The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Wednesday, February 5, 2025
Episode Date: February 5, 2025This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 09:41)A Generation of Young Adults That Never Grows Up: The Reaping of the World of Modernity is th...e Fall of Western Civilization as We Know ItWhat Happens When a Whole Generation Never Grows Up? by The Wall Street Journal (Rachel Wolfe)Part II (09:41 - 16:56)The Church is A Counter Culture: The Hope for the Restoration of Society is Only Found Through the Obedience to the Gospel by Local ChurchPart III (16:56 - 26:22)Secretary of State Rubio’s Trip to Panama: Trump and Rubio Send Strong Message to Panama About Adversarial Control of the Panama CanalSign 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 Wednesday, February 5, 2025. I'm Albert Moeller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
So what happens when a whole generation never grows up? That question was recently asked by the Wall Street Journal.
Now, there are crises, and then there are crises. There are challenges, and then there are challenges.
We see things that concern us, and then we see things that concern us at an even deeper level. You can't get any deeper than this level.
when we're talking about an entire generation not growing up, we're looking at a civilizational crisis.
Now, the Wall Street Journal is looking in particular at 30-somethings because the data keep rolling in about 30-somethings telling us that that generation is markedly different than the generations before it.
And by the way, some of the generations younger than, say, the 30-somethings alive today, they're following some of the same patterns of the 30-somethings.
they're not moving into adulthood. They're not achieving the usual markers of adulthood.
They're not entering into marriage. They are not having children. They're not buying homes,
as previous generations had at the same age. Now, when you look at this and you see even a newspaper like
the Wall Street Journal raising the alarm, you're talking about a crisis here. There's no denial of that.
The question is, how did it happen? What does it mean? Is there any way out of it?
So how did it happen? That's a great question.
there are a lot of people who are arguing that what happened is that the economy changed in such
ways that it became more difficult for young people to achieve the same kind of incomes as their
parents at the same age and thus economic disadvantage has made it more difficult to buy a house,
more difficult to achieve many of these landmarks of adulthood.
But as the Wall Street Journal, and let's just point out, if anyone in the world understands economics
is the people who write and publish the Wall Street Journal, they point to the fact that the economics
will not singularly explain this. As a matter of fact, even though the economic explanation is,
to some degree, legitimate, it doesn't explain this by a long shot because many of these young people
are actually making an income a multiple of what their parents made at the same age, but they're not
doing the same things. They're not getting married in the same way. They're not becoming parents in the
same way. They're not buying homes in the same way. As the journal says, quote, the conventional explanation
for what's freezing young adults in place is that they can't afford to grow up given rising inflation
and ballooning housing costs. Yet the journal goes on to say, quote, yet this doesn't explain what's going
on. End quote. There is the acknowledgement that there has been kind of a run of bad luck on the part of
this generation, as well as every other generation, by the way. Every generation has some run of bad
economic news at some point, even the greatest generation, which entered into the post-war
prosperity, had to go through the Great Depression and the trauma of the war in order to get there.
But as the Wall Street Journal says, many of these young people are actually, again, earning
a multiple significantly more than their parents did at the same age.
Quote, in many ways, this age group is at a better place financially, on average, than their
parents were at this age. The problem is that they don't seem to know it. Only 21% of adults in their
30s rated the overall economy as good or excellent last year per the Federal Reserve.
An economists say young adults are significantly more pessimistic about the future than prior
generations were, end quote. Okay, okay. So economics, not irrelevant to the issue,
but on the other hand, by no means and explanation of the pattern. These young people are not,
not getting married, and they're not, not becoming parents, and they're not not buying homes
because they can't.
It's because they're making other choices.
It's because they have other priorities in life.
It is because they are rejecting,
whether they say it or not,
the pattern that led to adulthood in previous generations.
You're also looking at something else.
You're looking at the fact that many of these young adults
intend to live with other young adults
in some kind of communal setting
and they want to live in metropolitan areas
that are extraordinarily expensive
and they also have economic priorities
that just candidly don't begin with,
marriage or having children. And if you don't begin with having marriage and children, then pretty
soon, maybe you tell yourself you can't afford them. The cultural expectations have also changed,
as the journal tells us, quote, growing up with less pressure to follow the same narrow route to
adulthood imposed on their parents and grandparents, a career, spouse, house, and kids by age 35,
has raised the bar for what these milestones look like if they choose to hit them at all, end quote.
