The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Wednesday, April 3, 2024
Episode Date: April 3, 2024This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 10:17)A Big Win for Life in Florida, For Now: State Moves to Enact 6-Week Abortion Ban, But Will It... Be Overturned by a Pro-Abortion Constitutional Amendment in November?Part II (10:17 - 16:25)Your Position on Abortion is Tied to Your Position on LBGTQ Issues — Just Take It from the Words of Planned Parenthood’s President and Commentators at CNNPart III (16:25 - 20:20)No, Adultery is Never a Laughing Matter: Massive Moral Shift Reveals Sad State of Marriage in Our SocietyAttention, New York Adulterers: Your Sin May Soon No Longer Be a Crime by The New York Times (Erin Nolan)Part IV (20:20 - 25:47)More Evidence of a Society Losing Its Mind: Why Washington’s New Law Enacting Protections for Sex Workers is Doomed to FailA Look at Washington State’s ‘Strippers’ Bill of Rights’ by The New York Times (Aimee Ortiz)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.
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It's Wednesday, April 3, 2024. I'm Albert Mueller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
Well, let's just give ourselves a heads up about the coming election cycle, because one of the things we will have to keep in mind is that stories tend to develop very quickly.
So as we are going into successive months, things are just going to develop even more quickly.
And over time, issues become ever more focused. And that's exactly what's taking place right now.
It is very clear right now that the issue of abortion is going to be by intention front and center in the election cycle coming up and thus front and center in our daily conversation.
So as we're trying to put all of this into perspective, what has happened that we have to talk about it today?
Well, it is the action taken just a couple of days ago on Monday by the Supreme Court of the state of Florida in two different dimensions on this question.
Number one, the Supreme Court there in Florida came back and said there's no constitutional.
Barrier in the state constitution to Florida's ban restricting abortion after 15 weeks
going into effect. Basically, the Supreme Court said there is no right to privacy, as the Supreme
Court had claimed in the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that pertains here. And so the Supreme Court
allowed that ban after 15 weeks to go immediately back into effect. But here's the bigger story.
The legislature has already passed legislation that is now triggered. So the 30 days,
from now, that limit is going to be six weeks, not 15 weeks. The Supreme Court has already made very
clear. It's not going to stand in the way, so that six-week provision will be the law in Florida
within 30 days. Huge story, huge win for the sanctity of human life. Huge win, by the way, for
constitutional reasoning, because it's really clear that the majority in the Florida Supreme Court is
absolutely right. There is no way to read a so-called right to abortion in Florida's
constitution anymore than you could read it into the American, the U.S. Constitution. So just on that
score alone, if that were all we had, Florida would have made big news. It's Supreme Court would have
made big news on the abortion front. And yet there's more to it. And there's actually a lot more to
it because the Supreme Court also acted in a second case, allowing a much more liberal proposal on
abortion to go to voters on the ballot in November. This ballot measure is going to be similar to that
which has been undertaken in other states, and it could move Florida almost immediately if it's
adopted by at least a plurality of 60%. So it's not just a majority. It has to be an overwhelming
majority there in the state of Florida. But if indeed that citizen initiative were to be passed
by the requisite majority, then the Supreme Court would then have a new situation and have a
new constitution to reckon with. And it's a very pro-abortion.
statement. The text of the proposed pro-abortion amendment to the state's constitution says that
abortion is to be available up until the moment of viability. That's generally right now,
arguably somewhere around half the way through the pregnancy. In other words, an extremely
more liberal position, a much more deadly position for the unborn, than what Florida has now,
much less what will be in place 30 days from Monday, when that six-week ban goes into effect.
Now, there's a lot going on here. At the most important level, that is the level of the sanctity
of human life, you can score this a big win and a potential big loss. And frankly, the loss could
nullify all of the win, and it could do so in short order. There's a political calculation here,
and that calculation is on the part of the Democrats that this is a winning issue for them.
And thus blatantly, the supporters of this proposed constitutional amendment, and remember,
It's now going to be on the ballot in November.
They said that they were doing so largely as a get-out-the-vote effort,
especially for those who would come out to vote for abortion rights.
And that also means, let's understand, politically,
would be more likely to vote for the Democratic candidate in any number of races.
By the way, all that is basically acknowledged in the press coverage.
