The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Tuesday, January 28, 2025
Episode Date: January 28, 2025This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:14 - 15:54)Religious Divide Over the Death Penalty: Worldview Divide Between Gospel Christianity and Lib...eral Christianity Shows Yet AgainChurch of murdered pastor supports execution. Another clergyman says it should be stopped by USA Today (James Powel)Part II (15:54 - 19:52)Gospel Christianity vs. Liberal “Christianity” on Immigration: Faithfulness Will Not Come From Liberal Presuppositions about ScriptureTrump Immigration Orders Fracture Church Sanctuary Movement by The Wall Street Journal (Scott Calvert, Kris Maher, and Joe Barrett)Part III (19:52 - 27:18)Does the Constitution Allow for Federal Funding for Explicitly Religious Charter Schools? SCOTUS Takes up Consequential Case from OklahomaSupreme Court to Hear Oklahoma Religious Charter School Case by The New York Times (Troy Closson)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, January 28, 2025. I'm Albert Mueller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and
events from a Christian worldview. It's often referred to as the binary, and that is the fact that
human beings tend to line up into discernible lines. You can call them what you want. You can call it
Democratic and Republican. You can call it liberal and conservative. You just go down the line,
and the interesting thing is that so many people end up on opposing sides of different
issues. So what's the explanation? The explanation is that even though modern people have so many
different positions, we have to take so many different positions, we have to say yes or no to so many
different issues, but the underlying reality is that even as these issues are different, the basic
divergence is at a far deeper level. It's at the level of presuppositions. It's at the level of
worldview. So when we talk about the Christian worldview, we need to understand that Christians
in times past didn't have to have the same kind of conversation.
That's because through many centuries in Western civilization, the Christian worldview was the only
available worldview. So you weren't looking at a binary in which you had a Christian worldview,
opposed to some other worldview. In most cases now, it is the modern, secular, materialistic
worldview. And so you look at the reality and you say, here's an issue, LGBTQ. Now, admittedly,
that's a number of issues, but let's just say it's one issue for a moment, LGBTQ. Are you for the
LGBTQ revolution, are you against it? Then change to the issue of abortion. Are you pro-abortion or are you pro-life?
Let's shift to another position. What can be the definition of marriage? Is it just merely,
essentially, always the union of a man and a woman? Or can it be any number of other permutations or
arrangements? The interesting thing is that as you look at these kinds of questions, people tend not to
cross the lines. They tend to be both pro-abortion and pro-LGBQ, to take just two examples. They tend to be
predictable on these issues, and the reason Christians understand is because the real commitment is
deeper than the issue. The position on the issue, say, of gay marriage or same-sex marriage,
that position on that issue doesn't come out of thin air. It comes out of deeper basic assumptions,
presuppositions, deeper convictions, deeper commitments. If you hold to a secular material,
materialistic worldview, then, well, marriage can be anything human beings decide or negotiate that it should be.
If you believe that marriage is defined by the creator who gave us marriage as his gift and said,
therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and shall cleave to his wife and they shall become one flesh,
and then to the man and the woman now united in marriage, he said be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth.
You either believe that marriage is a human creation and thus subject to endless human experimentation,
redefinition, innovation, or you believe that it is a divine institution given to humanity as a gift
defined not by the creature, but by the creator. But you know, there are other issues in which,
frankly, you have secondary and tertiary or third-level issues that tend to come back to the same route.
So it is predictable. If you hold to, I would say, a pro-abortion position that I can
pretty much predict where you're going to be on the LGBTQ issues. And there are other issues that are
probably equally predictable. But there's some other issues that might not be quite as predictable.
So if you tell me your position on abortion or you tell me your position on, say, same-sex marriage,
I might be able to infer your position on the death penalty. As a matter of fact, maybe four out of five
times I'm likely to get that right. The point I want to make here is that at the worldview level,
human beings are not as consistent as we should be. One of the responsibilities of Christians is to make sure
that our positions, understandings on all these issues is accountable to the Christian worldview,
and thus it is coherent and consistent and whole. Okay, now let's look at the reality of the church
in the year 2025. You have a two-party system in the church. You have liberal churches, and you have
conservative churches. Now, again, the main point of the conservative churches is that it is we who are
holding to historic Christianity, and the liberal churches have abandoned it. I believe that's absolutely
true. But when you drive down a street and you see the first church this, the first church that,
you just look at all these names, you recognize that there are liberal churches that still
continue to say they represent Christianity, liberal Protestant churches, as well as conservative
churches. And as you look back, say, to just a matter of a century ago, you had Protestant liberalism
versus conservatism or more orthodox wings of Christianity. And then you had denominations begin to
divide. So you had more liberal Presbyterians and more conservative Presbyterians. You had more
liberal Baptists and more conservative Baptists. And guess what? The conservative Baptist and the
conservative Presbyterians often have more in common, even across the denominational divide,
than either of them has with the Liberal Party in their own denomination, or at least by their own denominational name.
