on the basis of some kind of social science report?
No, it works the other way around.
It is important to understand that social scientists asking the question,
why are children not learning and why are they not advancing socioeconomically in terms of social mobility?
It turns out, as Professor Peterson says, it turns out that the most salient factor, the most important factor,
is whether or not that child is in a two-parent family.
Now, as Christians, we want to explain and we want to define two parents further than just the number two.
We're looking at the biblical imperative that we're talking about a mother and a father, a husband, and a wife.
But we also understand that statistically, that's exactly what's being talked about here.
If you talk about a two-parent family, statistically, you look at this kind of study, you are talking about moms and dads and their children.
Now, there's a lot more that is revealed when you start looking into, just say, the social science data.
You start finding out that all kinds of good things that happen to children happen.
to them more frequently and with greater predictability within the context of the two-parent family.
Now, we understand what's now militating against what is subverting so much of the flourishing of
children. It's because of the subversion of marriage and the subversion of the family.
In a society that's increasingly confused about marriage, increasingly confused about family,
in a society that wants to separate sex from procreation and procreation from
marriage, you have a recipe for more and more children being born and raised in situations that are
defined as those less likely, if not least likely, for children to advance academically and also
socioeconomically. And this is just common grace information. This is exactly what Christians would
expect. Once again, this is not the authority for our definition of marriage, our honoring a family.
it is nonetheless very important data that now you have in a secular context. This is a professor at Harvard University.
This is being published by the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. You just might think someone would pay attention to this.
Let's remember that the ideological left identifies what they sometimes rather strangely called the nuclear family.
They refer to the nuclear family as an artifact of patriarchy, an artifact of oppression, an artifact of oppression,
artifact of mandated heterosexuality. Well, if you follow that ideological path, you can look at data
like this and say, well, the reason many of these other children aren't doing well is because of
the discrimination they face because they are in a single parent home, et cetera. But here's
where this particular data, a look at this research, reminds us of the fact that you're looking
at what does lead to success, what does lead to learning, what does lead to security, what does
lead to socioeconomic mobility. And you'll notice that what does lead to those things is exactly what
marriage and family are pointing to and what they constitute and what their functions are.
And so you look at this again, the ideological left will say this is just further evidence
of discrimination. Children from other homes, parents trying to raise children in a single parent home
and other contexts. This just shows you the discrimination against them. But that's where this study
is really interesting because no doubt there is some of that discrimination. There is some of that
stigma. And again, as Christians, we understand all kinds of reasons why. But you'll notice that this
particular study goes on to explain further than you might think why having two parents in the home is
functionally important. And the one thing they look at, especially with educational background and
educational achievement, is the fact that that takes time. And here's just a simple fact of math.
Two parents have twice as much time as one parent. Furthermore, you begin to look at studies and
they just look at how families operate and, you know, it is very interesting. It's like National Geographic
discovers the family and they'll look at this and say, well, look at this interesting unit. This is a
very interesting way for human beings to arrange themselves. How does this work? Well, here's the thing.
The math isn't exactly right when you say two parents have twice as much time as one parent.
It turns out nearly mysteriously, and even as recognized by some studies, two parents have more
than twice the time of one parent. And a part of that is simply because, and let's say this with
respect to those who are single parents. They're having to do the work of two parents in many ways,
just in terms of income and family organization and all the rest. And so there just isn't a lot of
time left over. And it does point to God's plan. Christians understand it's a Genesis
revealed plan of the fact that God intended for children to have a mother and a father and for the
distribution of responsibility as children are being raised in the nurtured admonition of
of the Lord.
And so, you know, it's tempting just to say, you do the math.
The math has done for us in this article.
But I think the bravery and courage of this particular author and this article needs to be recognized
because this is in the face of the intellectual establishment, and in particular the academic
left, that will do everything possible to marginalize and dismiss this kind of research.