A lot of the headlines about these developments indicated that this is a potential boost for the Democrats.
Of course, this is where we as Christians have to go back and say,
you know, the big issue here is the sanctity of human life. We're talking about real human lives on the line.
Yes, it is in the midst of a political equation, but this is where we have to understand that the
politics has to be secondary to the sanctity of human life. That's a most basic Christian commitment here.
But we can't avoid the politics because in this case, if the politics goes the wrong way in terms of
this proposed constitutional amendment, Florida is going to see a massive increase in the number of abortions.
Now, strategically, it's interesting to note that Florida had been functioning as something of a haven for abortion rights when other states in the region there in the southeast were adopting more restrictive policies. And a part of that had to do with a judge's decision that put Florida's 15-week ban on hold. Of course, now, given the action of Florida Supreme Court, the ban will extend not only to abortions after 15 weeks, but after the 30-day period to abortions after 6.
six weeks a much earlier time. So there are a lot of people looking at this who are thinking about it
in terms of abortion patterns and they say, you know, a lot of the people that have been going to
go to Florida now are going to have to go in a different direction. And some people are arguing they're
going to have to go as far as Virginia now going north or northeast in order to find a state
that has more liberal abortion policies than what would be found in the south. It also
indicates something of the map, the moral map of this issue in the United States. If you look at the
southeast right now, you are looking at a region of the country that is clearly far more conservative
on the question of abortion than much, if not most of the rest of the country. Again, you think of
that basic distinction. The closer you get to a coast, it usually works out that it's more liberal.
But in the state of Florida right now, which after all is pretty much defined by a very long
coastline, the reality is the moral issue has trumped the cultural pattern. This also comes as a
reminder that regardless of where you live to some extent, to some degree or another, abortion is going to be on
the ballot. It might be on the ballot in terms of a local question. It might be on the ballot,
varying on where you live in terms of the statewide election. As you think about the role of the
governor, if the governor's race is on the ballot, or you look at your state's legislature in its
future, which is certainly on the ballot to some degree, regardless of where you live and what state
you claim. But it's also true that in this election cycle, the entire Congress is going to have to be
reelected in terms of the House of Representatives in a third of the United States Senate. And of course,
it's a presidential election year. So it's on the line. No one is able to escape the importance and
urgency of the question of abortion as a worldview and moral question. No one's able to avoid this
regardless of where you live as we think about the November election. So get ready for it. But there's
another angle on this, Patricia Mazzai writing at the New York Times yesterday, makes this point,
and that is this. The Democrats see that Florida might all of a sudden be in play,
might be in play in the presidential election and in statewide races. There might be an opportunity
here for a Democratic senatorial candidate running against incumbent Republican Senator Rick
Scott, who is up for re-election. It might be that there would be even a question of the
Biden campaign making a gain in Florida.
very significant gain in Florida. Biden clearly intends to play that game, and we need to recognize it is
entirely, I say that again, it is entirely driven by what the Democrats want to seize upon as
momentum they see attached to the question of abortion. But just to understand what's going on here
and how important this is and how it became nationalized immediately, recognized that the Biden campaign
produced a brand new ad directed right at Florida in light of this development, and the president himself is the
only person who appears in the ad. He looks at the camera and makes a criticism of President Trump on
abortion, wanting a far more restrictive policy than Biden wants. And then he said this, quote,
I'm running to make Roe v. Wade the law of the land again. So women have a federal guarantee to the
right to choose. Donald Trump doesn't trust women, said the president. I do. I'm Joe Biden,
and I approve this message. End quote. So it was hastily put together. It's very brief,
but it puts the president very much, as if we didn't know this already, on the pro-abortion side.
Now, I'm not saying that he doesn't want to put all of the abortion rights, as they were called, of Roe v. Wade, back into effect.
I'm saying that there is no way his administration would present something even as conservative, you might say, as Roe v. Wade was.
In the sense, the restrictions of Roe, there is no way today's Democratic Party is going to allow any of those restrictions.
and that's made clear by many major Democrats who will come behind the president and clean it up,
in effect, to say there's virtually no restriction on abortion that they will accept,
or at least that they'll put their reputation on at this point.
It's all or nothing.
