The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Wednesday, May 22, 2024
Episode Date: May 22, 2024This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 08:19)When Will SCOTUS Take Up the Trans Issue? The Inevitability of a Big Case Over Transgenderism... Hitting the Nation’s High Court Part II (08:19 - 14:48)Parents Don’t Want Transgender Athletes on School Sports Teams, Even in New York — And the Pushback is Nothing More than Moral CoercionN.Y.C. Parents Rebuked for Questioning Transgender Student-Athlete Rules by The New York Times (Troy Closson)Part III (14:48 - 17:14)President Biden Looks to Turn Back Advances of Women and Girls in Name of Transgender Support — What Placing ‘Trans Rights’ Under Title IX Really MeansBiden Turns Title IX Into a Weapon Against Women and Girls by The Wall Street Journal (Kristen Waggoner)Part IV (17:14 - 20:59)Your Neighborhood Gym Enters the Culture Wars: Fitness Facility Wrestles with Locker Room Policy and Sexual RevolutionPlanet Fitness’s New Chief Steps Into a Culture-War Storm by The Wall Street Journal (Jennifer Maloney)Part V (20:59 - 25:17)A Deliberate Rejection of the Good, the True, and the Beautiful: The Unspeakably Ugly New Portrait of King Charles IIIA Shock of Red for a Royal Portrait by The New York Times (Vanessa Friedman)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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Wednesday, May 22nd, 2024. I'm Albert Mueller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
It's inevitable. It's only a matter of time before the transgender issue lands before the United States Supreme Court and in a big way.
It is inevitable because in our constitutional system, when you have laws and policies that are challenged in constitutional terms, and especially when you have conflicting lower courts,
the Supreme Court at some point has to step in. And there is no way that it can avoid this issue
over the long term. It's also clear that the justices have been trying to avoid the issue.
Now, one of the reasons they have been trying to avoid the issue is because there is so much
controversy about the question. And the Supreme Court, and it's not just because of a
ideologically or politically or legally conservative majority, in the larger sense, the Supreme
Court in general has a little C conservative culture. That means that it rarely wants to bring attention
to itself. It's glad for the president and the executive branch to make a lot of noise. It is generally
glad for Congress to have all kinds of debates and make a lot of noise. The Supreme Court does
its most important work behind closed doors with the justices absolutely alone, and it, at least in
theory prefers not to draw attention to itself. But that is not to say the court hasn't taken
such things upon itself, and for that matter hasn't even arrogated into itself certain powers
collected certain issues that we could wish the court had never considered. Furthermore,
the court at times appears to operate by the hubris that it gets to establish national policy
and to do so even over against some kind of legislative majority. Now, you can understand
and why that might be necessary in a constitutional system, but such constitutional intervention should
be very rare. Furthermore, you look at the fact that the left, that is to say, the political and
ideological left in the United States began to focus on the courts, particularly beginning in the 50s,
then into the 60s and 70s, as the engine of liberal political change. And that's because they
couldn't get so many issues through Congress, so they sought to achieve their victories by means of
the Supreme Court. And the classic example of that is 1973 and the Roe v. Wade decision in which the
Supreme Court basically took upon itself the unconstitutional power to legislate the issue because
the Roe v. Wade decision was not just about, is there a constitutional right to abortion? And by the
way, as any honest person would have to say, abortion is not in the Constitution. So the only rational,
honest answer to that question is no. But not only did a majority in the Supreme Court in
1973 decide that they would invent a constitutional right to abortion, they went on to basically
legislate all kinds of qualifications and requirements that were the implications of its ruling.
So the left began to turn increasingly to the courts because the left, that is to say,
the liberal side could not get many of the victories they want by means of legislation,
so they went to the courts. We'll go that way.
Now, that's one of the reasons why conservatives began to focus on the Supreme Court.
with increasing urgency. The 1970s was the wake-up call decade. The 80s was the period in which
an awful lot of conservative legal thinking was beginning to crystallize around the ideas of
original intent or originalism, strict constructionism, and this meant basically reading the
Constitution in such a way that the actual words and phrases became absolutely determinative.
