00:00
00:00
00:01
Transcript
1/0
It's Monday, October 12, 2015.
I'm Albert Mohler, and this is The Briefing, a daily analysis
of news and events from a Christian worldview. Once again, the headline
is from California. And once again, Governor Jerry
Brown has signed a bill. As the Associated Press reports,
crisis pregnancy centers that discourage women from getting
abortions in California will be required to provide information
about abortions and other services under legislation Governor Jerry
Brown has approved. The AP goes on to say the measure
imposes the first such statewide rule after local communities
around the country have tried similar efforts. As the story
goes on, it turns out the legislation was supported by both Planned
Parenthood and NARAL. That's the group formerly known
as the National Abortion Rights Action League. We're talking
about crisis pregnancy centers being targeted precisely because
they are having an impact in terms of the pro-life cause.
In particular, many of these crisis pregnancy centers have
been instrumental in helping some women to think through the
issues related to abortion in terms of the reality of what
abortion is. In particular, some of these centers have been very
effective in helping many women at that point of decision to
think through these issues and to understand the reality of
abortion. and to understand the reality of the unborn life within
them. And some of these centers also provide some medical services,
including prenatal services. And now you have the state of
California mandating that they must also talk about abortion
and explain abortion, in some sense, even to advocate for abortion.
What we see here is an unconstitutional abridgment of free speech. What
we see here is also a specific, deliberate targeting of crisis
pregnancy centers. And it's not because they're
being ineffective, but precisely because they are effective. And
what we need to note here is that this legislation is one
way. It doesn't go both ways. It doesn't require abortion clinics
in the state of California to tell women who enter their doors
about the reality of the life within them. As a matter of fact,
this is entirely a one-way, a one-directional piece of legislation. And it's
happening in the state of California, and Governor Jerry Brown, once
again, has signed his name to a bill that undermines human
dignity and the sanctity of human life. You can see exactly how
the issue is posed from the left and from the pro-choice or pro-abortion
side when you see this AP article and you look at paragraph 3.
It reads like this. Pregnancy crisis centers often
are operated by abortion opponents, and critics say workers imply
the facilities provide a range of medical care and have credentials
they do not possess." Now, the main credential that crisis pregnancy
centers have is the credential of speaking to the sanctity of
human life, and that's the real issue here. The truth is that
many women at that most urgent point when they are considering
an abortion are at that moment ready to hear an argument either
way. And that is why these crisis pregnancy centers are so important
and why this represents such brave work for the pro-life cause.
The AP says that under the new law, the centers will be required
to offer information about affordable contraception, abortion and prenatal
care. The prenatal care, of course,
is not the moral issue here. It's the abortion and contraception.
And so you have here an abridgment of First Amendment rights that
are requiring these crisis pregnancy centers to say what is against
their own conscience, to state what they believe to be absolutely
immoral and to make them, by the force of law, complicit in
the culture of death and in the abortion industry. According
to the AP report, NARAL estimates there are more than 4,000 crisis
pregnancy centers, also known as Pregnancy Help Centers, and
that's nationwide, offering services, says the AP, such as pregnancy
and STD testing, ultrasounds and counseling. Assemblywoman
Shannon Grove from Bakersfield said that the bill forces clinics
against their will to pay for and distribute abortion referral
information. Grove said in a statement to
the press, Does the government have a right to tell a newspaper
what to write, a preacher what to preach, a private school what
to teach? Of course not. So why is it okay for the government
to force pro-life pregnancy centers against their will to advertise
and promote government abortion services?" That is, of course,
the most important question. And there is a very real likelihood
that this legislation will eventually go down in the courts because
it is an obvious infringement of First Amendment rights. But
it also tells us something that we ought to note very carefully.
These crisis pregnancy centers are being targeted precisely
because they are being effective. Some years ago, Time magazine
did a cover story on the impact of the ultrasound on the abortion
question. And it comes down to this. Women
who see the ultrasound image of their unborn child are far
more likely to acknowledge that that is exactly what it is, an
unborn child, and they are less likely then to go forward with
an abortion. As one abortion rights activist
said, the fetus beat us, even as she was working for an abortion
clinic. In other words, once the image of the fetus is seen,
once the image of that unborn human infant is seen, the woman
is far less likely to go through with an abortion. She's far more
likely to recognize that indeed she is a mother and for there
to be a maternal instinct and love for her child that emerges.
