The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Wednesday, June 4, 2025
Episode Date: June 4, 2025This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:14 - 08:13)Europe Has a Huge Free Speech Problem: Europe is Undermining Democracy in the Name of Saving ...DemocracyEurope’s free-speech problem: J.D. Vance was Right by The EconomistPart II (08:13 - 12:31)What is Happening in Finland Will Not Stay in Finland: Americans Need to Closely Watch the Free Speech Case of Paivi Rasanen in FinlandEuropeans are becoming less free to say what they think by The EconomistPart III (12:31 - 18:06)A Dark and Deadly Legacy: Étienne-Émile Baulieu, the Creator of the Abortion Pill, Dies at 98Étienne-Émile Baulieu, Who Developed the Abortion Pill, Dies at 98 by The New York Times (Scott Veale)The Truth About the Abortion Pill: The Deadly Danger and Effects of the Abortion Pill Revealed in New Study by the EPPC by The Briefing April 29, 2025 (Albert Mohler)Part IV (18:06 - 27:53)A Prominent NT Scholar Justifies an Abortion in the Case of Rape and Incest? The Big Issues with NT Wright’s Recent Comments on AbortionIs abortion ever justified? Can Lucifer be forgiven? NT Wright answers your questions by Ask NT Wright Anything (Michael Bird and NT Wright)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, June 4th, 2025. I'm Albert Moller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and
events from a Christian worldview. Europe has a huge free speech problem, and at least increasingly,
some Europeans are beginning to admit the problem. Now, just remember that it was a matter of a few
months ago that U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance in Europe accused the Europeans of having a free speech
problem, and he expanded that to many European nations having a democracy problem.
We discussed this yesterday on the briefing, the attempt to try to shut out so-called far-right
parties, basically compromising democracy in the name of some kind of higher goal.
And here's one of the ironies.
You have so many European governments saying that they are basically compromising democracy
in order to save democracy.
And you also see the cultural and intellectual elites in the United States circling the
wagons to try to do exactly the same thing, to try to curtail democratic freedoms,
supposedly in defense of preserving democracy. Now, the irony and all that is thick, and it turns out to be
really instructive as well. So let's look at the European situation. What was the vice president talking about
when he accused Europe of having a free speech problem? Well, many Europeans were up in arms.
How can you accuse us of having a free speech problem? All of our nations offer some kind of guarantee
of free speech. Just a little footnote here. Free speech in the American tradition is a matter of a
constitutional right. It is in the Bill of Rights. It's actually in the First Amendment. It is so important
that the founding fathers couldn't pass what became the United States Constitution. They couldn't do so
without qualifying it with the Bill of Rights and free speech had to be in there. So when it comes to the
United States, it's an almost, almost is an important conditional here. It's an almost
unconditional guarantee of free speech rights. In the United States, free speech is so
fundamental as a right is tied to freedom of religion, it's tied to freedom of assembly.
It is also, in American jurisprudence and in Supreme Court decisions, it is so protected that you
have to come up with something like the famous case in which Justice Oliver Wendell Holm said,
you can't cry fire in a crowded theater. Other than that, you can say just about anything.
You can publish just about anything. Free speech is an incredibly expansive right,
constitutionally guaranteed in the United States. And the reason for that,
is that the American experiment in self-government, the American experiment in constitutional
self-government, and yes, you can use the word democratic in this, it requires freedom of speech.
Because without freedom of speech, all the other so-called rights become artificial.
So we really do need to pay some attention to what's going on here in Europe.
The economist, and remember, that is one of the most authoritative press sources in Europe.
it is one of the most important news sources in the United Kingdom.
Responding to Vice President Vance's comments,
they came back with an editorial statement and a full analysis article.
The editorial statement is entitled Europe's Free Speech Problem.
The subhead, the continent that gave the world the Enlightenment,
has forgotten how to nurture free expression.
Okay, so something important is going on there.
The European elites recoiled in horror when the American Vice President made the statement
about Europe violating free speech.