But we've talked about what this means for the president of the United States,
who often presents himself as a Catholic, and that's why it was very important that the Cardinal Archbishop
of the Roman Catholic Church there in Washington was so clear about naming the game that the president is
playing on the question of abortion. He's picking and choosing, said the Cardinal Archbishop,
and in this case, what the president is choosing is abortion and what he is denying is the right
to life. In political terms, what's so shocking is that the president has put his name on this and
has entered the fray on this so quickly there is now no doubt this is going to be a major
Democratic theme in the fall. Now, we knew that, but what we have here is a very clear
affirmation of the direction the Democratic Party and the Biden campaign will be taking in weeks
and months ahead. So at this point, well, we will track this, but now I want to make reference to a
very revealing conversation or exchange that took place, in this case on CNN. And so as we're
watching these things develop, every once in a while, there's a crystallizing moment and you say,
well, all right, everything got put on the table right there. The program in this case was the Monday
edition of the Situation Room on CNN. The host is Wolf Blitz.
who's been at this quite a long time. And as the afternoon unfolded, the Florida Supreme Court decision
became known and CNN naturally turned to a conversation about the impact of that decision.
The first guest on was Alexis McGill Johnson, the president of Planned Parenthood, and you know exactly
where that conversation went. One of the big points that McGill, again, avidly pro-abortion made,
was that getting the abortion issue on the ballot in the fall with this measure that would amend the
Florida Constitution is a big political gain for the Democrats and furthermore might add a good deal
of momentum not only statewide but even nationwide on this question as the logic of this question
continues to become a matter of absolute distinction between the Republican and Democratic parties.
Before I leave the statements made on this Monday edition of the CNN program by Alexis McGill
Johnson of Planned Parenthood, I want to point to parting words in terms of her comments that
reveal how all this is tied together. This is just good for Christians to see how all of this is
tied together. All these giant moral issues eventually they're seeing to be tied together. And you're
wondering, how could that happen? Well, just listen to these sentences in her closing statement on this.
She spoke about limits on abortion and she said, that is unconscionable for American. She continued,
quote, like letting people understand that if you need access to abortion, that literally an entire
region of the country has now been devastated by these abortion bans, one out of three,
women, she said, and more trans and non-binary folks are living in states with abortion bans,
and this Florida ruling will impact that exponentially, end quote. Now, wait just a minute. Now
she's all the sudden bringing in trans and non-binary folks into the issue of the controversy over
abortion. Why did she do that? Well, it is because if you understand the logic of the left,
it is all tied together. I think just about any person who understands, let's just
a basic human biology and understands the distinction between a mother and a father, male and female,
would understand that it's very strange at this point. And as a matter of fact, the Democratic Party
for years has been talking about a woman's right to an abortion. But if you now aren't certain who a
woman is, I guess you've got to cloud the issue significantly. It takes more words. But then in the
next hour, there were two CNN political commentators who spoke, Alice Stewart and Kate Bedinfield.
And this is where I want to point us in terms of the biggest issue of concern or
interest here. So you had Wolf Blitzer, asked Beddenfield. What do you think? You expect this winning
streak out of abortion rights for women will, in fact, continue? And Kate Bedinfield basically said,
yes, I think it will continue. She had more to say later. But then he turned to Alice Stewart,
also a CNN political commentator. And Stewart said this, quote, let's just say first off,
on today's ruling by the Florida Supreme Court, from those in the pro-life community,
this is a huge victory for unborn babies who have a heartbeat and can feel pain and it's important to protect the sanctity of life.
So a brave pro-life statement there.
But she went on to say something very interesting. She made a turn.
Quote, but those in the pro-life community also recognize there's a huge battle ahead as this issue now will be up before voters in the next election.
And as we've said, when this is on the ballot, it does turn out voters.
