The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Tuesday, September 3, 2024
Episode Date: September 3, 2024This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 12:51)Hamas Attacks Israel and Now Kills More Hostages, While Israel Faces World Pressure: The Mora...l Reality in Gaza is Being Turned Upside Down Before Our EyesHamas Murders Six Hostages, Israel Is Blamed by The Wall Street Journal (The Editorial Board)Part II (12:51 - 24:15)A Realist and Honest Approach to Donald Trump on Abortion: We Need to Compare the Political and Moral Terms of the Policies of Donald Trump vs. Those of Kamala HarrisPart III (24:15 - 26:07)The Stakes for the Unborn in 2024 Election: Trump Needs to Make His Defense of Unborn Life Clear, Consistent, and UrgentSign 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, September 3, 2024. I'm Albert Moller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and
events from a Christian worldview. Just absolutely horrifying news coming from Israel when the Israel
defense forces found bodies of six hostages as they were seeking to make progress in one of the
tunnels under Gaza. The IDF reported that it appeared that the six hostages had been executed with
gunshot wounds, something like 36 to 48 hours,
before the bodies were recovered. This was devastating news in Israel, and quite frankly, it has led
to a political crisis there. Massive demonstrations in the streets, thousands turning out for some
of the funerals of these victims, among the victims, a young man 23 years old, who was both
Israeli and American in terms of citizenship. Hirsch Goldberg, Poland, was just 23 years old. He was
known to have been horribly wounded in the October 7 attack there in Israel, and in particular,
the attack upon a music festival there with several of the people who were attending the festival killed,
others taken as hostages. But we really are looking at a very, very severe political crisis there in Israel.
And a crisis has been building for quite a long period of time. But this also requires us trying to think through these issues
in terms of worldview and understanding. It requires us to telescope back just a bit and understand
the kind of challenge that Israel is here facing, and quite honestly, the way so many people in the
mainstream media and the heads of government around the world are fumbling this issue and fumbling it badly.
In my view, at the very top of that list is the current president of the United States, Joe Biden,
who when asked if Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was doing enough to try to bring about a ceasefire in the release of the hostages,
he responded with a terse no. Well, that's not only too short. It is.
grossly unfair. And yet it's indicative of the problem that Israel faces. Many of us just need to
take a step back and understand Israel faces an existential crisis. Now, that's a somewhat overused term.
I used it intentionally here because it means a threat to the very existence. And that's exactly
what Israel faces. It is a threat to its very existence. Israel's enemies, and at the very top of that
list, you'd have to put Hamas, you'd add to that the nation of Iran and its satellite groups
as well, Hamas is dedicated to the non-existence of Israel. This is something that many people in the
West just want to face. When it comes to the United States of America, we have enemies, we have
threats, we face the reality of terrorism, but the United States in this sense has not faced
an existential threat for a very, very long time. Israel is in a very different position. It has never
known a moment since the Declaration of Independence of Israel, going back to 1947, 1947, 1948,
it has never known a moment in which its existence was not threatened. And not only threatened
in a general sense, but threatened specifically by Arab nations in its earliest period and
then in recurring wars, but also Iran and groups such as Hamas. Hamas and its leadership
are absolutely determined to bring about the end of Israel.
That's something that's just not adequately acknowledged by the Western press
and by many Western heads of government.
But before we turn to that international situation,
let's look at the situation inside of Israel.
Because once those six bodies were found and once the news got out,
one of the immediate responses in Israel was massive protests,
and that included a general strike that covered a good bit of the business day on Monday.
Thousands upon thousands of people poured into public spaces in Israel demanding that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu achieve an immediate ceasefire with the release of the hostages.
Now, let's just step back for a moment. How would that happen in Israel and the fact that it did happen? What does this mean?
Well, there are multiple issues here we need to consider. The very first is that Israel has always had a very volatile political climate.
and that's been true the nation from the beginning, and it's explainable when you consider
the facts of Israel's history and its existence as multi-party system of government.
Israel was started in the context of world crisis, and it has existed in a context of world crisis,
and furthermore, it has experienced many internal political crises.