But now the economists, one of the most authoritative news sources in Europe, comes back and says,
well, that is actually true. Come to think of it, it's profoundly true. As a matter of fact,
you have other articles such as one that appeared in The Spectator, another British journal.
The headline of this one is J.D. Vance didn't go far enough on Europe.
This article by Rod Little, the Spectator, makes the very point we just made,
that free speech is fundamental to democratic self-government.
And Little writes, quote,
the only problem with the Vance speech is that it didn't go far enough and contained insufficient examples of the EU,
that's the European Union's warped concept of democracy.
He goes on to say, quote, the truth is that populist parties have both the right and the left have been persecuted by the EU for at least 25 years and continue to be.
Little says in the next statement, quote, if they somehow hoist themselves into power, they are warned that their country will be fined or suspended if they dare to enact policies on which they were elected, end quote.
So in the American media, there was the immediate response that the vice president had stepped over some kind of line,
but now you have authoritative sources in Europe coming back to say, no, the problem is the American vice president didn't press the case hard enough.
The lead opinion piece recently in The Economist includes these words, quote,
All European countries guarantee a right to free expression.
However, most also try to limit the harms they fear it may cause.
This goes well beyond the kinds of speech that even classical liberal,
agree should be banned, such as child pornography, leaks of national secrets, or the deliberate
incitement of physical violence. It often extends, says the economist, quote, to speech that hurts
people's feelings, or is in some officials view false, end quote. You see the huge problem here.
There is the assurance of a freedom of speech, but that freedom of speech is often construed by
legal authorities to mean that that particular speech is not free. Notice the example is given
here, speech that hurts people's feelings. I understand just how much speech that might shut down.
And that's because people's feelings can be heard over just about anything. And then you'll notice
that statement, or is in some officials view false, end quote. So this makes very clear that some
European governments and some European supergovernmental agencies claim the ability to say, no,
that's false. Now, you hear that in the United States also as well. The mainstream media tries to
do what they call fact-checking that often goes well beyond anything that could be called the rational
explication of a fact. It really is an official interpretation. And you know what? The mainstream media
and the United States got away for decades with being the authoritative voice getting to interpret
all these issues. They lost that franchise, particularly in the digital revolution. But you'll
notice in Europe, there is an attempt to clamp down on that kind of speech. The economist acknowledges
this. They give examples. Quote, France find a conservative
TV channel 100,000 euro, that's $112,000 for calling abortion the world's leading cause of death.
And the economist then says that's a commonplace view among pro-lifers from which the public must
apparently be shielded. The paper goes on to say, quote, online safety laws that slap big fines
on social media firms for tolerating illegal content have encouraged them to take down plenty
that is merely questionable infuriating those whose posts are suppressed. They go on to say things
may get worse. Quote, vaguely drafted laws that give vast discretion to officials are an invitation for
abuse. Countries where such abuse is not yet common should learn from the British example. Its crackdown
was not planned from above, but arose when police discovered they rather liked the powers speech
laws gave them. It is much easier, says the economist, to catch Instagram posters than thieves.
The evidence is only a mouse click away. End quote. But there's something more fundamental going on here,
and the economist knows it. Later in this,
article, they state this openly. Quote,
European liberals have grown queasy
about defending free speech.
The paper then asserts this is foolish.
Not only because laws that can be used
to gag one side can also be used to
gag the other, as can be seen
in draconian responses to Gaza
protests in Germany. The paper
goes on to say, quote, but also because believing
in free speech means defending speech
you don't like. If democracies
failed to do that, says the economist,
they lose credibility to the benefit of
autocracies such as China and
Russia, which are waging a global struggle for soft power. I like the way the Economist editorial board
ends their statement, quote, Europeans are free to say what they like about Mr. Vance, but they should
not ignore his warning. When states have too many powers over speech, sooner or later, they will use
them. End quote. Now, I said that the economist is offering a cover story here, a full-page editorial
statement, and a much longer analysis. And in that investigative report, there is something that Christians in
the United States need to know about and think about very carefully. The investigative report is very
thorough, and it begins with an example that's absolutely chilling and should have the attention
of Christians everywhere. Listen to this. Quote, should the Finnish Lutheran Church sponsor the
pride parade, a festival of rainbow flags, and sexual inclusivity? Many might argue that a state
institution would do well to show prospective parishioners that it has kept up with the times.
