The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Wednesday, December 18, 2024
Episode Date: December 18, 2024This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:14 - 14:15)There are Deeply Troubled People Among Us: The Daniel Penny and Jordan Neely Case Raises Mass...ive Mental Health Issues in NYC and BeyondIn Penny Verdict, a Flashpoint in the Debate Over Crime and Mental Illness by The New York Times (Hurubie Meko and Anusha Bayya)Part II (14:15 - 19:34)President Biden’s Reckless Clemency Commutations: President Biden Grants Shocking and Controversial Clemency CommutationsPart III (19:34 - 26:00)Salvation is Not a Pardon or Commutation: At the Heart of the Gospel is the Substitutionary Atonement of Christ on Our BehalfVictims ‘shocked’ after Biden grants clemency to ‘kids-for-cash’ judge and $54 million embezzler by CNN (Marshall Cohen)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, December 18, 2024. I'm Albert Moller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
Much of America was fascinated and quite pleased, just a matter of days ago, when Daniel Penny was found not guilty of charges that had been brought against him by the district attorney in Manhattan related to the death of Jordan Neely on a subway car after an incident that had led to a chokehold being applied by the former Marine Daniel Penny, and it eventually led to the death of Jordan Neely.
the district attorney in Manhattan charged Penny with criminal charges, including at least two major felony charges.
One of them was dropped after the jury said it was deadlocked.
A lesser charge was allowed, but just a matter of hours later, the jury basically came back and rendered a not guilty verdict.
And so the immediate story came down to the fact that the jury had acquitted a man who had killed another man on a subway car,
but it was ruled, at least in the view of the jury, to have been justified given the circumstances
of the fact that Jordan Neely presented a clear and present danger, and thus when Daniel Penny,
the former Marine, on a subway car under the surface of New York City, put Jordan Neely in a chokehold,
even when that led to Jordan Neely's death. There was no appropriate criminal charge to be brought
against Daniel Penny. The basic facts of the case are very well known. Jordan Neely had been,
known to police authorities and transportation authorities there in New York City for some time
because he had been arrested numerous times for various violations. He was known to be suffering
from psychiatric problems. He had a deep personal struggle. He was a very large man.
And on the day that he died because of this chokehold, at least that is what police understand,
in the very day he had gone onto the subway area and then into a subway car and was acting in a way
that indicated some kind of psychotic break or something similar to that.
It was behavior that scared many people on the subway car.
And when you had the former Marine Daniel Penny,
take action and take him in a chokehold in order to restrain him,
it did eventually lead to his death.
But basically, that was found to have been an act that, in some degree,
to a greater extent, was justified given the perception of threat in that circumstance.
Okay, but we knew all of that.
matter of days ago. We're returning to the issue now simply because of what the conversation
about the jury's verdict says and the aftermath of the conversation about the entire episode.
It's very interesting to see the worldview issues that arise here. And in particular, there's
also a history that most of the mainstream media have not recounted, but really is important
to this consideration. Because we're talking about a situation that is hardly unprecedented in
America's major cities, and in particular in the city of New York. We are talking about a problem
that increasingly has led to all kinds of anxieties on the part of people living in many of these
cities, but let's just speak specifically about New York City. And we're talking about a problem
that isn't going to go away. It's going to come back again and again and again. So at this point,
it's simply safe to say that Jordan Neely was known to be suffering from any number of psychological or
psychiatric problems. It had led to numerous arrests. It had led to numerous encounters. It led to
numerous incidents in which antisocial behavior, even threatening behavior, sometimes even just
kind of flamboyantly loud behavior, had caught the attention of people in the subway system and
the transport authority. And that includes the police. But there's a large story behind this with
massive worldview implications. And that has to do with the fact that some people estimate that as many as, say,
10 to 20,000 persons with similar profiles are found on the streets of New York at any given time.
And you're talking about a widespread problem of psychiatric disorders that have led to criminal
behaviors. And you have so many of these people who are apprehended, sometimes they're hospitalized
and put under treatment for a limited period of time, but then they are returned to the streets of
New York where the same cycle happens again and again and again. How in the world does this happen?