It's a multi-party state, as I said, and it simply goes down as historic fact that Benjamin Netanyahu
is now the longest serving prime minister in Israel's history, more than 16 years.
And Benjamin Netanyahu has been, for all of those years, a major figure on the world stage.
And he, at this point, is what is holding together the fragile coalition that represents Israel's current government.
Now, that government is going to bear some responsibility for the failures of October 7, 2023,
nearly a year ago, we should note.
But at the very same time, it is the conservative posture.
and the defense experience of Benjamin Netanyahu that has held the coalition together.
And so at the same time, Benjamin Netanyahu is not only the longest serving Israeli prime
minister, he is a figure of simultaneously political unity in the nation and disunity.
The disunity was just made graphic with the thousands of people who poured out into the streets.
But you'll notice again, what they were calling for is the prime minister to reach an immediate
ceasefire agreement with Hamas that would lead to the six-year.
successful release of the hostages. Okay, so let's just pause for a moment. Let's remember that we're not talking about two states here. We're not talking about two sovereign nations. We're talking about a terrorist group, Hamas, and we're talking about the nation of Israel. So when we talk about Israel and Hamas, we need to be very, very careful to keep our categories straight. Furthermore, when it comes to Hamas, Hamas launched the deadly attack upon Israel. Hamas kidnapped all of those hostages. Now, still more than 100 Israel hopes are alive.
it massacred the largest number of people in Israel's history going all the way back to the war of its founding.
And you look at this and you understand, wait just a moment.
You now have people in Israel demanding an immediate ceasefire, but let's just keep in mind the Hamas has rejected the ceasefire.
Now it's also true that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said that he will agree to know ceasefire that does not allow for a continuing Israeli military presence in Gaza.
and the explanation of that is quite simple.
He is not about to put his nation in the position it was in on October the 7th of 2023.
At the same time, it's also clear that internal Israeli politics are very much at work here,
but there's something else going on.
And this has to do with a part of Israel's history that is deeply rooted in its historic memory,
but they would also see is deeply rooted even in biblical history.
But the most important thing at this point has to do with Israel's history,
Israel's posture related to hostages. Now, going all the way back to 1947, 1948, Israel has been
confronted with the fact that some of its own, some of its citizens, some of its soldiers have
been taken as hostages. But over the course of the last several decades, Israel has basically
set some very bad precedence in terms of the price it has been willing to pay for the release of
hostages. Now, this leads to massive questions with worldview dimensions. Just think about this.
what would be the rightful posture of a constitutional government when it comes to some of its citizens or soldiers being taken as hostages,
would that nation bear their moral responsibility to do whatever it takes to free those hostages?
Or would the nation have to be put in a position where it said,
we can't create an industry of hostages?
We cannot create moral incentives, financial incentives,
for terrorist groups or other nations to take our citizens and our soldiers as hostages.
Well, Israel made the decision that it would pay, frankly, extraordinary costs when it comes to recouping or freeing its hostages.
It did so in what was declared to be a moral argument, that is, for a moral cause.
So there have been prisoner swaps, for example, when Israel has, no exaggeration,
released hundreds of prisoners for just a handful and sometimes just a couple of Israeli soldiers or citizens who were held.
and Israel has explained that these outsized deals are just because the nation sets as one of its highest priorities,
the return of those who are taken as captive.
But you know he's been listening to that.
Well, Hamas has been listening to that.
It's one of the reasons why the hostages were taken.
And I'll simply state that looked at honestly, it is hard to imagine a deal in which Hamas would actually free those hostages,
because then they would lose whatever leverage they have had in terms of the threat.
to harm those hostages over the course of the time since October the 7th. And you can see the political
value of that Hamas action when it comes to the protests on the streets of Israel. But it is also a
moral calculation that goes far beyond Israel. And by the way, before we leave Israel on this sense,
it's important to recognize that even as the national media there in Israel and international
media have given all kinds of attention to the protests and to the strike, the reality is that it is not
clear that the majority of Israeli citizens believe that Benjamin Netanyahu should do whatever is
necessary, just imagine what that could mean, to reach an immediate ceasefire agreement with supposedly
the release of the hostages. There is a realism that, for good reason, is deeply baked into the
character of the people of Israel. But as I mentioned, the international picture is also filled with all
kinds of issues that demand a worldview analysis. For one thing, consider this editorial that has just
been published by the Wall Street Journal. Here's the headline. Hamas murders six hostages,
Israel is blamed. So just think about this. Think of the moral message of that headline.