So you couldn't make the Constitution mean what it is clear that the words and sentences do not mean,
and at least the original form of the argument was, that would be inconsistent with the original intention of those who adopted the language,
both in terms of writing it and those who ratified it.
Over the course of the last several decades, quite honestly, conservatives have been following the game plan of the liberals in some cases,
not in terms of how to read the Constitution, but in when to go to the court.
courts, and that has happened from time to time, where conservatives are in the same quandary as the
liberals. You can't get certain issues through legislative gain, so you go to the courts. And many of
these have been fairly construed as defensive, as in the defense of religious liberty, the defense
of Christian schools, the defense of Christians in the workplace, the defense of conservative
values and of conservative ideas, even in the public square. But that's a sense of Christians. But that's
then brings us to the current moment when both conservatives and liberals, progressives and conservatives,
share the awareness of the fact that the transgender issue is going to land before the Supreme Court
eventually. And both sides are looking for the cases that are likely to put them in the strongest
position. But at the end of the day, what activates the Supreme Court's interest more than anything
else or with greater urgency is conflicting lower court opinions. Because if you have a question such as,
do parents have the right to know if their child is being considered transgender in the schools?
Or can a biological male claim transgender female identity and show up in a high school locker room in the girls' locker room?
Those are questions that you really can't have decided on a constitutional basis, supposedly, and have, say, one circuit in the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals under one set of rules and another circuit court of appeals.
different region of the nation under different rules. Just imagine how that would operate in many other
issues. And remember, this is a federal court conflict we're talking about here. It's one thing if the
Supreme Court of Illinois says something different from the Supreme Court of Georgia. But when you're
talking about the federal courts, over time, they cannot speak with multiple voices. They have to speak with
one voice. Now, Jan Wolfe and Laura Casito have written a piece for the Wall Street Journal. The
headline that just ran in recent days was High Court Press.
on transgender law, that's exactly what's going on. The High Court is being pressed.
Liberals want the right case to be accepted by the court on their terms in order to push
the transgender revolution coast to coast, north to south, every context, everywhere that
federal law applies. And that would mean, of course, not only in, say, federally tax-supported
colleges and universities, it would mean all the way down to your local elementary school and
kindergarten. So the left understand.
what is at stake? On the other hand, conservatives also are looking for the right case with the right
facts coming with the right circumstances in order that the court would say, you know,
this isn't just like other rulings that we've handed down in the past. Now we are talking about
the fact that we're not going to force the jurisdictions under the federal government to allow a
biological male in a female changing room, nor are we going to require, say, sporting organizations,
schools and all the rest to buy into the entirety of the transgender revolution. By the way,
I put a footnote in here as if, by the way, they could. But there's even more to this, and we need
to step back for a moment. As you look at the facts on the ground, one of the interesting things
is that the vast majority of Americans really aren't, or you might say, aren't yet for this
revolution. Now, I can hope that the American people don't get to the point where they accept
this confusion, along with all the previous confusion, you have to have some doubt about that,
quite frankly, given the liberal trajectory of the culture. But at least at this point,
more than half of all Democrats say that they don't want a system in which a biological male
can insist upon showing up in their daughter or granddaughter's locker room at school.
But you'll also notice that when you look at how these issues are framed, well, in order to get a picture of that,
let's just go to New York. In this case, let's go to New York where a group of parents in New York City
have demanded that the schools review and reconsider departmental rules coming from the Department of Education
allowing those students who identify as transgender to play on sports teams that, in the words of the New York Times,
align with their gender identity, end quote. So you can see exactly where this goes. So some parents,
And by the way, this isn't in, say, Tupelo, Mississippi, in the south. This is New York City. Guess what? Even parents in New York City don't want their daughters in a locker room with boys. Now, almost immediately, the elites have corralled in opposition to these parents. As Troy C. Lawson of the New York Times tells us, quote, the school's chancellor, David C. Banks called the proposal despicable and in no way in line with our values. Later in the
article, the New York Times tells us, quote, in a letter made public, a coalition of 18 Democratic
elected officials from New York called the proposal hateful, discriminatory, and actively
harmful to the city's children. Okay, so what we're looking at here is the fact that these
parents, acting as parents, concerned for their own children and particularly for their own daughters,
they have called for the schools to review the policy, but the Democratic political elite has
solidified in its absolute determination to push the LGBTQ argument as far as is possible,
even to the point of calling their own constituent parents despicable.