Well, there's a fascinating story behind it with massive worldview implications.
The most important parts of the story behind it have to do with a history of psychiatric treatment in the United States and the rise of a new level of civil liberties recognized by the courts.
And if you take the second one first, the courts increasingly have been ruling over the past several decades for an increased interpretation of the civil liberties that cannot be infringed upon, even if one is living on the streets of New York, harassing people on the subway, and repeatedly showing up with threatening behaviors.
The idea here is that there must be a sufficient reason to hold someone in terms of any kind of involuntary custody.
And there's a reality behind that, which is that there are not enough psychiatric.
beds and hospitals to handle all the people on the streets of New York who need that kind of treatment.
The other big issue, though, has to do with why society puts someone like Jordan Neely
back on the streets again and again and again. And that gets to a massive change in the treatment
of psychiatric and psychological problems in the United States. So let's go back before the problem
as it currently stands. How was society arranged when this kind of thing was like,
common? Well, it was arranged in such a way that there were basically asylums or institutions where
people who had shown this kind of psychiatric problem and certainly this kind of antisocial
behavior were sent without their consent usually, and they were institutionalized there for a
very long period of time. Some of them basically spent the rest of their adult lives in some form
of institutional care, which was legally defined as some kind of institutional captivity. All that began to
with two developments, both of them come with a lot of worldview implications. One of them
was an increased understanding and demand for the civil liberties of persons who would be committed
to these institutions to be recognized so that they were not permanently housed as if they
were guilty of, say, a criminal charge. They could not just be classified as a danger to their neighbors.
There had to be a kind of specific criminal charge after a specific criminal act that had to be
dealt with on those terms. So you basically had just a lot of people turned onto the streets of
America's major cities. The second big development had to do with the fact that society began to say
that the problem of psychiatric or psychological illnesses, regardless of how they are defined,
that is not an adequate reason to put someone into an involuntary restraint or some kind
of involuntary captivity or even involuntary treatment. And so the rise of
patient or personal consent became a huge issue. You try to go to the emergency room these days. You have to sign all kinds of consent lines in order to be treated for something if it was a minor injury. Consent is now one of the major issues in law, and that includes the law of medical treatment. So over the course of the last half of the 20th century, became harder and harder for society to say, this is a deeply troubled person that needs to be kept away from the general population. We will
put this person in some kind of mental treatment facility or psychiatric treatment facility.
And more and more, there was the affirmation that the only way someone could be held captive
against his or her will is if they had committed some kind of serious criminal act.
But at the same time, there was an inflation in terms of that definition, because even as jails
got more and more filled and the courts became more and more complex, it became more and more
common that you had an inflation in terms of this kind of crime that would lead to this kind of
confinement. I mean, frankly, the courts have become so lenient in many cases that people are
basically arrested, arraigned, and then turned pretty much right back on the streets. And that's
what takes us to that subway car and eventually to the action by Daniel Penny against the threat
of Jordan Neely that led to Jordan Neely's death. In a city like New York, and New York's
important because it is the paradigmatic big city megalopolis of the United States and given its
history as a long tradition and history of dealing with this kind of issue. One turning point came
in the late 1980s when in 1987 Ed Koch, who was the mayor of New York at the time, he wanted
to apply the law in New York in such a way that he could take those that referred to as the
loonies and the crazies off the street. And that's because there were a lot of people who weren't
coming to New York or were working in New York and said they were afraid to go to work to walk
on the streets to take the subway because there were so many people on the streets who were
demonstrating threatening behavior. Adam Iscoe, writing for the New Yorker tells us about the
impact of this policy. Quote, almost every patient who comes in this way has a serious
underlying condition, bipolar disorder, major depression, schizophrenia, that even a couple of weeks
surrounded by nurses, doctors, and social workers cannot fix. In the late 80s, he continues,
Following a legal challenge to Mayor Cox's involuntary hospitalization initiative,
one judge described the city's approach as, quote, revolving door mental health.
That is, forcibly institutionalized, forcibly medicate, stabilize, discharge back into the same environment,
and then repeat the cycle, end quote.