By the year 2025, most of the Baptists have sorted out into conservative bodies and more liberal bodies.
Most of the Presbyterians have done the same.
That wasn't the case yet in the early 20th century, when Gresham Machen, the Great Presbyterian New Testament scholar,
went on to describe what he saw as two rival religions, Christianity and liberalism.
But now you see that on a number of issues that divide that Machen recognized back a century ago,
it shows up in some interesting ways.
And even in a highly secularized age, the major media can't get away from the fact that there is disagreement among churches over some very important front-line moral issues.
So yesterday's edition of USA Today, a major article, here's the headline,
Execution divides religion for churches.
The subhead, Murder of Texas Pastor sparks support.
Well, support for whom? Well, as James Powell, the reporter on the story tells us, quote,
ecclesiastical lines have been drawn over the fate of Texas death row inmate Stephen Nelson,
with one church saying his sentence for killing its pastor is justified,
and another clergyman saying the state violates a foundational principle of Christianity.
Okay, wait just a minute. So that's an interesting lead. That's referred to as the first paragraph in a news story,
historically the lead. What's the lead here? Christianity is divided between,
those who are pro-death penalty and those who are anti-death penalty. And that is certainly classically
revealed in this case in which the murderer of an evangelical pastor has been sentenced to death.
But notice something else. In this lead paragraph, we are told with one church saying his sentence
for killing its pastor is justified and another clergyman saying the state violates a foundational
principle of Christianity. So you have a church on the one hand set against a clergyman on the
hand, and that's just the way the press sometimes plays the game. But there is a divide within
institutional Christianity over the question of the death penalty. Again, evangelicals tend to be
an overwhelming agreement, and liberal denominations opposed to the death penalty tend to be in
just about universal agreement. How did this happen? Well, if you go back to even say the early
decades of the 20th century, just about all major Christian denominations are in favor of the death
penalty. Why? Well, I'll just say that it has incredibly powerful scriptural support. For one thing,
in the covenant made with Noah in Genesis chapter 9, it is not only presented as a legal option for
human beings when it comes to the murder of another human being, it is actually ordered by God
because of the sanctity of that human life and the assault upon not only the creature,
but the creator in attempting to destroy an image bearer. So according to Genesis 9,
it's not really an open question as to whether a rightly ordered society would have the death penalty.
But you'll notice not just for any crime, before the specific crime of deliberate intentional homicide.
In the New Testament, you have an emphatic statement made by the Apostle Paul in Romans chapter 13.
When speaking of the emperor, he makes very clear that the state, the government, does not hold the power of the sword in vain.
The power of the sword, referring to legal prosecution in a general sense, but California,
punishment in a specific sense. So it is recognized as a legitimate, indeed, necessary demonstration
of proper justice. Again, let's note, not for just any crime, and frankly, in some periods of
human history, capital punishment has been far too widely applied, far beyond the biblical logic.
But the biblical logic does make very clear that intentional homicide is set apart from other crimes.
as I said in Genesis chapter 9 in the covenant that God gave through Noah.
In the case covered in this USA Today story yesterday, we're really talking about a very
brutal, intentional murder.
The murder of an evangelical pastor in a church, and further, not just the murder of the pastor.
Other crimes were committed.
Other people were involved.
The man arrested for the crime, eventually convicted of the crime and sentenced to death
for the crime, is Stephen Nelson.
The argument being made,
by the anti-death penalty advocates here is not that he didn't do the crime,
but basically that no one should ever receive the death penalty.
Now, here's something very interesting.
I pointed to the contradiction of the fact that when former president Joe Biden,
in the last days of his administration,
offered clemency to most of the prisoners on death row in the federal system.
I disagree with that action, but I also want to point to his hypocrisy.
He did not grant clemency to all.