And it's important to shift the conversation for talking about abortion bans to abortion limits.
end quote. Now, at least two or three times in the comments on CNN, this person identified as a
pro-life commentator basically says we need to stop talking about abortion bans and talk about abortion
limits. That predictably is going to be the line that it will likely be taken by the former
President Donald Trump as he runs as the Republican candidate in the fall. Less conversation about
abortion bans, more emphasis on some kind of abortion limits. But what we need to note is that
that the pro-abortion movement is going to be as against limits on abortion as they are against
bans on abortion. And in this case, they understand the logic may be better than some people who
claim to be pro-life understand that logic. Later, Stewart said, quote, so let's talk about
where we can put limits on abortions and do away with this language of bans so we can most
importantly protect unborn children, but also mothers and make sure that we keep exceptions in
place for rape, incest, and life of the mother, because that is another issue that voters do agree.
on end quote. So you can say at one point, maybe Alice Stewart is talking about what she defines as
the politically possible, but I think we as Christians need to recognize that when we're talking
about the sanctity of human life, we're talking about a categorical, which is to say, we believe
that every single life deserves and demands protection from the moment life is given at fertilization
until natural death. Anything less is an unacceptable permanent compromise. It might be a step along
the way to a more comprehensive protection of human life. But we can never say, we must ever say
up front that this is what will be morally right. This is where we can stop. This is where we can be
satisfied. Now, at another point in this exchange, you had the more pro-life commentator say,
you know, we need to talk about limits, not bans, and the person on the other side, the woman on
the other side simply came back and said, you know, the problem is women have different understandings
of where they are on the abortion question.
They're in different situations.
In other words, no limit.
And that's the big point.
By the time we get to November,
that is really what the issue is going to be.
It's going to be one side,
which I hope and pray is consistently pro-life
on the other side,
that at least reveals this deadly logic,
no limits, no restrictions on abortion whatsoever.
But now we're going to shift to talk about
a couple of other laws
that reveal some basic moral reality,
some basic moral truths we really do need to recognize. Over the course of the last several weeks,
some legislators in the state of New York were reminded of the fact that guess what? The state of
New York still says that adultery is a crime. Now, just as an object lesson and understanding how
much moral change has taken place in the United States, just think about the fact that when the
state of New York adopted legislation, in this case, it's a rather continuous legislative history,
outlawing adultery, it was already under the most severe social sanction of the society at the time.
In this case, it was just made part of the criminal law in 1907, non-controversially, it was made a part of the law.
Well, guess what? It hasn't been repealed. So it still is a part of the law.
And as it was rediscovered, also rediscovered was a legislative history and a political history in which you've had various efforts over the course of the last several decades by people in New York to get this particular.
legislation taken off the books. But thus far, it has been unsuccessful. But so far as many legislators
in New York are concerned, you know, you really have to get rid of this law because having a sanction
on adultery, having the law uphold the dignity and sanctity of marriage as the union of a man and a
woman, it is just outdated and frankly, to the cultural left, it is embarrassing.
Furthermore, it could come with legal complications, because after all, if it's on the books and
it is a law, then someone can make it a matter of legal consequence.
and thus you have the more liberal side in New York State that simply says, you know, we've got to get past this.
Now, at this point, I just want to speak with a bit of honesty.
When you look at these laws against adultery, they reflect what was a moral consensus shaped by the biblical worldview,
unquestionably in previous generations in the United States.
The honest part is I want to acknowledge that millions and millions of Americans are no longer restrained at all by that worldview.
I wish they were, but they are not.
So if you were to just imagine that a legislative body would meet in 2004 in the state of New York, pretty liberal.
If they were to meet and decide what should be their law concerning adultery, it would almost assuredly be no law.
That tells you a lot about how moral change has taken place in just one state in just over a century.
But the other thing you need to note is that there is an odd phenomenon here, and it comes up, by the way, with the Comstock Act, which also goes back to roughly the same era in American politics.
And that was the law that made it illegal to send contraceptives by mail or to be involved in prostitution or another sex-related activity.
This is the federal law that said it was going to use the federal or interstate power in order to shut down vice crimes.
And guess what?
It too is still on the books.
And it came up graphically in the oral arguments for the abortion pill case at the Supreme Court just a matter of days ago.
And you ask, why is that law still in the books?