Now, I don't think we have to go out on a limb to recognize that the vast majority of
America's parents, if honest, are going to say pretty much exactly what these parents in New York
did.
And we are looking at a situation in which this does represent the threat of nationwide moral
coercion. And that's exactly what the LGBTQ community wants. That's what the Democratic politicians
allied with the LGBTQ community want. And by the way, one of the ways you also need to watch
some hypocrisy in this is that many of these Democratic politicians who are pushing these leftist
agendas will make certain that their children are educated elsewhere. But even if they're not
hypocrites and they actually believe in this, what they believe in is morally abhorrent. And these
parents are doing exactly the right thing. The New York Times article makes very clear that this is going
to be settled one way or the other. Because as you look at this, there's no way that you can have a
halfway compromise when it comes to whether or not a biological adolescent male can be in the
girl's locker room. You can't say, let's just try some kind of halfway compromise. It doesn't
work. The boy's either going to be in the locker room or he's not. And the same thing has to do
with who is on the team and who is not. And it's not just that. It's who's on the team. It's who's on
the team that your girl's team is going to be playing? How is that going to be handled? You can
understand how this is going to ricochet through the entire society. And by the way, the logic of this
isn't going to end with adolescents and children. It's going to be extended further. But before we
look at the extensions, let's just recall that we are talking here about parents who believe that at the
very least, they have a right to know what is going on with their own children. This is something
is bubbling up in the federal courts, where you have parents say, look, the schools are treating my
child or, in one sense, might be treating my child in a way that's directly contrary to my ability
to be a faithful parent, or for that matter, even to know my child. You have some school districts in
which a child can show up with the parents having no idea and supposedly change gender identity,
go by a different name, different pronouns, even change clothes, all the rest, and this is hidden from
parents. That's one of the issues that is likely to land before the federal courts. We have states
and we have education departments and we have local school districts who are saying, look, we're speaking
up in defense of the child. That kind of moral insanity is spreading elsewhere. That's why this becomes
a matter of urgency. You have the sports teams. You have the transgender identity at school with parents
not even being told. You have the larger question of what rights parents have, even when they know.
and by the way, the Supreme Court recently decided not to take a case having to do with parental
notification and they at least let stand a lower court ruling in which it was openly stated that
the parents in this case don't have standing because they don't know if their specific children
are being treated this way. And that's the kind of legal insanity we're facing, by the way.
You don't know. And so you take the issue to court and then you're told that you can't sue because
you don't know. You would have to find out by some means, which is exactly what the schools are
trying to prevent. This is the kind of legal insanity that someone needs to clarify. But at the same
time, Christians looking at this have to recognize that even though there is a conservative
majority on the U.S. Supreme Court, all you have to do is go back a couple of years to the
Bostock decision and recognize that there are some supposedly conservative justices who seem
to, well, abandon conservative principle when it comes to some of these sexuality issues. Inevitably,
we're about to find out where the justices are. And as Christians are looking at this, we just need to
hope that the right case with the right facts presents the Supreme Court with the right opportunity
to do the right thing. You understand why we need to be very concerned about this, why we need to be
praying about this, why we need to be working on this. There is just an awful lot of right
that has to fall into line there. The right case, right facts, right circumstance, the right time,
with the right arguments leading to the right decision. That's a lot that is at stake here,
and there are many moving parts. One final issue here, and at least the news story in the Wall Street
Journal, recognize this, and that is the fact that we do have the development coming from
England, where the government there is itself shutting down so many of the treatments,
both surgical and hormonal for teenagers because they said an adequate medical review
indicated that these treatments are doing more harm than good. Now, we know as Christians,
there's a reason why that is so. But we also see right now the determination of the
progressive elites in the United States to force this issue even against the evidence,
even against parents, even against creation order. We'll find out soon enough if they're going to
try to do so even against the Supreme Court of the United States. But as we're talking about this
issue, the Biden administration has made its position very clear, and it did so, as we've already
discussed, in a way that is particularly dangerous to us as the Biden administration trying to turn
Title IX, as it is known, applying especially to non-discrimination law. They're trying to turn
the Title IX provisions into an absolute endorsement of the transgeny.