He said he was against the death penalty.
but he left some of those death sentences intact. Why? Because they were notorious cases, such as the
Boston Marathon Bomber, others. In other words, they weren't politically plausible. That tells us this
wasn't a serious moral argument. But those who oppose the death penalty, in some cases, are making
a serious moral argument. But we just need to note that they are arguing sometimes because they say
the death penalty has been wrongly applied. And we come back and say, we want to make certain
the death penalty is rightly applied.
But then they come back and they're opposed to the death penalty as an idea, as a concept.
They're opposed to it in principle.
And that's where, I believe, established on a biblical worldview, we can't be against what the
Bible through the Noahic covenant commands.
But in reality, I'm not even bringing this up primarily over the issue of the death penalty,
but over the issue of the fact that even when you have a secular newspaper like USA Today,
in a supposedly secular age, the headline is, execution divide.
religion for churches. And thus, USA Today recognizes this isn't just a legal argument. It's not just a
cultural or social argument. It's a theological argument. And I just want to point out that those
churches in the main, I'm not going to say this is absolute, but I'm going to argue very strongly
that those churches in the main that have a more conservative view of biblical authority,
a more classic view of Christian theology, they're going to be far more likely to hold to the
appropriateness of the death penalty. But those are the more likely to be more likely to hold to the appropriateness of the death penalty.
those who oppose the death penalty have to find some way to say, even though there are clear references
to the death penalty in Scripture, they believe that humanity has to basically grow up enough
that we grow too big for the death penalty. It's a humanitarian impulse, they will say,
in which it simply is our current understanding that no one can do anything that is deserving
of the Capitol Senate. Now, again, I want to point out that former President Biden said that he
doesn't believe the death penalty should be applied, but he didn't commute all the sentences
of the federal prisoners on death row. That's because it wasn't politically plausible. Now, let me
just point to the logical thinking here, the worldview thinking here. If the death penalty is appropriate
in any case, it is not categorically wrong. And this is where most people in society, they're
asked a question about the death penalty. Oddly enough, they may have a strong opinion, yes or no,
they may be somewhere in kind of a mushy, undecided middle,
but when you get to specific cases with specific crimes,
belief or confidence, support for the death penalty, goes up fast.
Okay, what are the theological issues behind the death penalty?
Whereas I said, the number one issue, theological issue behind the death penalty,
is human beings made in the image of God.
Thus, an assault upon the image bearer is an assault upon the one whose image is born.
So it's a direct assault upon the Creator when you seek to destroy the human creature, made in God's
image. It's a bit different when you talk about animals. They're God's creatures, but they're not made
in his image. Human beings are made in God's image. Thus, the Noahic covenant is extremely clear
in singling out homicide as a capital crime. But there are other basic theological issues behind
this. And as I mentioned, one of the first and foremost is biblical authority. When you look at a text
like Genesis 9 or Romans 13? Are those just suggestive? Have we outgrown those issues? Now, you might have
some more sophisticated argument. Well, Genesis 9 is an Old Testament issue. To what extent is that
binding on the church in our conscience today? The reality is that Romans 13 answers that question,
I believe. And so, by the way, has the Christian consensus for the better part of the last two
millennia. But my point today is that in looking at this USA Today article, the secular news
article, there is an understanding that there is a divide among churches over an issue like the death
penalty. I want to suggest to you that divide is deeply theological, and it's also predictive.
And so I would say that the churches, when they line up against the death penalty, the denominations,
the churches, the institutions, the individual members of the clergy, as the newspaper reports them,
who hold to a more liberal position. I'm going to argue that in the main, they're going to hold to
an entire constellation of liberal issues. That's going to be tied to understandings on sexuality.
What's the direct tie? The worldview. It's going to be tied to issues in politics. What's the direct
tie? The worldview. It's going to be tied to other issues in terms of predictability at the very
least. And this comes right down to the gospel. What is the gospel? It is really interesting that so many
of the people who want to argue the more liberal position on these issues, they may want to make reference to
the Gospels, but they don't want to make reference to the letters of Paul. That is to say,
they don't hold to any comprehensive understanding of the authority and inspiration of Scripture.
And sometimes, frankly, it's a lot worse than that. I also want to point to a certain imbalance
in all of this. One activist from the theological left is given about as much voice in this article
as the argument that is represented by North Point Baptist Church, whose pastor was slain,
and also the First Baptist Church of Arlington, Texas.
A church that, by the way, is very clear in the fact that it believes that the homicide of this pastor is deserving of the death penalty.
