R. Albert Mohler Jr.'s Blog, page 266
October 19, 2016
The Briefing 10-19-16
"Back end eugenics": African Americans in D.C. suspicious of pending assisted suicide lawWashington Post (Fenit Nirappil) — Right-to-die law faces skepticism in nation’s capital: ‘It’s really aimed at old black people’
Federal court to pro-life centers: You must tell women where they can get abortionsThe Federalist (Bre Payton) — Federal Court: Christian Pregnancy Centers Must Tell Patients Where They Can Get Abortions
Media bias by the numbers: 96% of campaign contributions from journalists went to Hillary ClintonCenter for Public Integrity (Dave Levinthal and Michael Beckel) — Journalists shower Hillary Clinton with campaign cashWashington Post (Callum Borchers) — A ‘shower’ of media donations to Hillary Clinton looks bad, but numbers don’t tell the whole story
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October 18, 2016
The Briefing 10-18-16
Time to desegregate the sexes? The conflicting absolutes of the gender revolutionNew York Times (Judith Shulevitz) — Is It Time to Desegregate the Sexes?
Millennials against free speech? The disappearance of common ground in the public squareNew York Times (Jennifer Schuessler) — Can Cries of ‘Free Speech’ Be a Weapon? Students Say Yes
Support for the deadliest political ideology in human history is on the rise among millennialsThe Federalist (Nicole Russell) — Survey Finds High Support For Communism Among Millennials
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October 17, 2016
How Confident Is Our Pluralism? A Conversation with Professor John Inazu
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The Briefing 10-17-16
Planned Parenthood: 100 years of searing the American conscience on abortionNew Oxford Review (Anne Barbeau Gardiner) — Planned Parenthood: Seventy Years of Defying the LawHuffington Post (Catherine Pearson) — On Its 100th Anniversary, A Reminder Of Why Planned Parenthood Is So VitalMotto (Cecile Richards) — Planned Parenthood’s Work Is Far From Complete
After decades of draconian one-child policy, China unable to convince its people to have more childrenWashington Post (Simon Denyer and Congcong Zhang) — China drops one-child policy, but ‘exhausted’ tiger moms say one is plenty
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October 14, 2016
The Briefing 10-14-16
"Religious beliefs have to change": Hillary Clinton's open hostility toward religious libertyWall Street Journal (Editorial Board) — Anti-Catholics for ClintonWashington Post (Sarah Pulliam Bailey) — WikiLeaks emails appear to show Clinton spokeswoman joking about Catholics and evangelicalsWashington Post (Mark A. Thiessen) — Hillary Clinton is a threat to religious liberty
Dutch government proposes "death assistance providers" for anyone who feels they have "completed life"Reuters (Toby Sterling) — Dutch may allow assisted suicide for those who feel life is over
When it's everywhere, sex no longer sells: Abercrombie abandons sexually explicit adsWall Street Journal (Elizabeth Holmes) — Abercrombie & Fitch Tries On a New Attitude: Friendly
Girls, boys, and gender-neutral toys: It turns out boys and girls are still differentWall Street Journal (Jonathan V. Last) — Notable & Quotable: Boys’ Toys vs. Girls’ ToysAcculturated (Jonathan V. Last) — The Ridiculous Crusade for Gender-Neutral Toys
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October 13, 2016
The Briefing 10-13-16
Opening an irreversible door: New push for assisted suicide in the US raises huge moral concernsNew York Times (Editorial Board) — Aid in Dying Movement AdvancesDenver Post (Editorial Board) — No on Proposition 106: Aid-in-dying measure lacks proper safeguards
In religious liberty crackdown, China to "protect" children from religious influence of parentsNew York Times (Ian Johnson) — China Seeks Tighter Grip in Wake of a Religious RevivalReuters (Ben Blanchard) — China targets parents in new religion rules for Xinjiang
Pres. Reagan to 7th grader: Don't ask government to do what you should do for yourselfWall Street Journal — Notable & Quotable: Clean My Room, President Reagan
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October 12, 2016
Yet No One Remembered that Poor Man
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12 Theses on a Christian Understanding of Economics
Regrettably, many American Christians know little about economics. Furthermore, many Christians assume that the Bible has nothing at all to say about economics. But a biblical worldview actually has a great deal to teach us on economic matters. The meaning of work, the value of labor, and other economic issues are all part of the biblical worldview. At the same time we must recognize that the Christian worldview does not demand or promote a particular economic system.