gender revolution. And that gets back to schools. It gets back to sports teams. It gets back to
just about anything. And as you're looking at this, you recognize that the Biden administration
is trying to put their new pro-trans rules in such a policy form that it would be very difficult
even for, say, a second Trump administration to reverse them. So that tells us two things. It tells us,
number one, that the Biden administration knows exactly what it is doing. It's intentionally trying to
make it very difficult for a subsequent administration to pull back on its policy.
Kristen Wagner, whose president and general counsel of the Alliance Defending Freedom,
wrote another piece for the Wall Street Journal, which she points out that the Biden
administration has turned Title IX into what she called a weapon against women and girls.
And she makes a very important argument.
We talked about this before, but she makes the argument in a way that demands our attention.
I want you to hear this.
Quote, the administration's new rule tosses this language to the side and directly addresses locker room, showers, and bathrooms.
Virtually every school in the nation that takes federal money will now have to allow boys who identify as girls to enter girls' physical education classes, locker rooms, showers, and bathrooms.
Schools will be compelled to disregard the rights of women and girls in favor of a male's subjective and sometimes temporary feelings.
She concludes that's immoral and unconstitutional. It makes a mockery.
of Title IX's promise of equality.
And that gets back to the point.
Title IX was written specifically
to identify women and girls as women and girls
and to assert their equal rights to access
to basically anything covered by higher education
and federal funding.
And what you see here is the absolute corruption
of that distinction being made by the left
because the LGBTQ revolution trumps
the achievements made by women and girls
for equal.
rights back in the 1970s and 80s.
But finally, before we leave this issue entirely for today, it's important to recognize that
this revolution is going so fast and its reach is so broad that it's going to show up
just about everywhere.
And so I don't want to let go without mention and a bit of attention.
An article by Jennifer Maloney that's actually on the front page of the business and finance
section of the Wall Street Journal.
And that's a way of saying this isn't like Supreme Court headline news.
This is an editorial comment.
This is what you need to know as an investor, as a follower of the financial reports.
So this tells us it's in a different context.
But guess what?
The same issue shows up.
It shows up because of the new CEO of Planet Fitness.
And you know one of the big issues that Planet Fitness's new leader is going to have to address?
Well, the headline says new Planet Fitness CEO inherits culture war.
You know what the main issue is?
Who gets to use which locker room under what conditions?
Who uses which shower facilities under what conditions?
Not just at your local high school,
but where you actually have to pay money
in order to have access to the facilities at Planet Fitness.
Here's how the article begins, quote,
Colleen Keating was a newcomer when she took the helm of a home rental business
just before the pandemic hit
and many people across the country suddenly couldn't pay their rent.
Now, says the paper, quote,
is sailing into another storm. In a few weeks, she'll become the chief executive of Planet Fitness
as it weathers a culture war uproar over the Jim Chains' approach to transgender rights.
It turns out that the culture war dimension that brings this company into the controversy has to do with the fact
that a woman had taken a photograph in a woman's facility of what is clearly a biological man
using the facilities. And she was kicked out for having taken a photograph, but
the point is the larger moral question has to do with whether a biological male belongs there.
Clearly, this woman didn't believe so.
You look at this and you recognize we've just lost moral sanity here.
We are a society in which you can now just say, cite a story like this out loud.
And to a frightening percentage of Americans today, it evidently makes sense.
To the political elites today, especially the political elites on the left, the instinct is now to say, hey, what's the big deal?
just get over it. You're in trouble for taking the photograph. The biological mail is not in trouble
for being in the facility. Now, in this case, Planet Fitness is probably in pretty much the same
condition as every other business with the same service and business model. And if this isn't
now a controversy near you, it will be very, very quickly. And in this case, the headline tells
us about one company with a CEO who has inherited a culture war, but there's no way anyone.