Well, it is because even in the year 2024, the more liberal forces,
haven't had enough momentum that they would put their names on a measure to repeal either the Comstock Act or now
the law opposed to adultery in the state of New York. Will they come up with adequate political momentum in
2024? Well, in the New York case, probably so. But something for us to note is that when it comes to
the Comstock Act, when it comes to the federal government, all of a sudden you have pro-abortionists
and others on the left who are crying out, you know, while we have a Democratic majority in the
Senate. And while we have a Democratic president in the White House, maybe we better push really hard
to reverse or to repeal the Comstock Act. But you know what? That's going to be more easily said
than done. Why? Because even in 2024, the number of legislators who want their name on repealing
such an act is, well, fewer than you might think. But while we're thinking about some of these very
odd developments, the state of Washington, that is to say Washington state has enacted a new law
that basically offers all kinds of on-the-job protections for, I'm just going to use the word that's used in all the headlines, strippers.
So we're talking about the pornographic sex trade here.
And we're talking about the state of Washington, very progressive in this kind of issue, trying to step up and say, you know, we're going to provide on-the-job protection.
What makes this story so important from a Christian worldview, and don't worry, I'm not going to go into any of these details.
but what makes this so important from a Christian worldview perspective is that the details in this law are absolutely, well, disgusting.
What you have in this case is a liberal society trying to legislate something that is inherently immoral and to try to make what is immoral safe.
Guess what? That's not going to work.
One of the factors behind this legislation is that the women in this trade are vulnerable.
They can be abused. They can be hurt. They can be the objects of violence.
and that's exactly what this legislation is intended to prevent.
But when you look at the situation, you recognize it's a little late for the law to jump into a situation.
I'll just say this messy and this explicit and try to say, oh, you know, we can put in some common sense protections here.
I think the most interesting and revealing statement that comes out in the New York Times coverage of this story is the statement made by a law professor at the University of California, Vina DuBall.
and we are told that even as she is a law professor at the University of California at Irvine,
and even as she specializes in labor law, she said that the new law was, quote, the result of the hard work of organizing done by these workers in a very, very dangerous industry.
End quote.
Just think about this for a moment.
A very, very dangerous industry.
Why would that be?
Just imagine the lie of a society saying, you know, we can regulate that.
We can put in protections.
we can put in rules. By the time you get to the end of that article, quite frankly, is such a
disgusting picture. But this is legislation that was actually adopted in the state of Washington
as there were those there who said, you know, we just need to make this a respectable profession.
One final theological point. State Senator Rebecca Saldanya of Seattle, who had sponsored the
legislation, said, quote, it is crucial that we confront the stigma surrounding adult entertainment
and recognize the humanity of those involved in the industry.
She mentioned the women involved. She said they're workers, and they should be given the same rights and protections as any other labor force, end quote. But let's just speak the honest truth. They're not just like any other labor force. And furthermore, when she says that she wants to recognize the humanity of those who are involved in the industry, this is where Christians and those with moral sanity just need to respond, you cannot grant them the protection and the respect that you are demanding here. If you are insisting on promoting a
so-called profession, which by its degrading status basically invites the very harm that you are saying
you oppose. You look at an article like this and you recognize this is just further evidence of a
society that is no exaggeration to say losing its mind. And one final thought as we're thinking
about the scale of moral change in the United States. Let's go back to New York and that ban on
adultery and a comment that was made by one person very much involved in this situation as a lawyer.
Speaking of the current law, still in the books in New York against adultery, this lawyer said, quote,
it's embarrassing that this is still in the books. He went on to say, even in law school, everyone burst out laughing every time it came up, end quote.
Just think about that. Here's a lawyer saying, look, we just need to get rid of this thing because, quite frankly, a law against adultery, well, it's just embarrassing.
And then he spoke with the law students laughing when they heard about the law still on the books.
So let's just conclude by making a Christian statement, the moral point is clear.
Adultery, whether it's legal or not in the state of New York, in any calculation is no laughing matter.
I'm happy to tell you that Southern Seminaries' next preview day is coming up, and it's coming up fast.
It's going to be on Friday, April the 12th.
In our secular age, we see an increasing need for those who are called to ministry,
and we see the need for them to be trained with the highest level of biblical and theological educational
for a lifetime of faithful service and faithful conviction.
That's why Southern Seminary is committed to providing rigorous theological education
that you and the church can trust.
That preview day, April the 12th, you'll tour our beautiful campus,
meet our world-class faculty, and learn how God is using Southern Seminary
to train faithful ministers of the gospel.
Listeners to the briefing, now get this, can register for free at SBTS.edu slash preview
by using the code.
Now, you've already figured this out, the brief.
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