Pye v. Razzan is not among them. A staunch conservative, mother of five,
and Member of Parliament since 1995,
she questioned on social media
whether the church's endorsing pride
was compatible with the Bible's teachings on sin and shame.
Razan then offered a photograph of some scriptural texts.
The economist says, quote,
an accompanying picture of some of the books
as the Bible's less tolerant passages
may clear her own conclusions.
This was in 2019.
The temerity of her questioning
has resulted in six years of police investigations,
prosecution trials and the threat of a hefty fine.
The economist continues, as Finland's interior minister in the early 2010s, Ms. Rosanan had overseen the police.
Soon she was sitting in their interrogation rooms for 13 hours in all, she says.
Ultimately, a court in 2022 found that her views, offensive as some may have found them,
were no crime under Finnish law.
An appeal also went her way.
But the ordeal is not over.
The Supreme Court will soon announce whether prosecutors will soon announce whether prosecutors will,
for a judicial rematch will be granted." End quote. Now, I was with Pivey Rosenen in a meeting in Berlin
just days ago, and I can tell you this is a very live issue. She's a very brave woman, a very brave
Christian, and she is facing what could be, still could be, a criminal action against her for citing
scriptural verses. As a member of parliament, as a former interior minister, as someone who wants
to be in charge of the police, she's now being hounded by the police and in terrorizing.
for citing Bible verses. I can tell you that she's a very tough lady, but I can also tell you this is a
very tough situation, and it is one that now involves her, but make no mistake, if this pattern
continues, it could involve you or your pastor or your member of Congress as well. Looking at several
violations country by country, the economist then raises the question, what happened? They answer,
quote, on paper, Europeans from Ireland to Greece enjoy free speech rights, similar to the First
Amendment protections offered to their American cousins. The European Convention on Human Rights
that applies across the continent states that everyone has the right to freedom of expression.
With a nuance, exercising that freedom comes with duties and responsibilities, the convention adds,
end quote. And of course, what government bureaucrats and sometimes government officials themselves
try to do is to step in and say exactly what comes with those duties and responsibilities.
Increasingly in Europe, that means you have absolute free speech until you absolutely do not.
The Economist points out that some nations have laws against making critical statements of elected officials.
Now, wouldn't that be convenient?
What Congress wouldn't decide that that would be in the member's best interest?
It may well be that the most important part of this package in The Economist, a big cover story,
is the acknowledgement that liberals in so many nations are losing confidence in free speech.
they are going to say they are trying to protect liberty by conscribing liberty.
But you'll notice it's conscribing liberty for certain persons with whom they disagree.
That is always the problem with censorship.
It's just like what George Orwell discussed in Animal Farm.
Everybody's equal, but some are more equal than others.
We will continue to track this issue, and I just can't emphasize enough that Christians have a particular stake in this,
and it's not an accident that so many of the cases in which free speech rights are
are being violated have to do with Christian speech. It won't stop with one legislator in Finland.
I think you know that. We need to speak up about it while there's time. But next I want to go to a
major obituary published in the New York Times about a death of a physician in France.
Scott Veal wrote the report and it is about the death of the man who invented the abortion pill.
As the obituary begins, quote, Dr. Etienne Emil Bélyieu, the French biochemist and physician who was
often called the father of the abortion pill, and who was also known for his pioneering studies
on the role of steroid hormones in human reproduction and aging, died last Friday at his home in
Paris. He was 98 years old. Dr. Balu was a researcher, very interested in the effects of hormones,
and that led to, as the New York Times tells us, quote, groundbreaking work on estrogen and
progesterone and the development in the early 1980s of the synthetic steroid, RU486,
or Miphypristone, that thrust him onto the world stage.