And that's exactly what the abortion industry is fearing in terms
of these crisis pregnancy centers. And that's exactly why groups
such as Planned Parenthood and NARAL have targeted them. And
that's why the very liberal state of California, through its General
Assembly, has put forward this legislation. And now, California's
Democratic Governor Jerry Brown has signed it into law. Now,
let's keep score here. This means that just in the past
two weeks, Governor Brown has signed legislation at both ends
of the life spectrum. Even as we talked about it, when
just last week, He signed the bill authorizing physician-assisted
suicide in the state of California. As we said, the compromise of
the sanctity and dignity at one end of the life spectrum will
not remain just on that end. It is inevitable that it's at
both ends in terms of birth and of death. And now we have the
absolute proof of that just a matter of days in the same state in
a bill signed by the same governor. At this point, we'll simply have
to make the tragic observation that the discounting of the dignity
and sanctity of human life in California is at least horrifyingly
consistent. They have now, by legislation,
undermined the sanctity of life at the end of life and at the
beginning, in just a period of two weeks. USA Today's run a
headline that says sex education in U.S. isn't making the grade.
It's by reporter Greg Toppo. It's one of those headlines that
gets your attention. This is what he says, quote, modern day
American teenagers are as connected to the greater world and to each
other as any generation in history. But take a look at their sexual
health and you'll start to wonder exactly how they're benefiting
from all those connections. End quote. Now, I don't want
to pick on Mr. Toppo here. I'll simply say that
that's the kind of lead that has very little to do with anything
that follows. Because the real focus of his
story has nothing to do with social media and everything to
do with the curriculum in terms of the public schools when it
comes to so-called sex education. He writes that there is good
news and that is that teen pregnancy rates have dropped and they've
dropped rather significantly. But the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention notes that the U.S. teen pregnancy rate is substantially
higher than in many other industrialized nations. But he goes on to say,
the picture gets worse. Only about one in five sexually
experienced teenagers has ever been tested for HIV, that is,
the virus linked to AIDS. Nearly half of the 20 million
sexually transmitted diseases contracted each year are among
people ages 15 to 24. Then comes the killer sentence.
Quote, Most parents count on schools to teach kids about sex.
Why is sex education in U.S. schools so ineffective? End quote.
Now, as I said, that's the sentence that demands our attention because
it is a non sequitur. I'm fairly certain that it's
not true that most parents count on schools to teach kids about
sex. As a matter of fact, the reality is that only a minority
of states in the United States of America even mandate sex education
in terms of the public school curriculum. This is not so much
an outcry from parents as it is from those who are pushing
the sexual revolution by means of so-called sex education. And
these are the very people who've been trying to put in schools,
so-called comprehensive health clinics, that will not only teach
about sex, but offer contraceptives and other services without parents
even knowing. From a Christian worldview perspective,
the one thing we have to keep in mind here is that education
is never morally neutral. It is always presenting a worldview.
It is always presenting some vision of the moral good. And
when it comes to sex education programs in the public schools,
By and large, they have been promoted by, they have been shaped
by, and often have actually been written by, those who are the
agents of the moral revolution. And that's why so many parents
have had concerns for a very, very long time. I've been involved
in this controversy long enough to know that when a headline
like this comes along, it generally isn't really about anything new.
I was testifying before legislative committees on this issue back
in the 1980s and the 1990s. This, most decidedly, is not
new. And it goes back especially to
the 1960s, when the moral revolutionaries were pushing so-called sex education
as a way of pushing a larger moral agenda. Now, what does
make Greg Toppo's story very interesting is where he takes
an international perspective. He quotes a man by the name of
Jonathan Zimmerman who's written a book entitled Too Hot to Handle
A Global History of Sex Education. And this is where it gets interesting.
According to Toppo, Zimmerman finds that even politically liberal
countries such as Sweden struggle to get it right. You see, one
of the things we hear over and over again from the cultural
left in the United States is that somehow we are a backward
nation when it comes to sex education. Now, that's not the worst insult
that could come our way, but what's being insinuated there
is that somehow if we just had the right sex education, which
is, of course, the kind of sex education the moral revolutionaries
are demanding, that all of these pathologies and statistics would
go away. But as Zimmerman makes clear in this book, even some
of the most liberal societies on earth lose their liberal nerve
when it comes to sex education for their own children and teenagers.
It turns out that there's not a single country on earth that
can really represent what even the liberals would consider to
be a gold standard on this question. Zimmerman, who is a professor
of history at New York University, maintains, says Toppo, quote,
that no country in the past century or so has done much more than
offer sporadic sex education instruction, end quote. By the
way, Professor Zimmerman catches on to at least one of the central
ironies in terms of sex education, and this is a pretty honest acknowledgment.
He told USA Today, quote, But as we have said, the real
problem is that somebody is going to be writing that curriculum,
and some vision of the moral good is going to be represented
in that curriculum, and some moral agenda is going to be very,
very clear in terms of what is taught in so-called sex education.