And so hats off to the Hoover Institution and to the editors of the Hoover Digest for publishing
this and a sincere word of appreciation to Professor Paul E. Peterson for writing this article
and working through this research. At the conclusion of his article, Professor Peterson writes,
quote, the gold medal goes to dual parent families, which by a wide margin contribute more
to an equal opportunity society than any other factor, end quote. Those are particularly
courageous and particularly clear words, more important than any other factor. Once again, it's
almost as if this was part of God's plan. And we as Christians understand we're not smart enough
to have figured this out on our own. This is God's gift to us in the order of creation and in the
explicit teachings of Scripture. All right, now I want to transition to another headline.
This one comes from the Washington Post. Quote, in rural America,
more women are saying, I don't.
The subhead in the article, many Americans still imagine rural areas as bastions of traditional families.
That's no longer the case.
Shelley Clark and Matthew M. Brooks are the reporters on this story.
Professor Clark is at McGill University.
Professor Brooks is at Florida State University.
And it's very interesting how the article begins.
Listen to this, quote.
The Trump administration recently issued new guidelines for the transportation
Department, surprisingly prioritizing spending and infrastructure for communities with marriage
and birth rates higher than the national average. In other words, communities with large traditional
families. The authors continue, quote, we know what you're probably thinking. That means rural
in small town America, presumably President Donald Trump's core constituency will disproportionately
benefit from these funds. But you could very well be wrong, end quote. All right, let's just
step back for a moment. First of all, many people who observe government very carefully were very
surprised by this particular set of guidelines issued for the Transportation Department. We're talking
about funds used to support road projects and all the rest and infrastructure. That's a huge amount
of money. It's hugely important. This is one of the things that government does that we all
recognize because we all have to drive. And so the roads immediately get our attention.
If a bridge is out, if something happens to a highway, it's washed out.
We want it fixed, and we want it fixed now, and most of us don't complain that tax money is being used to fix the bridge.
But nonetheless, it is interesting that the Transportation Department guidelines that were issued by the Trump administration
prioritize specific communities, communities with marriage and birth rates higher than the national average.
Now, let me just step back for a moment and say, that's a pretty amazing development.
Here you have a president in his administration saying, we're going to put our money where our mouth is on this, and we're not only going to support marriage and we're not only going to support children, even having additional children, we're going to prioritize road projects and infrastructure projects accordingly.
But the interesting aspect, the very interesting angle undertaken in this article is to ask the question, well, what about marriage in rural America?
and they're looking at a very interesting singular statistic, pun intended, of how many women in rural America are basically giving up on marriage, or at least are not marrying.
Now, as Christians, let's just forget the roads for a moment. This is far more important than a bridge.
We're looking at the very essence of human civilization by God's own design. So what in the world is going on here?
Well, for one thing, we're looking at a long-term crisis that is not unique to rural America
is present throughout America of declining marriage rates.
And then, of course, we have what we're going to talk about later this week on the briefing,
which are catastrophically falling birth rates.
But, of course, we recognize that they're tied together.
The fall off on the marriage rate, particularly when you're looking at young women,
has to do with a lot of things that might be part of the causation.
For one thing, young men and young women are working through societal levels towards social maturity at different rates.
Let me give you one statistic that will make the fact very clear.
You're looking at some universities and colleges where the entering class is as much as 70% young women, 30% young men.
We're looking at high school graduation rates, look at college admission rates, college graduation rates.
We are looking at a female surge.
And the fact is sociologically that most women, and I'm speaking here sociologically, most women sociologically don't want to marry down, which is to say someone, a man with less education, they want to marry a man with more education.
They don't want to marry a man with lower job prospects than they see themselves as having.
They want to marry a man with higher job prospects.
And this is where Christians, by the way, have to jump in and say, again, creation order is very much at stake here.
the problem is a generation of young men, far too many of whom are just not advancing as they should.
They're not growing up as they should. They're not understanding and growing into disciplines as they should.
They're not working. They're not learning as they should. But that's just a part of the equation.
The other thing that has really flipped the scales in the United States, it lands at a far deeper worldview level.
And this has to do with so many young women buying into the idea of personal autonomy,
And frankly, so much of the world inhabited by young women, and I speak of the college campuses,
that's ground zero for much of this. It's so saturated with leftist ideologies that revolve around
personal autonomy and, quite frankly, success specifically without reference to marriage
and specifically without reference to children. And so we are reaping what has been sown,
and it's been quite deliberate. But nonetheless, it is very interesting to have the Washington
Post run this article just stating that even as the Department of Transportation is that we're going
to prioritize spending for infrastructure to regions that have higher marriage rates and higher birth
rates, that might not land where you expect.