Hamas murder six hostages and Israel is blamed. That's one of the problems we see,
especially in many liberal Western countries. Many of them look at Israel, and whether they do
this intentionally or not, they transpose their own situation onto Israel's situation, and they
imagine that Israel can respond the way they imagine they might respond. Now, just think of the United
States again, we have oceans to the east and to the west. We have Canadians to the north,
Mexicans to the south. We do not face, just to state the obvious, the kind of constant hostility
from nations determined to destroy us that frames our daily existence. And so Israel has to look at
this differently, and frankly, Israel's government, above all, has to look at this situation very
differently. But the Western press and so much of the Western sentiment is reflected in that
very lamentable Wall Street Journal headline, Hamas murder six hostages, Israel is blamed. It is Hamas
who launched the attack on October the 7th. It is Hamas who has taken the hostages. It is Hamas
who has been holding the hostages. It is Hamas that has continued to carry out terrorist attacks on
Israel. It is Hamas that insists that it can't be satisfied until Israel no longer exists. And it is
Hamas who killed the six hostages whose bodies were found just over the weekend.
The editors of the Wall Street Journal got it exactly right with this sentence, quote,
Hamas probably can't believe its luck or the lack of moral seriousness by its enemies.
The next sentence, quote, the terrorist murder six Israeli hostages, including one dual citizen
American, and Israel is suddenly under pressure to make concessions to Hamas, end quote.
Those two sentences demonstrate, along with the headline,
there, a moral world turned upside down. And as Christians, we need to note when moral reality
is turned upside down, or when people attempt to turn that moral reality upside down. That's
exactly what is going on in this case. And we need to call it what it is. Yaya Sinwar, who is
the head of Hamas there in Gaza, continues to operate out of those tunnels. And he continues to
follow the methodology and ideology he has made so clear, again, his effort.
is not to achieve a ceasefire with Israel. It is to achieve the non-existence of Israel.
Benjamin Netanyahu cannot for a moment forget that fact and forget the intention of Hamas
from the very beginning. All too clear, all too deadly. All right, coming out of the Labor Day
weekend, I felt that morally that was the most important story we needed to consider first,
but the second has to do with controversy over the same period, but frankly extending over the course of
the entire 2024 campaign controversy about Donald J. Trump, the former president of the United States,
and the issue of abortion. This has turned out to be absolutely crucial, not to say, controversial in
recent days. But when it comes to this larger question, I think we need as Christians just to step back
for a moment and think with a bit of honest realism and, frankly, say some things out loud. For one thing,
I do not know. I would not claim to know what Donald Trump really thinks about abortion.
I am not certain that Donald Trump, if honest, could tell us exactly what his understanding of abortion is.
Looked at it in an historical perspective for most of his life, he held something apparently like a pro-abortion or a pro-choice position.
He made campaign contributions, he made comments that were very much along those lines.
He was very proud of his sister, a federal judge, who, by the way, was a pro-abortion federal judge,
saying that she would represent a very good appointment to the U.S. Supreme Court.
All that began to change with the 2016 election.
So think of the years, 2015, 2016, something changed.
Well, what changed?
Well, for one thing, as Donald Trump was considering that run for the presidency,
and he entered the Republican primaries,
it became very clear that abortion was going to be a defining issue.
And this is where Donald Trump changed his position.
He came out and described himself as pro-life.
He came out and made a pledge in the course of the 2000.
2016 primaries that he would appoint justices to the United States Supreme Court who would hold to a strict constructionist position, conservative justices, the fight against Roe v. Wade that was eventually fulfilled with the reversal of Roe v. Wade in 2022 by the Supreme Court.