There's no way any CEO. There's no way any company is going to.
to avoid this. Now, if you have locker rooms and changing rooms, you have bathrooms, you're
probably ahead of the rest. And by the way, one of the interesting things you will see, and I think
you certainly notice this in restaurants and businesses, is that a lot of businesses are just
going from gender-specific bathrooms to, you know, gender-neutral bathrooms. I wonder if anyone's
doing the calculation of how much that would cost. As you look at that, you recognize this is not
going to be a change that's going to come without consequences.
But of course, we as Christians understand the most important consequences aren't matters of money
or even of, say, porcelain in a bathroom. It's about the morality of what is at stake.
And whether we are a society which can any longer even know the distinction between male and female,
even horrifyingly enough, regardless of age. But very quickly, I'm going to end today,
not dealing with the transgender issue, but rather the degeneration of culture at large.
How's that for a bit of inspiration?
In this case, I'm going to point to the unveiling of the first official portrait of the King of England, King Charles III.
And this is a portrait that's gaining a lot of headlines because it is just, well, horrifyingly read.
And if you haven't seen it before, I would suggest you take a look at it.
It is a representation of modern or postmodern art, and it shows the modern revolt against the unity of the good, the beautiful, and the true.
This is, I think, by almost any artistic estimation, a truly wretched portrait.
Larger than life, by the way, because of course, wouldn't it be that way?
The king's face is, at least recognizably showing through a sea of red with kind of a somewhat
imposed military uniform of the Welsh Guards and a butterfly, which is supposed to represent
the king's metamorphosis.
And as you're looking at this, it's just red.
It's just really, really red.
Jonathan Yo, who is the avant-garde artist who did this portrait, he is known for painting
what I could only describe as incredibly, almost unspeakably ugly portraits.
But that just makes him a famous figure in the art world these days, and his art very much
sought after.
I think it's particularly apt that this horrifying painting is of King Charles III, because
as Prince of Wales and as King, he has been the advocate for some of the work.
in terms of the separation of the good, the beautiful, and the truth.
But at the same time, he's often spoken against some of the ugliness of, say, modern architecture
and brutalism and all the rest.
The point is, it's all about his taste.
It is not about any permanent judgment.
It's not about any lasting standards.
And when it comes to so many issues, you know, the royal family has seemed to want to have
things both ways.
To be the very picture of continuity in terms of,
even the uniform that is weirdly depicted in this portrait.
But then they have to say nice things when they unveil such a horrifying portrait
even when they are the subject of the portrait.
Because Britain has lost all ability to speak of any kind of sane aesthetic standard
by which someone would say, you know, in previous days they would have put this artist in jail.
But no instead.
This particular artist is very much out of jail, very much celebrated,
and this will probably almost certainly lead to even bigger commissions for future artistic representations.
One person wrote on the royal family's webpage about the portrait, quote,
to me it gives the message the monarchy is going up in flames, or the king is burning in hell.
Another wrote, it looks like he's bathing in blood.
Someone else said that the portrait raises the issue of colonial bloodshed.
As the New York Times says, quote, there were comparisons to the devil, and so on, end quote.
Let me remind you that the biblical worldview says that something can be beautiful only if it's true.
It can be true only if it's beautiful.
It can be good only if it is both true and beautiful because the good, the beautiful, and the true are united in the creator.
And our job is to represent the unity of the good, the beautiful, and the true in creation.
Otherwise, you're going to be staring at this kind of wretched portrait.
By the way, eventually it is going to hang in Draper's Hall in London.
and draper's hall was the hall of the medieval guild of those who made drapery.
All I can say is that the best thing you could do with this in Draper's Hall is to put a drape over it, but they won't.
Thanks for listening to the briefing.
For more information, you can go to my website at Albertmuller.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 sbtsbtsbts.edu.
For information on Boyce College, just go to Boisecollege.com.
I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