Quote, unlike the morning after pill, which is used after sex to delay ovulation,
RU486 works as a kind of anti-hormone, and that's in Dr. Ballyu's words,
by blocking the uterus from receiving progesterone, thus preventing a fertilized egg from
implanting.
The two-dose treatment, as the obituary notes, in terms of the abortion pill,
quote, has been proved safe and highly effective with a success rate of about 95% and is
commonly used in many countries in the United States, medication abortions accounted for more
than 50% of all abortions in 2020."
Well, that is another example of the elite media ignoring data they do not find acceptable.
You'll notice the New York Times said that this pill has proved both safe and highly effective.
Well, it's highly effective, but remember, it's effective at preventing a fertilized egg from
implanting in the uterus and growing to maturity and then being born. And so it is a death pill
when it comes to the unborn. And it's a highly effective death pill. Not only that, we are told that
over half of all abortions in the United States now come by the pill, so-called medication abortion,
rather than by surgical abortion. But you'll notice the Times also said, just as an offhand comment
in this obituary, that the pill has proved to be safe. Just days ago, I reported on the fact that the
Ethics and Public Policy Center has released a massive report demonstrating that this is a false
claim. And it is something that the press just ignores the data showing deep problems with
RU486, or Mififristone, as it is now commonly known, the press just suppresses them. And that's
exactly what's going on here. The obituary cites the fact that there was much controversy around
Dr. Baueru and his research, quote, controversy over RU 486 began as soon as its release in the 1980s.
Dr. Balupe developed the drug in partnership with the French drug company, Roussel Euclif,
where he was an independent consultant.
After RU486 was approved for sale in France in 1988, Roussel Euclief was briefly forced to pull it from the market
after protests from the Catholic Church and the threat of boycotts before the French government
persuaded the company to reverse its decision.
Notice what took place there.
The French government stepped in to demand the continued sale of the abortion pill.
That tells you a lot about how these things work, in this case, particularly in France and more generally in Europe.
The obituary does cite the opposition, quote,
opponents of abortion assailed RU486 as dangerous and immoral, calling it a death pill and a chemical coat hanger.
As recently as 1996, four years before the pill was officially approved for use in the United States,
the Vatican called it a serious threat to human life.
The article points out the fact that Dr. Bau-U was not only a researcher, he was an activist for abortion,
and before that he was an activist for contraception and birth control pills.
He was, as the paper says, a vociferous public presence in the crusade for acceptance of the
abortion pill.
At one point, we are told, he held an impassioned news conference at the World Congress of
Gynecology and obstetrics in Rio to condemn Roussel Euclief after its decision to pull
RU-486 from the market.
Now, the paper says that he had no financial stake in the abortion pill's success.
He saw it as a medical issue.
and ethical issue. And once again, I'll just take that as a truthful statement. It may be that he had
no financial statement. That doesn't change the effect of RU486. It doesn't change the deadly effect
of this pill. It doesn't change the fact that it is a life termination pill, regardless of who
profits. Sometimes a major obituary like this makes some interesting connections. In this case,
here's one, quote, as a young scientist on a fellowship at Columbia University in New York in the 1950s,
he met Gregory G. Pinkas, the inventor of the birth control pill, who became a mentor, and who inspired Dr. Boutieu to pursue research into contraception and pregnancy regulation, end quote. That's an interesting way to put it. Pregnancy regulation. Anyone who knows the history of the sexual revolution and the contraception pill in the United States knows the name of Gregory G. Pincas. And once again, you're talking about someone who claimed the high mantle of medicine and medical research, but who
was ideologically committed to the sexual revolution and to what became the hormonal revolution
in the contraceptive pill. Also, I would argue, with very serious ethical complications.