That was very much the background. That was the context. Donald Trump came out on the issue of abortion and frankly surprised many of his competing candidates for the 2016.
presidential nomination for the Republican Party, surprised many people had known him for years,
but there is no doubt that his affirmation of a pro-life position was absolutely instrumental
in his gaining of the 2016 nomination and eventually his win of the 2016 presidential election.
When he made those arguments, by the way, just consider one of the debates against Hillary Clinton,
when he made the argument against the pro-abortion position, and actually Hillary
Clinton and the Democratic Party's platform position in 2016, he did so not only with great
effectiveness, but with what appeared to be a lot of personal conviction. Now, again, I would not
claim to understand or to know Donald Trump's heart on this issue. I cannot explain all of his
thinking on this issue. I'll repeat myself by saying, I'm not sure he can either in one sense.
But even as we're trying to think about this issue in the most serious of context of the 2024 presidential
election, Donald Trump is clearly in a different position now, and that's come as a great disappointment
to the pro-life movement in the United States. Donald Trump has come out, among other things,
criticizing the current Florida abortion law saying that a ban on abortions after six weeks is,
in his words, terrible. It's something that needs to be changed, and even in recent days,
he's repeated the fact that he thinks that the ban on abortion should start sometime after six
weeks. It's also clear that President Trump has muddied the issues with statements such as what he
posted on true social, his own social media platform, when he said that a second Trump administration
would be, and here are the words, quote, great for women and their reproductive rights, end quote.
Now, one of the things you need to note is that that phrase reproductive rights is one of the
dark inventions of the pro-abortion movement, seeking to avoid using the word abortion,
and instead speaking euphemistically and false advertising of a woman's reproductive rights.
Of course, right now in the Democratic Party, I guess you'd have to say a pregnant person's reproductive rights.
But nonetheless, without chasing that rabbit, let's go back to the issue of Donald Trump and abortion.
And he has also muddied the waters by declining to indicate that he would vote against the abortion referendum,
which is coming in Florida, a radical referendum that would actually nullify
the pro-life gains in the state. Now, let me be very fast to say that the Trump campaign, and Trump himself
came back and said, no, he would vote against that Florida referendum, that vote coming in Florida
in November. That's good news for the pro-life movement. But it's not good news that Donald Trump
and controversy over abortion has become a mainstay of the 2024 presidential campaign. The president's
made some other statements. He has also indicated that, to use his own language,
the abortion issue doesn't lean toward Republicans in this election cycle.
Well, I'm not going to argue that it does in political terms,
but I am going to argue that the sanctity and dignity of human life
is the moral priority regardless of the politics of the age.
Now, Donald Trump is clearly making the argument.
It doesn't matter what your position is if you can't get elected.
But an immediate response to that would have to be
that given his role on the issue in 2016,
given his three historic appointments to the U.S. Supreme Court, given the fact that Roe was reversed in 2022,
and he deserves a lot of credit for the reversal of Roe, given the fact that he has accepted that credit,
even in recent weeks in terms of the overturning of Roe v. Wade,
it's very hard to imagine how former President Donald Trump thinks that voters who are highly pro-abortion
would ever be motivated to vote for him.
And lamentably, instead, he has sent men.
signals that have highly traumatized his pro-life base in the Republican Party and, quite frankly,
raised giant question marks. Now, this is where we're going to have to think very, very carefully,
very carefully. In political and in moral terms, I'm going to argue that pro-life voters have to
think of two very different things. They're inseparable, but there are two different questions.
Number one, what does Donald Trump really believe about abortion? And the key question that lied to that also is
what does Kamala Harris, vice president and current Democratic presidential nominee,
what does she believe about abortion? And in both cases, we can't read their hearts,
but we can follow their words. But the second huge issue is even more important, and it's good
for Christians to think this through. It is less important to know in political terms what exactly
Donald Trump believes about anything, what Kamala Harris believes about anything. The big question
is, what would their government do? What would their administration do? What would their administration
do? What would they seek to do when in office? What actions would they take? What nominations would they make? What appointments would they make in terms of the administrative state? What laws would they support? What executive orders would they issue? It is the effect. It is the governmental action that is the key issue here. And by the way, this has been true, and Christ has needed to think about this throughout political history in the United States. We would want a situation in which we would know what a candidate believes in his.
or her heart on these issues. But that's impossible, since most of us don't know Kamala Harris and
don't know Donald Trump. It's impossible in this case, even for people close to Donald Trump to be
able to read his mind on some of these questions. Kamala Harris is much more easily read. There's a
consistency in her position, and this is where we need to understand that the election of Kamala Harris
as president of the United States and Tim Walz, the Minnesota governor, her running mate,
as vice president of the United States, would put in place the most radical pro-abortion government,
the most radical pro-abortion administration in American political history. Period. No contest.