And you notice an imbalance here.
You're talking about a church and you're talking about one critic.
That's the way the media stories are often driven.
At least as is reported in this article, and I will go much further than that,
I will simply say that the First Baptist Church of Arlington, Texas, is on very very very important.
very solid, biblical ground. But in thinking about this deep divide in terms of institutional Christianity,
and again, I'm not saying there's a divide in gospel Christianity on these issues, there's a divide
when you have liberal denominations and conservative denominations. It is interesting that in the
year 2025 in the supposedly extremely secularized age, you have not just one, but over the weekend,
you have another article in a major newspaper. This one's the Wall Street Journal, over a divide in
the churches, here's the headline, churches divide on loss of refuge status. This has to do with
announcements and executive orders handed down by the Trump administration on the issue of immigration,
actions for which there is very broad support in the United States. But the reference here is to
what are defined as sanctuary churches. Now, this doesn't refer to churches that have a sanctuary.
This refers to sanctuary churches where they are claiming a right of sanctuary,
to offer protection for those who are here illegally or are suspected of being here illegally.
And in some cases, you're talking about a very long time.
So, for example, the article cites Reverend Jim Rigby of St. Andrews Presbyterian Church in Austin,
Texas, quote, which has been sheltering a Guatemalan mother and son for nearly a decade, end quote.
They say it's a part of their religious mission.
You also have other churches that have taken similar kinds of actions documented in this article,
sometimes for even more than a decade. That is to say, they're not allowing immigration authorities or law enforcement
on the church property, but they are offering what they call a right of refuge or a simple protection of these persons who are here without legal status,
and they're defying the U.S. government in doing so. Now, interestingly, the beginning of the story talks about some churches that had been a part of this movement that had decided not to be,
and I think at least a part of that is probably explained by a major shift in public sentiment.
But here's the other thing. I just want to point out, the churches that are taking this very
liberal position on this issue, guess what? Predictably, they're very liberal across the board.
Not a single identifiable conservative church is identified in any of these related stories
as holding to this kind of argument about the immigration and refugee sanctuary status of their congregation
or their church or religious property.
Out of curiosity, I'll admit, I've looked at some of the websites,
some of the churches mentioned in this kind of story,
and let me just say they turn out to be pretty much predictably
liberal or progressive across the landscape.
And my argument is that's because we as human beings
tend towards a certain form of consistency.
We tend toward a certain form of alignment,
a consistency with our own positions,
and when you get to the issue right now
where you have such a divide between conservatives and liberals, it's really hard to keep switching sides.
Most people don't. Most congregations don't. Most denominations don't for good and explainable reasons.
This is where we also come to understand that biblical teachings coming with biblical authority
come with a requirement on conservative churches that accept and celebrate biblical authority
that liberal churches and denominations don't have. If you see Christianity is something that's
constantly evolving as the gospel is something that needs to be constantly updated, the ethical
teachings of the church need to be updated from the old prescriptive binding restrictive
commandments of the Bible. If that's your view, then Christianity is a constantly evolving
project. On the other hand are the conservative churches, which will, of course, make some mistakes,
but the attempt, the motivation, is to stand in the line of apostolic and biblical truth,
to contend for the faith once for all delivered to the saints.
That's an embarrassment to the liberal churches.
It's an assignment recognized by the conservative churches.
Well, I'll switch to a separate issue.
It's also interesting that the Supreme Court of the United States recently announced
just in past few days that it is going to take a case on appeal
in which the big question is whether or not an explicitly Christian,
or in this case, Catholic charter school, can be established with the support of the state
and can actually be recognized as a charter school with an explicitly religious basis.
I'm using that term in the legal sense.
Troy Clawson is the reporter for the New York Times,
and he tells us the Supreme Court agreed on Friday, as Friday of last week,
to consider a high-profile case that could open the door to allowing public dollars
to directly fund religious schools.