Now, just how badly is this generation, say, missing the mark?
I think the information is overwhelming.
You're looking at the fact that many of them aren't married and now won't marry.
And you're looking at the fact that many of them don't have children and in all likelihood at this point won't have children.
Quote, just over half of Americans between the ages of 30 and 40 were married as of last year.
Continued, quote, this is down for more than two-thirds in 1990 when those in the middle of the cohort were
born. The share of women in this age range who had never given birth fell seven percentage points
between 2012 and 2022 alone current population survey data show from 78% to 71%. Melissa Carney, an economist
at the University of Maryland, points to this generation and says, quote, our expectations are so
much higher today. Generations before us didn't expect to have large houses where every kid had a
bedroom and there were multiple vacations, end quote. Turns out that the multiple vacations part is
quite central to this generation. But Professor Carney went on to say, quote, part of this is social
expectations and part of this is shifting priorities and part of this is economic realities,
quote, but altogether they seem to be pushing in the same direction, which is increased rates of
staying single and staying childless, end quote. A young man to whom we are introduced early in the article,
his name is Cody. He's identified as a 38-year-old who is single and lives with three roommates in Brooklyn.
He said, quote, it feels like the instructions for how to live a good life don't apply anymore, and nobody has updated them, end quote.
But when it comes to this young man, it also points to a part of the problem here, and that is that many of them have chosen to live single childless lives in very expensive places, rather than to get married and have children and live in less expensive places.
For example, Cody lives in metropolitan New York City, end quote.
Although he now makes around double what his parents did at the height of their careers combined,
he's disappointed by what it affords him in New York City, end quote.
So this is a choice.
It's a lifestyle choice.
He has chosen to live in New York City.
He's making twice as much as his parents at the same age combined,
but he's disappointed in the, say, real estate options that are available to him in Manhattan.
He's living with other 30-something young men in a communal apartment.
By the way, we're also told that in a period of a sluggish labor market, he decided he would go and get a law degree.
He is now, because of that degree, $180,000 in student loan debt that now has ballooned to more than $200,000 because he's been making only the minimal payments.
You also have a young woman cited in the article who lives in the Los Angeles area.
Quote, she knows her salary would go farther in her hometown of Philadelphia.
but she prefers to stay in L.A.
Inflation has raised the price of small luxuries such as her Spotify subscription,
but she doesn't want to give them up.
Quote,
there isn't any part of my life that doesn't feel more expensive than it did two years ago,
she says, but she likes her life.
She, quote, says she enjoys meeting friends and waking up when she wants,
which makes the upheaval of children unappealing motherhood, she says,
is a non-starter.
And in an incredibly telling statement, she said this,
and this is the concluding.
statement in the article, quote, kids become the first priority, I'm still figuring out myself as a
priority, end quote. Well, sometimes your words, in a quote like that, just say it all. What we're
looking at here is the reaping of the whirlwind of modernity. The modern age that says we can
separate ourselves from creation, we can separate ourselves from creation order, we can
separate ourselves from biblical commands, we can separate ourselves from the Christian worldview,
we can separate ourselves from the institution of marriage, we can separate ourselves from children.
You know, if we can make all those separations, here's a key principle of life in a fallen world.
If we can make those separations, we will.
If we can have sex without marriage and sex without babies, then a sizable number of human beings will choose that option.
But this is also, just looking at this kind of data, it for Christians comes at us at two levels.
Number one, let's just say the civilizational level.
Civilizations can't survive this.
civilizations can't survive about half of a generation deciding it's never going to marry and never
going to have children. That's not survivable. It's a matter of demographics. You can do the math.
The math tells the story. Eventually you end up a civilization like Japan right now or some other nations
right now that are looking at such low birth rates that they're having to look at creating robots to take
care of people in nursing homes. That's where society is headed if we stop having babies. But here's the point.
The Christian worldview addresses this at an even deeper level, which is the fact that it's not just for the good of civilization that we are to do these things, it is for our own good.
It is the crucible of making human beings as adults, and that's how we understand marriage and having children.