Now, realism forces us to concede that the pro-life movement in the United States has taken
some very serious setbacks. After the historic win reversing Roe in 2022, we've seen a line
of referenda and state votes. We've seen them fail. We've seen the pro-abortion.
argument prevail. We've seen the Democratic Party, and particularly the Harris campaign,
decide that it is going to just campaign on abortion and abortion rights. It believes that's a
winning strategy. The issues here are very clear. The contrast between the two parties is still
clear. Honestly, it is nowhere as clear as I think it should be or I would want it to be,
but it's still clear. The clearest distinction is this. Former President Donald Trump
says that he is opposed to federal legislation on abortion.
Kamala Harris says that she is absolutely determined to achieve federal legislation on abortion.
And even though they euphemistically say what they want is to legislate Roe or codify Roe v. Wade,
you and I both know that the Democratic Party is far beyond that.
And the clearest evidence of that is that she chose as her running mate,
Tim Walts, the governor of Minnesota, who in the aftermath of Dobbs,
passed one of the most radical abortion laws ever to be passed in the United States.
basically no restrictions whatsoever abortion declared to be a fundamental right parents don't even have to be informed of abortions on their minor children it is an absolute disaster and so even as Donald Trump isn't saying as much as I want him to say even as Donald Trump isn't saying as much as he said in 2016 the fact is that his opposition to a federal law on abortion is in itself right now a very significant political firewall so two things
we know, number one, a Kamala Harris administration would be the most radically pro-abortion
administration in American history, and she basically has told us exactly that. The second thing is
that a Trump administration would be light years more pro-life than a Harris administration
when it comes to those issues of appointments and policies, executive orders, and nominations.
And it reminds us that, as I have to argue very often, when you elect a president in the United
States increasingly, and I say this as something of a metaphor, you elect a government. You elect an
entire complex of persons and appointees and judges and just go down the list. And frankly,
it's an outsized influence that in the case of someone who's pro-abortion could cause immense
danger, particularly if the composition of the Congress is also tilting Democratic after the
November election. In any event, we have to be very careful to understand that if a Democratic
president is elected, and if there is a Democratic majority in the House and in the Senate,
we are looking not only at something very much like Roe being put back in place by legislation,
we are looking at far, far worse being put in place. A generation shaping disaster on abortion,
a disaster when it comes to the sanctity and dignity of unborn human life. There are so many
other issues at stake in the election. And one of the key questions we simply would have to pose to the
former president at this point is why the former president would send such an uncertain and confusing
sound on abortion when what he needs to do not only politically, but morally, is make very clear
the pro-life commitments of the Republican ticket and hold fast to the confidence of pro-life voters
in his political base. The alternative is disaster.
in the November election for the Trump campaign.
The former president needs to be more and more clear in terms of his stand for unborn human
life and his opposition to abortion.
And we understand that, yes, the political situation is changed in 2024 from where we stood in
2016, but the moral issue of the sanctity and dignity of unborn human life has not changed.
And the calculus former president Donald Trump needs very much to keep in mind is not how many
pro-abortion voters will vote against him, but instead how many pro-life voters will vote for him?
So many big issues loom before us, even just coming out of this weekend, looking at the week ahead,
but those two issues above all demanded our attention, and in moral and in worldview terms,
will continue to demand our attention for days to come.
Thanks for listening to the briefing.
For more information, go to my website at Albertmohor.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 sbts.edu.
For information on Boyce College, just go to voicecollege.com. I'll meet you again tomorrow for the
briefing.