Almost immediately you have the fear on the part of many people in New York City that dangerous persons,
dangerous to themselves and to others, are being routinely released onto the streets of New York.
New Yorker report comes down to this, quote, the hospitals keep letting them go because they often have
to. Patients can always refuse treatment or ask to be released. Compelling someone to stay requires a
court order from a judge and the legal standard is high. The hospital must prove that the patient
poses an immediate threat to himself or others and that this judgment is so impaired by his illness
that he doesn't even understand that he needs help. End quote. Now, in worldview terms behind all of
this is, well, a frank understanding that there are deeply troubled people.
amongst us. And that is something we all have to recognize. And I think all of us recognize,
consistent with the biblical worldview, that every part of us can be affected in such a way that it can
lead to a distortion and a corruption. And we certainly see that when it comes to the phenomena that
are described here. We also understand, however, that in a secular age, there has been an attempt
to try to define all these things in purely secular terms. And one of those secular dimensions is the
rise of the cult of the therapeutic. And at the same time, you have the rise of the cult of civil
liberty in such a way that you describe people as being sick, but they have to be incredibly
sick in order for someone to be held or restricted from being a part of the general population.
And so we really are looking at a fascinating war of ideas here, but we're also talking about
real world consequences, and that takes us to the real world situation of what took place on
that subway car and eventually the jury finding not guilty and he was released. That doesn't end
the issue. The first thing Christians need to recognize here is that there is something real to a lot
of these diagnoses. The second thing Christians have to understand is that the diagnosis only
scratches the surface of the problem. And so as you see a secular society trying to deal with these
very deep and problematic syndromes, you look at them trying to deal with people who are clearly
deeply troubled. People who are a threat to themselves and to others. You match that with the
civil libertarian worldview of the last half of the 20th century, and you have people who are
understood to be threats to themselves and potentially to others who are just put back on the streets
again and again and again. And you have the giant cities of the nation that become collecting
points. Again, by some estimations, there are something like a quarter of a million persons with
some kind of similar diagnosis in a city or a metropolitan region like New York City, and at any given time
between 10 and 20,000 of them might present a clear and present danger to themselves or others.
Part of the problem here is the conception of personal autonomy and individual liberty that is being
held up by so many jurists and frankly by so much of the intellectual left in the United States.
Heather McDonald writing a city journal gets it right when she says, quote,
Jordan Neelys are still roaming New York streets because protecting their autonomy is government's
paramount concern. Never mind that the autonomy of the law abiding is proportionately restricted.
Many New Yorkers, she writes, now avoid the subways, losing access to a vital public service
that they're paying for simply because government refuses to maintain order, end quote.
And remember, that is one of the first assignments of government is to maintain order.
A failure to maintain order is one of the most basic failures of government.
I wanted to return to this issue today simply because of the huge issues here,
And we all have to admit, these issues are very complex. There's no easy way to deal with these problems.
And even as Christians understand that the reliance upon psychiatry alone is a very problematic position,
we also recognize there are some very serious psychiatric and psychological problems that are very much walking the streets of a city like New York,
or frankly, walking down the sidewalks even closer to us than we might recognize.
The reality is that we are living in an age, however, that has no explanation for these things
except the psychiatric or the psychological, the sociological, or following some other
secular worldview.
And clearly, those secular worldviews fail to explain with any adequacy the reality of this
challenge.
But I'm going to leave that at this point and get to another issue, a lot of controversy in
recent days.
And this controversy is likely to continue because remind yourself for just a moment that
Joe Biden is still president of the United States. He still has the constitutional authority to act.
And remember that days ago, he acted to commute 1,500 criminal sentences at one time.
1,500. It was the largest commutation in the history of the American presidency.
There had been some mass commutations before, but generally they had been because of a change
in an understanding of the law. Now, instead, what you basically had in the case of President Biden's
commutation of at least a lot of the 1,500 sentences here is the fact that many of these people,
because of the situation in COVID, had been put into some form of home confinement.
And Joe Biden came back and said, we should just consider basically that their debt to society
has been paid and then to commute their sentences.