And that's because sex education isn't just about human reproduction.
It's not just about biology. It is about a realm of human
experience that is inherently and inescapably moral. And the
question is, whose morality is going to be presented? And that's
where the sexual revolutionaries are really only interested in
sex education if they get to write it and they get to direct
it. But that's where this article by Greg Toppo really becomes
very interesting and valuable. It's because he takes this international
perspective and quotes Professor Jonathan Zimmerman of New York
University who says, and I repeat once again, that even politically
liberal countries such as Sweden struggle to get it right. Which
just might be, in one sense, an acknowledgment of the fact
that even those driving the sexual revolution aren't quite ready
to drive it when it comes to their own children and teenagers.
But speaking of the inescapably moral dimension of all education,
we need to note that in recent days, the United States Secretary
of Education, Arne Duncan, has announced that he will complete
his term in the president's cabinet at the end of December. That's
really important because the Department of Education is one
of the youngest departments in our federal government. Previously,
there had been a cabinet department known as HEW. That was the Department
of Health, Education and Welfare. It got divided in the Carter
administration to the Department of Education and the Department
of Health and Human Services. To conservatives in America,
the Department of Education has always been the problem rather
than the solution. And as a matter of fact, that
reminds us of the fact that education in this country has traditionally
been left to local school boards and to the states in terms of
definition, primary funding and regulation. But the federal government
has been trying its very best to gain control over the nationwide
education system, and that's by mandates and by the Department
of Education and by all kinds of other means as well, many
of them tied to funding. But it's clear that Arne Duncan,
who saw his department gain billions and billions of dollars of additional
budget revenue under the Obama administration, is clear that
he is exhausted by his task. And even with the billions and
billions being spent on public education in America, in leaving
his post, Secretary Duncan said he, quote, accepted that some
of his work was controversial, but he said he fundamentally
regretted that education isn't seen as a national priority,
end quote. Well, that's the big issue there.
The two words there, national priority, are symbolic of the
problem. Because when we're talking about education, we're not talking
about something that can be mandated well and run well by a federal
government in all 50 states. This is where there has been
wisdom in the American experience of leaving local school boards
in charge of the schools, and then expanding that responsibility
statewide, but leaving it the responsibility of the states.
Just to go back to the issue of sex education for a moment,
just imagine how sex education would be different if taught
in California, or at least in some California school districts,
when compared to a state such as Mississippi, or for that matter,
even Colorado. We're talking about a nation
where community by community, there would be very different
expectations, not only of sex education, but of the entire
educational process. And that's why the more this
question is made a national question, the less effective we actually
are. But you'll notice the logic of Arne Duncan as he leaves the
post as Secretary of Education. He feels that as a nation we
simply do not have education adequately ranked as a national
priority. But using the two words national
priority actually points to the problem. A problem, he acknowledges,
he wasn't able to resolve. But it's on that topic that the
Wall Street Journal dropped a bombshell over the weekend in its column
known as Notable and Quotable. What's really important about
this column is that the Wall Street Journal virtually every
day, several times a week, runs a document from the nation's
history, a document from our past. It's not an article. It's
not an op-ed piece or an editorial. It is an official document of
one form or another, often from a speech, sometimes from the
Federal Records Depository. And that's exactly what the Wall
Street Journal ran over the weekend when it published a 1978 memo
to President Jimmy Carter from his chief of staff in the White
House, Hamilton Jordan, regarding the potential creation of what
became the U.S. Department of Education. Just
last week on the briefing, we talked about the power and influence
of unelected officials. And I mentioned at the very top
of that list, the chief of staff of the White House. But now you
have this document written in 1978 to President Jimmy Carter
by Hamilton Jordan, his chief of staff, on the potential of
the Department of Education, and he writes, quote, the following
are the major political considerations that you should be aware of in
making this decision. Number one, he says, the teachers
organizations, particularly the National Education Association,
are the fastest growing, most active, and by many standards,
the most effective political organizations in this country.
With a membership that exceeds two million, they comprise one
of the most committed and articulate political constituencies in our
country. Two, these groups, particularly
the NEA, have been our political friends in the presidential campaign
and our allies on many crucial legislative battles. For the
first time in its 114 year history, the NEA endorsed a presidential
candidate in the 1976 general election. And here we simply
remind you that wasn't another than President Jimmy Carter.
Then in conclusion, the chief of staff wrote, and I quote,
I would strongly recommend that you support the creation of a
separate Department of Education for the following reasons. First,
your unequivocal promise in the campaign to do so. Second, the
teachers of this country have been our political friends in
the past and can be our valuable political allies in the future.