Christians don't understand marriage and children as achievements of adulthood.
We see them as part of the process of adulthood.
We see, for instance, entering into marriage as a part of making us men and women as adults.
We see entering as married couples, a man and a woman, into parenthood as a part of becoming adults by becoming parents.
We grow ourselves up by getting married, and we grow ourselves up by having children and parenting them.
And if you have a generation that says, you know, I'm just not sure I know enough about myself to know who I'd want to marry or how I'd enter into marriage
I don't know enough about myself to acknowledge children as a priority, so I'm just going to do without them.
What you end up with is a generation that, by the way, is never going to find itself until it finds itself single and without children
at a point in which it's very difficult to reverse either.
Here's something else the Christian worldview validates, and that is that God has made as chronological creatures,
and that means that we are born, let's just say, with the promise of reproductive capacity,
but we're not born with reproductive capacity.
Reproductive capacity comes in adolescence,
that period between childhood and adulthood.
And the point of adolescence is not to get stuck there,
but rather to move into adulthood.
And that means that physiologically all of a sudden
you have not only the promise of being a parent,
but you have the ability to be a parent.
And then that indicates the fact
that you should be moving into more serious responsibility,
eventually entering into marriage.
And the order here is very important in biblical terms.
you enter into marriage and then entering into marriage, you become fruitful and multiply,
which is to say you have children and thus you grow up.
You know, I think all of us who are married any length of time would say that we have grown
up by being married.
And I think all of us who are parents would say we have grown up by being parents.
If you wait until you're grown up enough to get married, you're never going to get married.
And if you wait until you're grown up enough to become a parent, you're never going to become a parent.
And that's because, you know, in times past before birth control and before the sexual revolution that said you don't have to get married to have sexual relations, at that period, guess what? You grew up because you had to. You grew up because, guess what, you get married? And what comes to that? Children, you're going to have to grow up fast. And that's one of the reasons why. I'll just put it this way. As the president of an academic institution, of a seminary and of a college, I'm surrounded, I am thrilled to say, by young adults.
who are actually adulting.
And you see that with all the young couples getting married,
you see that with all the young couples pushing strollers out on the lawn
on a beautiful afternoon.
And you see it and all the children playing out on the lawn
along with the college students and others.
It's just a picture of the way it ought to be.
And that just points to the fact that the church is an alternative culture.
In the midst of a secular age,
the church is the place that better get these things right
when no one else gets them right.
And I also think this means to Christian leaders, to pastors, to parents of young people,
it means we have to understand that the social script is being rewritten by the secular world in such a way
that if there is not clear biblical teaching, if there is not clear affirmation and encouragement,
if there is not a clear set of expectations, we shouldn't be surprised that any generation of young adults
will decide to go off in any number of different directions in a project of themselves rather than the project of
getting married and having children and helping to build a civilization. But here's something else.
And this, I don't think, has really been a parent until very recent times. And that is that I don't
think that's enough. I don't think that's enough. I think that's enough. I think it points to the
necessity of the local church as a body of believers where there is mutual encouragement into
faithfulness in all of these dimensions. And that's one of the reasons why I think if you go to a liberal
church, you don't need a nursery. You go to a conservative church, you better be ready to expand it.
And it is why when you see these young people get married, other young people say, I want that.
And when you see these young couples have babies, other young couples say, we want that. And pretty
soon, you're going to have to add space in the nursery. And by the way, we also are looking at the
reality that among Christians there is a resurgent natalism, which is to say an understanding
that having babies is not only something which comes as something of an adult hobby,
it is an adult responsibility. And thus, it is central to our accountability. This is really
important. And when you look at the collision between the secular and the Christian worldview,
even when it comes down to something ideological, like the distinction between liberal and conservative,
conservatives are far more likely to get married, stay married, and have babies. It doesn't mean that
they're morally superior in every way. It does mean that if you're trying to,
conserve, guess what? You're trying to conserve patterns of life. Even if you're not a Christian,
you understand that certain patterns of life have to be conserved. As a Christian, you understand
that those patterns of life are not incidental. They're not accidental. They're a part of
creation order and a part of the creator's plan. But when you look at the birth patterns
and you look at the falling of the birth rate, it's true that it affects across the board,
but it is not evenly distributed. And it shows that worldview matters. On Monday night of this week,
I'm just going to talk inside baseball here for a moment.