Now, a commutation is not the same thing as a pardon.
Let's be clear.
The president has the power to do both, to commute sentences and to pardon citizens.
Those are two different things.
A pardon means that the criminal convictions expunged from your record. A commutation means that your prison sentence is going to be ruled as having been served.
Whatever prison sentence or whatever judicial sentence you have will be ruled to have been ended or commuted by presidential declaration.
You may have served eight of ten years, but the president commutes your sentence, you go home.
In the case of a large number of those in the 1500 recently commuted, they were in some kind of home confinement because of COVID.
And we're also looking at the fact that the criminal justice system in the United States, the penal system of jails and prisons, it is vastly overtaxed.
That is to say, it's overworked. The demand is greater than the supply.
And so in almost any major American city, you're going to have a lot of people, you're going to pass on a sidewalk who are perhaps even then under some kind of judicial restraint, some kind of
criminal definition. But the really interesting thing here is that Joe Biden was basically
bragging. The White House was bragging about having done something that was claimed to have been
just. It was claimed that this was a just act to commute these sentences. What's really interesting
in this case is how many people, even of the president's own party, came out and said, this was
wrong. And so you have, say, politicians in Wisconsin saying, this means that people who are
dangerous and are guilty of very serious crimes are being put onto the streets of Wisconsin.
State by state, you had similar kinds of criticisms that were made. Then you had all kinds of
examples such as what was reported by CNN. Here's the headline. Victims shocked after Biden
grants clemency to Kids for Cash Judge. And in another case of this kind of shock,
he granted clemency to an embezzler of $54 million. Now, here's what's interesting.
we're told, quote, a Biden administration official told CNN the latest commutations were not
individual decisions and instead it was a uniform decision granted to people who met certain
criteria like having a track record of good behavior while on house arrest, end quote.
Now, honestly, every time a president of the United States exercises his constitutional authority
in this way, there are consequences and there is controversy. And in this case, I think
President Biden deserves a lot of criticism for having taken the sex.
For one thing, the White House is in no position to come back and say, oh, some people were
put back on the streets who shouldn't have been put back on the streets.
We didn't do this on an individual basis.
We did this on a group basis.
Well, regardless of that, it was the president of the United States who commuted these
sentences on his own personal authority.
He bears full responsibility.
It cannot be delegated to anyone else.
This is going to go down as a lasting memory of Joe Biden's presidency, along with, let's remind ourselves,
his categorical pardon of his own son convicted of criminal charges.
CNN reports about that first situation, that is the Kids for Cash judge, quote,
former Pennsylvania judge Michael Conahan was convicted in 2011 in what was infamously called the
Kids for Cash scandal, where he took kickbacks from for-profit detention centers in exchange for
wrongly sending juveniles to their facilities. The case was widely considered to be one of the
worst judicial scandals in Pennsylvania history. Well, Scranton Joe, you bear responsibility
for putting this criminal back on the streets. A lot of folks in Pennsylvania are not happy about
having this criminal back on the streets. They're also not happy about the fact that the state of
Pennsylvania eventually had to pay $200 million to the victims of this judge's criminal behavior.
I just want to make a major theological point here.
Looking at a controversy like this, we see there are some big applications just to thinking
about the constitutional power of the presidency and understanding of what is right and wrong,
the demands of justice.
Also, we look at the very real danger of putting some of these people back on the streets.
You look at the fact that justice, when corrupted or warped in this way, it serves to minimize
the entire system of justice.
But there's a deeper Christian reason for us to think about.
these things, far beyond the headlines in these news story or the scandal of this presidential
action. We need to think about the very notion of clemency. We need to think about the notion of
pardon. We need to think about what this means in light of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
You know, as we think about, in this case, clemency or in this case, the commutation of a
sentence, you know, the interesting thing is that President Biden did not dare to say that these
criminals who were convicted of their crimes didn't commit criminal offenses. He doesn't say that. He simply
says we're going to accept that the debt they have paid to society is going to be paid in full
ahead of the accomplishment of their sentences simply because he wants to say so. And there's a sense
immediately of the injustice of that. They did not serve their sentences. They should have served their
sentences. What is Joe Biden as president of the United States? What does he think he's doing by simply
commuting 1,500 sentences in this way. And then we think back to the previous controversy over
President Biden's pardon of his son, Hunter Biden. And you think of the word pardon. It's not the same
thing as a commutation. Commuting a sentence means that the verdict of guilty remains,
but time served is simply going to be considered as just equity and punishment for the crime.