Nowhere in this obituary do you find a line acknowledging that Dr. Boutou's development of this
pill has led to the deaths of millions of unborn human beings. Finally, for today, there has been
some interesting conversation about a podcast. It's the Ask NT Write Anything podcast, and in this
particular edition of the podcast, Bishop Wright also addressed the issue of abortion. And he did so in a way
that I think points out some general patterns of thought that we as Christians need to recognize.
We're talking about NT. Wright, very famous New Testament scholar, already very controversial in many
circles for his redefinition of justification, his reordering of biblical theology, his
teachings on eschatology. He is a proponent of the so-called new perspective on Paul, which many of us find
deeply problematic. He has also offered some very important defenses of the historicity of the
resurrection of Jesus Christ. He has been a very well-known New Testament scholar for a matter of decades.
He is also a churchman in the Church of England. Between the years 2003 and 2010, N.T. Wright
served as the Bishop of Durham there in Northern England. He's held academic post at the University
of St. Andrews and at Oxford University, where he now serves as a senior research fellow.
This particular podcast is moderated by another figure, well known to evangelicals, Michael Byrd,
and in the edition of the podcast released on June the 1st of this year, the bishop has asked
the question, is abortion ever justified? In his answer, he began saying, quote,
it is obviously hugely sensitive and difficult, and I know it's become a political hot potato
as well as an ethical hot potato, particularly in America, end quote.
Okay, stop for a moment, particularly in America.
You hear some condescension there, but there is also the suggestion that America is just the odd case here,
and I find that particularly irritating.
I want to say, if this is not a controversy in the United Kingdom or elsewhere,
it is the failure of those in the United Kingdom to make it an issue.
Right, make some good statements about abortion being a part of the fruit of the sexual revolution,
solution, but he then goes on and says, there must be some exceptions. He says, quote, I do think we
have to be very, very careful. And I've had personal experience of this with a close family member,
he says, where soon after the couple discovered that they were pregnant or the wife was pregnant,
then it also became apparent that the wife had been accidentally exposed to German measles,
rubella. He goes on, quote, now, as we know, that exposure to German measles can result in
serious deformities in the womb, et cetera, et cetera. And the GP, that's general practitioner in that case,
was a devout Christian. And then Wright says, the doctor said, quote, we're going to do the test.
And if she's been exposed to Rubella, if there's a threat of serious deformation or whatever,
then we will recommend termination. Right then says, and I remember my heart and my mouth when
I heard that in thinking, do I really agree with that? He then says this, but at the time,
it was absolutely clear for the mental health, never mind anything else of the mother and the potential
father as well, that this was the way to go. In fact, all was well. The rebella had not actually done
what it sometimes might do, and that child was born perfectly healthy and has grown up now, etc.
This was a long time ago, he says, that has made me very sensitive about the fact that there are
many, many cases where it is about the mother's health versus the health of the child or whatever,
and particularly, he says cases of rape or cases of incest, there may be a very, very strong
argument for saying this ought never to have happened and with sorrow because we do not want to do
this in principle, but with sorrow and a bit of shame, the best thing to do is as soon as possible
to terminate this pregnancy, end quote. So you'll notice he fears to be going in a rather good direction
about the fact that we should not feel good about this, but then he basically turns it into
something that's less ethical and more emotional, and then he rushes on to say that if there's
sufficient evidence, then you should terminate the pregnancy as soon as possible. Later in his answer,
Wright goes on to say he doesn't support abortion right up until the moment of birth. He
He says that's clearly wrong.
He compares it with the ancient infanticide practices of the Greeks and the Romans.
But then he goes on to say, basically, that we're not for that.
We must be against that.
But he won't draw the line about where abortion, in his view, is ethically right or ethically wrong.
It seems to have something to do with the pattern of development of the fetus.