On Monday night this week, I got to speak to the assembled young men of Boyce College,
just the young men.
And I had the opportunity to exhort them not only to grow up as young men in Christ,
but to grow up right on time.
And that means all these hallmarks of adulthood,
they're not just sociological realities.
They point to underlying creation order realities.
And we understand our accountability is far greater than,
a secular generation trying to figure these things out on its own.
I also told them what I want to tell you,
and that is that these students make me very, very happy
because they're drawn to this kind of vision
and they believe these kinds of convictions,
and they do intend to be faithful and to make a difference.
And you know what?
They're doing it with joy.
That's the happy thing.
I find so many of the people cited in this kind of article
talking about how they're not following the familiar script,
and this is just not for them.
they also don't appear to be very happy.
In the way that I think, for instance, my parents,
who didn't have all that much,
but what they had was devoted to their family,
I think they were very happy.
And I think that joy is itself a testimony to God's glory.
I can't think of issues more important than this, frankly,
when you think about the future of our civilization,
so we'll be returning to these issues
because they're central to the Christian worldview and to Christian concern.
But for the brief and today,
I'm going to shift now to a very different issue, and this is driven by the news, and it has to do with Secretary of State Marco Rubio's visit to Central and South America.
And the background to this is really important when you talk about a clash of worldviews.
You talk about a clash of world powers.
A lot of this is driven by domestic concerns here in the United States.
But the other part of what is driving this is concerned about the influence of a nation like China, an adversary nation by specific U.S. declaration.
an adversary nation that is seeking and in some cases achieving significant interest right here close to
the United States of America. The encirclement of the United States by Chinese interests under the
direction of the Chinese government and indeed the Chinese Communist Party. That is a part of the
Belt and Road initiative that China has undertaken. It's a part of the development of relationship.
So where did that explode under the news? It exploded, I think most interestingly, when it comes to Panama
and the Panama Canal. Now, President Trump,
even as President-elect Trump
shocked a lot of people
by his talk about the Panama Canal
and by his statement that it's vital to U.S. interests
and that Chinese control
or the threat of Chinese control
over the Panama Canal is unacceptable.
Now here's the thing.
Many of the mainstream media have run off on this
as if it's a crazy idea,
but we need to point to the fact that many Democrats
as well as many Republicans share the same concern
and actually share the same conviction
or the same judgment.
They're just not saying so so publicly.
And of course, a part of what President Trump does, as compared to other politicians, is he offers leadership by thinking out loud.
He enjoys thinking out loud.
He enjoys the effect of thinking out loud.
But President Trump, in this case, has not just thought out loud.
He also sent his Secretary of State, a Secretary of State who is the first Hispanic or Latino Secretary of State in U.S. history.
And he went to Panama, and he met with Panama's president.
And he made very clear that it is unacceptable to the United States.
that a company controlled by the Chinese Communist Party
could have control over the ports
in the case of what's now true,
both ends of the Panama Canal.
That's just not acceptable.
It is not consistent with the security needs
of the United States of America.
It's not consistent with the Monroe Doctrine, I would point out,
handed down by President James Monroe in 1823,
that said it is in the national interest of the United States
that we exercised the determination
that foreign interests in particular in his day, European interests could not seek to control
significant territory in Central or South America in North or South America as continental realities.
Now we're looking at an updating of this plan, but we also need to understand that this is a
struggle that's gone back a long time. And so even though it kind of exploded into the headlines,
we need to understand there is a story here. That story is really interesting. That story takes us
back to the 19th century. And even further back in one sense, when the European powers, having mapped
out Central America for the first time, noticed this itthmus where the Pacific and the Atlantic are so
close together, separated by less than 100 miles. And the idea was, if we could just build some kind
of canal there, we could have a shortcut, which could make all the difference in the world in economic
or in military terms between the two great oceans, the Atlantic and the Pacific. Okay, so the
United States and the Monroe doctrines behind this, the United States understood that it would build this
canal. And frankly, it went through all kinds of political and military interventions to make that
possible, basically sequestering some land in Northern Columbia, declaring it to be a part of
Panama and then bringing influence on Panama to offer legal cover for the United States to move
into building the canal. And then it administered the canal in what was declared to be a canal zone,
transforming traffic between the two oceans and transforming world trade in that matter,
and also American military influence by the building and the maintenance of this canal.