Pardon means the society is going to act as if the crime never happened, or at least as if
there was no real criminal guilt when it comes to this person. If you are pardoned, then you walk away
basically Scott Free. But it's really important to notice that when a president pardoned someone,
he doesn't say to another citizen, okay, this means you've got to go serve this sentence or you've got
to go serve the remainder of this sentence. It simply says, we're going to act as if this offense
never happened. No one's going to go to jail for this offense, or at least no one's going to
stay in jail for this offense. And you say, what does this have to do with the gospel? Well, it has
everything to do with the gospel in terms of our necessary understanding that what was happening in this
case of either President Biden's pardon of his own son or the commutation of these particular sentences,
massive number of 1,500 sentences, we need to understand that neither of those acts comes close
to what is described as pardon in a biblical understanding of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
my point here is not primarily legal, it is not primarily political, it is primarily theological
in order to see the glory of the gospel of Jesus Christ. We deserve the verdict of guilty,
every single one of us, all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God. We all deserve
to spend eternity in hell because of our rebellion against God and our sin against him.
This is all of us. And if we were set to hell,
and separated from God and given the sentence of eternal punishment because of our sin,
God would be just in doing so. He would be absolutely just in sending us into eternal punishment.
But we are told, God so love the world, that he gave his only son that whosoever believes in him
might not perish, but of everlasting life. And that points to the fact that as the New Testament
tells us, it is not that our sentence is merely commuted. God does not say,
if you believe in my son as Savior and you place your faith and trust in Him,
if you confess Jesus Christ is Lord and believe that God has raised him from the dead,
then I'm going to commute your sentence.
He doesn't say, we're just going to consider this on the basis of time served.
He doesn't say we're going to ignore the crimes and we're simply going to dismiss the punishment.
That is not the atonement.
That is not the salvation accomplished for us through Jesus Christ, our Lord.
Nor is it merely a pardon as if to say we were foul.
guilty, we're now just going to be declared not to be guilty, no one's going to pay the penalty.
It's as if the crime didn't happen. The folder is simply going to be closed and you are
free to walk. That is not the gospel. The gospel does not tell us that God, the righteous judge,
simply says, I give everyone a blanket pardon. No, instead, the sentence for our sin,
the just punishment for our sin, that was placed by the father on the son.
And Jesus Christ on the cross willingly bore the just penalty for our sin, the sins of all the
redeemed, such that there was no commutation of the sentence, and the sin was not merely pardoned,
rather sinners receive pardon through the substitutionary atonement of the Lord Jesus Christ.
He made him, Paul says, who knew no sin to be sin for us in order that in him we might become the righteousness of God.
And that's because God the Father didn't commute our sentence.
He didn't just issue a blanket pardon.
No, he promises salvation to those who come to faith in the Lord Jesus Christ
and repent of our sins precisely because, as the hymn tells us,
Jesus paid it all, all to Him I owe.
Sin had left its crimson stain.
He washed it white as snow.
This is the substitutionary atonement.
Those who are in Christ are in Christ precisely because
He did pay it all. He paid the penalty for our sin. He paid it in full for all the redeemed.
That's the grace and the glory of the atonement accomplished by the Lord Jesus Christ.
And, you know, even in the New Testament, it is really interesting that the New Testament uses
the legal terms and the legal process of that time in order to help us understand the gospel.
Oddly enough, talking about these same issues in our time gives us the opportunity.
to do the same. Let's seize it. Thanks for listening to The Briefing. For more information, go to
my website at Albertmower.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 sbtsk.edu.
For information on Boyce College, just go to voicecollege.com. I'll meet you again tomorrow for the
briefing.