But nonetheless, what we have here is a very classical non-answer to a question that demands
a very specific answer. Is abortion ever justified? The Christian perspective is that abortion is never
justified, and I will just make that argument. It's never justified. As a matter of fact, even the Roman Catholic
Church teaches that it's never justified. That doesn't mean that if the mother's life is in danger,
surgery cannot do what it must, that medical intervention cannot be done, even if that means the death of the
unborn child. But the death of the unborn child can never be the strategic intention of even
effort to try to save the mother's life. Speaking about that abortion in the ancient world, even
infanticide, he says that Christians wouldn't have anything to do with it. Thank you very much.
He said, quote, and I think that shows us the way in principle, this is not something which we should
welcome. It's not something which we should collude with, end quote. Well, what exactly does that
mean? Not something we should welcome, not something we should collude with. Anglicanism is famous for
its claim of comprehensiveness. And in T. Wright, who has identified as a conservative on many issues,
he is nonetheless and has been a bishop in the Church of England. He was a member of the group that
brought the Windsor report out on LGBTQ issues a generation ago. And even as it said some very
right things, it didn't require right action. In the Anglican Communion, you have some very
liberal bodies such as the Episcopal Church in the United States that is all four, just about
every dimension imaginable of the LGBT
revolution. You have some Anglican churches in Africa
who are decidedly not going with that program. And there are many
Anglicans who want to say, well, I'm on this side of the issue or that
side of the issue, but you also have the example of many who are saying
things that are so complicated and indirect. It's not exactly sure
how any of this will be translated into an absolute policy. I have to say
that's absolutely the case about NT rights statement here on
abortion. We also see an extreme effort to try to talk about this issue with what is defined as
sensitivity. He says at one point that it's awkward when, for instance, in the Roman Catholic Church,
the Roman Catholic hierarchy, which is all male, tells a woman what she can and can't do. He says,
the optics of that are pretty bad. He says, and I quote, that's part of the same system of male
bullying, which we have to avoid like the plague, end quote. So, in other words, Catholic priests
shouldn't say what is true about abortion? For that matter, evangelical men shouldn't? I want to make
another point here, and that is that the pro-life movement in the United States among evangelicals is,
in my view, not primarily driven by men. It is driven by Christian women. And so that argument really
falls pretty flat here in the United States. There's just no getting around the fact that
N.T. Wright has here suggested that at least in some cases, an abortion as soon as possible,
appears to be the least worst answer. And that's actually language he uses himself. He states this,
quote, even if we then have to say with sorrow, and a certain sense of this is the least worst option
in this situation, that there may be some cases of exceptions, that that's about as far as I can get at the
moment, he says, and as I say, I'm very much aware of just how sensitive this topic is politically,
sociologically, as well as ethically. End quote. Well, no doubt it is a sensitive subject. It is also a
matter of life and death. I think it requires some pretty clear answers. And I believe the most important
Christian answer to this is that the scriptural teaching is that every life is precious, and that life
begins. The moment God says let there be life and the two cells come together and fertilization
takes place, everything from that point onward is an unfolding of the life that is already there.
That's now being presented as an insensitive, extreme, radical statement. But I
I dare you to come up with anything ethically sustainable that isn't that clear and doesn't have
fertilization as the starting point. You can try to carve out some kind of third way between the pro-life
and the pro-abortion position, but I don't believe any such way in truth exists. And you'll notice
one sign of that is the fact that some of the people who either argue for or hint at that kind of
third way aren't willing to say, all right, well, here's the line in pregnancy that I would draw, and
here is the ethical foundation of the argument that I am making. You just don't hear that kind of
argument taken to its logical conclusion, and that ought to tell you something. Human life begins
at fertilization. Every single human person begins at fertilization. I think we have to make that
statement. We have to make it clearly. We have to make it sensitively, yes. But we had better
make the point with clarity and conviction, because honestly, there's no other choice.
Thanks for listening to The Briefing. For more information, go to my website at Albertmohar.com.
You can fill me on Twitter or X by going to Twitter.com forward slash Albert Moller.
For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbtsketech.edu.
For information on Boyce College, just go to boyscology.com.
I'm speaking to you from Coburg, France, and I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