But there were pressures, especially in the last half of the 20th century, given the backlash
to imperialism and so many other things, that the canal needed to be under Panamanian control
and even under Panamanian ownership.
and thus there was a treaty that was devised under President Carter
and thus eventually the Panama Canal was repatriated to Panama.
President Jimmy Carter was very clear about this.
When he was running for the 1976 presidential nomination,
then former governor Ronald Reagan, former governor of California,
ran on a platform of opposing the transfer of the Panama Canal.
But nonetheless, it was transferred.
And by 1999, it was under the full control.
Panamanians. Now, the largest number of registered ships going through the Panama Canal continues
to be American traffic. It continues to be largely about American transport, but you are looking at
the deliberate intentional strategy of China to gain control over many of these choke points.
And that's exactly what President Trump and Secretary of State Marco Ruby have said is not acceptable.
Now, what exactly would go on in, let's just say the negotiations or the posturings between
the United States and Panama. My guess is that the bottom line is that there will be some kind of
acceptable ownership and administration of the canal and of those ports, or the United States
will perhaps even take military action. And I know there are people saying the United States
doesn't do that, but let me remind you that the United States has done that before, military
action in Panama, indeed as recently as 1989, 1990, in which the United States invaded Panama,
in order to help bring about the fall of the regime of a military strong man, Manuel Noriega,
and he was removed and replaced with a democratic government.
But it's still true that Panama is kind of defining its own political reality.
I landed in Panama City as a newspaper editor just after the military toppling of the Noriega government.
The commandantia downtown was still in Panama City smoldering when I arrived in the city.
and as an American journalist had the very first interview
with the new Panamanian president, Guillermo Indara,
there in the cathedral, by the way, in Panama City.
He wanted to sit in the cathedral in front of the peyatta
in order to make certain that there would be less likelihood
he'd be assassinated because the assassins being presumably
coming from a Catholic background would not dare
to shoot him in the cathedral in front of that statute.
Interesting footnote in history.
But all this just reminds us that China is a malign
influence seeking to have control over choke points. Strategic assets all over the world. It is doing
this in Africa. It's doing this in South America. It's doing this in Asia. Even doing this in the
Middle East. It is seeking influence by building infrastructure and controlling that infrastructure
often through shadow companies. Some of them now, by the way, headquartered in Hong Kong,
which you'll recall was returned to mainland China just in recent decades. There's more to this story,
of course there are commercial relations, there are fees charged in terms of the traffic through
the canal. But in worldview analysis, what I want to point out is that if you have a nation like
the United States, and if you have the declaration, the understanding very early in our national
history, that what happens in a place like, say, Panama is in the national interest of the
United States and has a good deal to do with the eventual survival of the United States,
then you can look at the kinds of statements made by President Trump, the kind of message
taken by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and you understand that if you're in Panama, you better
hear these words as very, very serious. That's not to say they can't be delivered in a respectful way,
but it is to say that at the end of the day, the United States cannot allow an adversary power
to have control over a choke point like this. And you can argue about how that should be communicated,
but the bottom line is, evidently, it has been communicated. Finally, I just want to tell you as we come to a
conclusion that I'm going to be teaching a class. I'm very excited about it. It's a class for both
Southern Seminary and Boys College. It's coming up this spring. The class is entitled Leaders and
Leadership Lessons from Leaders who changed history. The course is going to start on March the 11th.
It's available to students on campus and to online students. It's also available, say, to listeners
to the briefing who would like to participate without doing so for academic credit. You can join
us live or you can watch each class and lecture on your own time. To learn more, just go to the website.
SPTS.edu slash
molar course. That's just one word,
molar course. I'll tell you, it's going to be
fun. We're going to learn a lot together
and I will hope to see you there.
Thanks for listening to the briefing. For more information
to go to my website at albertmuller.com.
You can follow me on Twitter by going to
Twitter.com forward slash Albert
Moller. For information on the Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, go to sbts.bts.
For information on Boyce College,
just to the voicecollege.com.
I'll be chosen tomorrow for the briefing.