And this is not an assault upon rural America because there are also some sociological reasons
why rural America is in decline on so many of these issues.
For one thing, middle-level cities have lost a lot of their industries, a lot of their jobs,
the transition in the economy and the urbanization of the entire society with more people moving
into cities and metropolitan areas.
You look at a state like Texas or a state like Georgia, and you can look at cities like Atlanta
or Dallas or Austin, and you can see vast growth and young people moving to those places
as if they were magnets or mecas.
But that means they're not staying in the county seat towns where they grew up and went
to high school.
The pattern in so many of these states is that younger people go to the city.
college and they don't come back. And that just changes everything. So we are looking at a very
complex pattern here. Frankly, it also filters down to churches in so many of these rural areas and in
small communities. Because so many of them have few young adults precisely because the young adults
have moved elsewhere. I often talk about the fact that social liberalism and secularism,
they follow the patterns. I mentioned the seas, concentrated on the campus, concentrated on the coast,
concentrated on the cities. There's more to it even than that, including corporations.
So when you're looking at fewer women getting married and fewer men seeming to be qualified
for marriage, you're looking at a social phenomenon that's devastating to a country.
And there are biblical reasons why it is so devastating. But we're also looking at a flip side here.
The headline is, in rural America, more women are saying, I don't.
spectacularly surprising data is coming in, telling us that in this generation of young adults,
18 to 30, more young men want to get married than young women.
That's very interesting.
There is a desire expressed on the part of more young men at those ages than even young women
to be married.
One other factor reflected in this article and in the studies behind it, it is very sad to note
the decline in a marriage culture throughout much of America. That decline in the marriage culture,
it came slower to rural America, but guess what? Rural America has caught the contagion.
What began on the campuses, began in the cities, began on the coast, is now in the heartland.
It affects red America as well as blue America, and in that sense, we should all be saddened
by the understanding of what's taking place. But it also shows the importance of Christian churches
and of Christian parents. It shows the importance of Christian pastors preaching and teaching the
word of God, pointing to God's plan, affirming and explaining creation order, setting forth God's
plan for human beings as men and women, a man and a woman coming together in marriage, receiving
children as God's gift and raising those children in the nurtured admonition of the Lord. The family,
by the way, is the greatest engine for turning out successful adults. Again, just look at the data we're
talking about here, it also in ways that many people don't want to think about becomes one of the
greatest predictors of how future citizens will vote and how they will act. It turns out that the
intact family also turns out to produce people who want to conserve the intact family. If you're
surprised by that, you shouldn't be. Well, all right, sometimes you just have to look back and
wonder and say, well, the battle's been joined. The Trump administration has handed down a raft of
executive orders on the gender question, making very clear that the United States government will
recognize two and only two genders, the male gender and the female gender. The administration
went on to define that, but the Trump administration has gone further to specify an entire series of
specific changes in policy, in U.S. departments, in colleges and in universities,
in different contexts related to, for instance, the prohibition of those with male bodies playing
on female athletic and sporting teams, the cessation of the federal government allowing for
so-called transgender treatments or gender-affirming treatments, as they are wrongly called when it
comes to children and minors. It's a pretty comprehensive thing. And all of this, of course,
is going to end up in the courts, and it already has landed in one U.S. district court, and in this
case with Judge Anasie Reyes. She was hearing a case, by the way, she was appointed as a federal
judge by President Joe Biden, and she was presiding over a hearing about a call for an injunction
against the Trump administration on some of these transgender policies or gender clarification
policies. And in this case, this judge decided she would hop right into it in a hot way.
she was very clear in stating that the Trump administration says there are two and only two genders,
and then the judge responded that that is, quote, biologically inaccurate, end quote.
Now, let's just wait just a minute.
Here you have a federal district court judge declaring that the Trump administration's policy,
that human beings are male and female, and she says that's not biologically accurate.