Third, the arguments for the creation of a separate department
are at least as convincing as the arguments against it." End
quote. The memo goes on, but the big
point to note here is that this was a political calculation.
There is no argument here that the Department of Education would
actually enhance education. Instead, it's all about politics
and centrally about gaining the support of the National Education
Association, the largest union representing public school teachers
in the United States and one of the most leftward labor organizations
in the history of this nation. While on this subject, it's also
important to note that conservatives have been very ineffective in
dismantling the Department of Education. President Ronald Reagan
ran on that platform as a central issue when he ran against Jimmy
Carter in the 1980 presidential election. But as you may know,
the Department of Education still stands, which gets to another
point of government. Once you create something, it
is likely to be there forever, as long as the government lasts.
Five-star General Douglas MacArthur famously told the United States
Congress that old soldiers never die, they just fade away. But
when it comes to federal programs of big money, they not only never
die, they also never fade away. And finally, speaking of things
that didn't happen, among the most important things that didn't
happen last week was the end of the world. A group known as
the E-Bible Fellowship had gained headlines around the world for
recommending that everyone listen to its last ever question and
answer podcast with its host Chris McCann because McCann believed
that October the 7th would be the last day of planet Earth.
It turned out, of course, that the end of the world did not
happen last week and the group has acknowledged that it was
an error. Adam Gabat of The Guardian in London says that prior to
the 7th of October, McCann had said there was a, quote, strong
likelihood, end quote, the world would be rent asunder, but he
did admit there was a chance he could be incorrect. He said,
quote, well, a strong likelihood means that something was pretty
well set to happen, in this case, according to the biblical evidence,
yet there is a possibility it may not happen. So he went on
to say it was surprising that it did not occur, but the comforting
thing is that God's will is always perfect, end quote. Well, that
is a perfect mass of theological confusion, and it's furthermore
tremendously embarrassing. I'll be honest, it just might
be that my favorite media correction of all time was offered by the
leader of this group, who said, quote, since it's now 8 October,
it's now obvious we were incorrect regarding the world's ending
on the 7th, end quote. And the two most important words
in that sentence are the two words obvious and incorrect.
But a serious Christian trying to think seriously about these
headlines and being asked questions by people who wonder what in
the world Christians actually believe, we have to make very
clear that the last thing in that statement by Chris McCann
is absolutely right. God's timing is always perfect.
But what we also need to note is that the New Testament tells
us that when the Lord returns, He is to find us doing what He
set us to do, not sitting on rooftops looking for His appearing,
and certainly not setting a succession of embarrassing deadlines that
simply don't happen. The cause of Christ, the cause
of the gospel, and the cause of defending Christian truth
is so important. It's simply embarrassing when
you have people making headlines like this, including the necessity
of making statements such as, since it's the 8th of October,
we're obviously incorrect, the world would end on the 7th. In
the Gospel of Luke, Jesus asks his disciples, when the Son of
Man comes, will he find faith on the earth? That's the crucial
question. When the Son of Man comes, will he find us testifying
of the gospel, defending that gospel? Will he find us teaching
Christian truth? Will he find us doing what he
has commissioned us to do? The Lord has called us to be
found faithful, not to be found tweeting about our predictions
of the precise timing of His return. Thanks for listening
to the briefing. For more information go to my
website at albertmohler.com. You can follow me on Twitter
by going to twitter.com forward slash albertmohler. For information
on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary go to spts.edu. For
information on Boyce College just go to boycecollege.com.
If the world doesn't end between now and then, I'll meet you again
tomorrow for the briefing. you
The Briefing 10-12-15 (Abortion, Arne Duncan, Education, End of the World)
Series Cultural Commentaries
- California bill undermining liberty of crisis pregnancy centers, requiring abortion promotion signed Brown signs bill requiring pregnancy centers to provide abortion information, Associated Press 2) Journalist attempts to place responsibility of sex ed on schools, not parents, for sake of moral agenda Pregnancy rate, STD stats show sex ed in U.S. not working, USA Today (Greg Toppo) 3) Secretary of Education resignation reminder of political nature of national education agenda Arne Duncan, Education Secretary, to Step Down in December, New York Times (Gardiner Harris and Motoko Rich) Notable & Quotable: Hamilton Jordan, Wall Street Journal 4) Embarrassment over false prediction of end of the world detracts from seriousness of cause of Christ Leader of Christian group adjusts incorrect doomsday prediction: 'Soon', The Guardian (Adam Gabbatt)
| Sermon ID | 101215110116203 |
| Duration | 20:01 |
| Date | |
| Category | Current Events |
| Language | English |
Documents
Add a Comment
Comments
No Comments
© Copyright
2026 SermonAudio.