The article continues, quote,
The widely watched case out of Oklahoma could transform the line between church and state
in education, and it will come before a court whose conservative majority has broadly embraced
the role of religion in public life, end quote. So what we're looking at here is that an organized
charter school was put in place in Oklahoma with an explicitly Catholic identity. Now, the idea of
a charter school is that even though it is funded with public funds, and in many cases can meet
in a public building, it is organized around a comprehensive approach to education with a lot of
separate control. It's outside the normal control and curriculum of a school district. It operates on the
basis of a charter. Now, in the case of Oklahoma, it's an explicitly Catholic school. It could be an
explicitly Protestant or evangelical school. It could be an explicitly Jewish school. This is a new
question, and it only comes about because of the development of charter schools over the last several
decades. And frankly, it comes in the midst of so many challenges to the great secular edifice
of modern public education, even in a state like Oklahoma, maybe especially in a state like Oklahoma,
there is at least a widespread support for the allowance of charter schools with an explicitly
religious mission. Well, is that allowable, according to our Constitution or not? Frankly,
the Supreme Court taking the case tells us that that's an important question. The Supreme Court
is requested to take far more cases than it does take. When it takes a case like this,
it is because it believes there is precedential value, which is to say the Supreme Court is going to
decide a question, and it will establish a precedent not only for the state of Oklahoma, but for all
50 states. Thus, we're very interested in this. So, according to the Christian worldview, what's the
right position? Should we be for these religious charter schools or against them? You know, my guess is
that on this kind of question, there could be a genuine difference of opinion among people who hold
to the same basic worldview. You could have, say, conservative Catholics just to identify a worldview.
Some of them may be for this. Some of them may be against this. The argument for it would be that
parents should be given the choice for this kind of education rather than shunted into,
that is, their children shunted into public schools, and in many cases, teach what is it variance
with the parents' beliefs. And the same thing might be true of an evangelical community,
where a sizable group of parents want to establish this kind of charter school. You can,
could just go down the list. In states like New York and New Jersey or in some other parts of the
country, it could be Jewish parents who want to do the very same thing. The issue here is tax support.
The argument for it is that parents should be given choice to decide how their tax monies are going
to be applied for the education of their own children. The argument against it is a bit more
complicated. And there are some who argue it's simply blatantly violative of the constitutional
text. I'm not sure about that. But there are some of it.
some good arguments. One of them has to do with the entanglement of government in the affairs of a Christian
or religious school. Who's going to make the decisions about what's going to be taught? Who's going to be
hired? What will the policies be? I will simply state this. If this is a public school in any sense,
even a charter school, the state is going to have some requirements that I would find difficult
for an evangelical Christian school. You also have the entanglement of federal money and state money,
taxpayer money when it comes to, say, educational choice in this sense. But in the main, I have to say,
my worldview tells me that I want to empower parents to have as many choices as possible in making
their choice, which I believe is assigned to them by the Creator, in terms of understanding
what is the best educational option and context for their own children. There are many Christians
who are simply at the point of saying, you know, there have to be options that are covered by the
taxpayer money that is, after all, confiscated from us that do not require us to violate our convictions.
And in a world of pluralistic understandings, different, sometimes even contradictory
understandings of the aims and purposes of education, there ought to be more choice, and the
government should facilitate those choices. I will simply say that I believe the religious liberty
and the parental choice argument is incredibly strong. I also think the danger of entanglement with tax
money is very significant. So I look forward to the oral arguments presented before the Supreme Court.
We'll talk about those arguments when they happen. That should be very clarifying. And then, of course,
we'll have to wait. And then the Supreme Court of the United States will hand down a ruling.
And yes, it will have a lot of precedential importance. Precedential, as in establishing a precedent.
We'll have to talk about that, too. In the meantime, let's just understand that the clash of
worldviews comes in many different forms. In this case, it takes the form.
of the question as to whether the state of Oklahoma can charter an explicitly religious school.
A lot more hangs on this than one school in one state, and we know it.
The worldview implications are huge, but we don't even know yet all the arguments that are going
to be made.
We do know this.
Those arguments are going to turn out to be very important.
One final observation about this case.
If you were to rewind history, say, 100 years, Catholics and evangelicals would be probably
in opposing corners on this kind of question.
But the pressure of a secularizing age
means that conservative Catholic parents
and conservative evangelical parents
may find a good deal of common ground
in saying, we want more choice
according to our convictions
when it comes to the education of our children.
When you understand, as we must seek to understand,
how the existence and the influence of worldview
shapes all these things,
this kind of thing doesn't come as a surprise.
but it should not escape us for its interest.
I'm glad that the Alliance Defending Freedom is on this case,
and a spokesperson for the Alliance Defending Freedom was clear
that the issues here are not just parental choice,
but the basic question of religious liberty.
That makes the case all the more important.
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 sbtsd.edu.
For information on voice college, just go to voicecollege.com.
I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