Do we need a federal district court judge to tell us about biology that's as simple as male and female?
I think not, but what this demonstrates is the fact that in our cultural division in this country,
and frankly, in the projection of so many of these issues into the judiciary, all these issues ended up in court,
that's going to happen again and again and again, and we're going to have more judges like this.
By the way, Judge Rays was very clear in pressing against the Trump administration,
the Justice Department's attorney.
But basically, she said it's biologically inaccurate
to say there are only two genders, male and female.
I can just tell you this is going to be appealed.
You're going to have all kinds of courts active in this.
And by the way, that is a part of the strategy
of the Trump administration,
which is to move so quickly on so many fronts
with so many policies that the federal courts
will get clogged with so many cases,
and President Trump wants these issues adjudicated as quickly as possible.
But the important thing for us
to recognize that all of this is now at stake.
And so you think about how important an election is
and you try to weigh it in the balances.
Well, just consider that in this case,
we're reminded that male and female
was in the election of November 2024.
And then you also recognize, okay, there's more to it than that
because who sits in the federal courts
has everything to do with who's sitting in the Oval Office.
This judge, who just declared male and female limitations
to be biologically inaccurate,
was appointed by President George.
Biden. No spectacular surprise there. So again, it underlines the importance of elections and the fact
that in this country right now, we're not just talking about political divisions. We're talking about
a collision of worldviews. And we're talking about the fact that virtually the most basic issues
of human existence, they're now pretty much on the headlines. You can't get more basic than male or
female. But as you're looking at federal judges, you also see that some of them are now posing as scientists.
and I want to point out that's not new.
And the politicization of the courts,
the pushing of so much of this into the courts,
which was done primarily by the ideological left
in the 1950s, 60s, and 70s.
Producing, for instance, the Roe v. Wade decision in 1973,
remember that in writing the majority opinion,
the pro-abortion opinion,
of the U.S. Supreme Court in the Roe v. Wade decision,
and remember, it wasn't incidental
that Justice Blackman had been
the general counsel for the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota.
He had a lot of medical friends. He turned to those medical authorities to define when human life
begins and the realities of abortion. It was Justice Blackman who introduced into America's
cultural conversation the division of pregnancy into trimesters in which he came up with this
artificial and, frankly, absolutely deadly scheme of looking at the relative rights of the
government to protect unborn life in the respective trimesters. I just want to talk.
underline the fact that when you're looking at the federal judiciary, these days, you are looking
at ground zero for many of the most important policy issues of our day. I don't think this is what
the founders of our constitutional order expected. But in a highly litigious society, this is where
so many issues are going to land. That was true of abortion, not only in Roe v. Wade, but in subsequent
decisions, thankfully also the Dobbs decision reversing Roe v. Wade. And so even as you're looking at
the Supreme Court of the United States dealing with the abortion,
issue, you understand that those justices were dealing with an issue that the founding justices
of the U.S. Supreme Court couldn't imagine would ever come before that court. And we're now looking
to judges to have all kinds of expertise. And in the case of Judge Reyes, she evidently
believes she has that expertise. But we're looking at deeper issues here as well. You can't get
to more foundational issues than the identity of human beings as male and female. And the fact that
this is now something that is going to be thrown into the federal judiciary, and the argument is going to be
made by not only lawyers, but also doctors on both sides of the argument. It just shows you how much
ideology is entered into the world around us. And so just buckle your seatbelts. It's going to be a wild ride.
It's going to be a very interesting few months and even few years ahead. Judges are going to be hearing
all kinds of cases. Arguments are going to be made, and honestly, we need to track them all because
every one of them is going to be important. All that to say, yes, we're in a cultural moment in which
male and female make the headlines almost every single day. It's almost as if we need to look back
to the book of Genesis for bearings. Almost. Thanks for listening to the briefing. For more information,
go to my website at Albertmohar.com. You can find me on Twitter or X by going to Twitter.com
forward slash Albert Moller. For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to
sbtsk.edu. For information on Boyce College, just go to voicecollege.com. I'm speaking to you
before a live audience in San Gabriel, California, and I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