Because this is the case, Christians must allow the economic principles found in Scripture to shape our thinking while simultaneously recognizing that we can act in light of those principles in any economic, cultural, or generational setting.
1. A Christian economic understanding has God’s glory as its greatest aim.
For Christians, all economic theory begins with an aim to glorify God (1 Corinthians 10:31). We have a transcendent economic authority.
2. A Christian economic understanding respects human dignity.
No matter the belief system, those who work show God’s glory, whether they know it or not. People may believe they are working for their own reasons, but they are actually working out of an impulse that was put into their hearts by the Creator for his glory.
3. A Christian economic understanding respects private property and ownership.
Some economic systems treat the idea of private property as a problem. But Scripture never considers private property as a problem to be solved (see, for instance, the Ten Commandments). Scripture’s view of private property implies it is the reward of someone’s labor and dominion. The Eighth and Tenth Commandments teach us that we have no right to violate the financial rewards of the diligent.
4. A Christian economic understanding takes into full account the power of sin.
Taking the Bible’s teaching on the pervasive effects of sin into full account means that we expect bad things to happen in every economic system. A Christian economic understanding tries to ameliorate the effects of sin.
5. A Christian economic understanding upholds and rewards righteousness.
Every economic and government system comes with embedded incentives. An example of this is the American tax code which incentivizes desired economic behaviors. Whether they work or not is an issue of endless political recalibration. However, in the Christian worldview, that recalibration must continue upholding and rewarding righteousness.
6. A Christian economic understanding rewards initiative, industry and investment.
Initiative, industry and investment are three crucial words for the Christian’s economic and theological vocabulary. Initiative goes beyond action. It is the kind of action that makes a difference. Industry is human work done corporately. Investment is part of the respect for private property found in Scripture.
Investment, as it turns out, is as old as the Garden of Eden. That which accrues value is honorable, and the impulse to accrue that value is honorable. Thus, a Christian economic theory indicts anyone who will not work, not respect private property and not reward investment.
7. A Christian economic understanding seeks to reward and incentivize thrift.
In a fallen world, money and investments can quickly be distorted to idolatrous ends. For that reason, thrift is a very important issue in the Christian worldview. In a fallen world, abundance one day can turn into scarcity the next. Thrift may be what provides survival in times of poverty.
8. A Christian economic understanding upholds the family as the most basic economic unit.
When thinking about economic theory embedded in the beginning of the Bible, the dominion mandate is central, but so is the divine institution of marriage. The pattern of leaving and cleaving described in Genesis 2 is fundamental to our economic understanding.
Adam and Eve were the first economic unit. The result is that the family (biblically defined) is the most basic and essential unit of the economy.
9. A Christian economic understanding must respect community.
Most secular thinkers and economists begin with the community and then move to the family. However, thinking from larger to smaller economic units not only does not work in theory, it also fails in practice. Beginning with the family unit and then working out towards the community is a much smarter option. The doctrine of subsidiarity — which emerged out of natural law theory — teaches that meaning, truth and authority reside in the smallest meaningful unit possible.
If the family unit is deficient, no government can meet the need of its citizens. When the family is strong, government can be small. When the family is weak, however, the government must compensate for the loss. By focusing on the family, we respect and better the community.
10. A Christian economic understanding rewards generosity and proper stewardship.
Christians who are committed to the economics of the Kingdom and to the good of the next generation must live with a future-oriented financial perspective. We each have the responsibility, whether we have a lot or a little, to see that our generosity endures far beyond our lifespan.
Spirited generosity, which is so clear in Scripture, is essential to a Christian economic worldview.
11. A Christian economic understanding respects the priority of the church and its mission.
Christians must embrace economic priorities that the rest of the world simply will not understand. Christians must invest in churches, seminaries and international missions. These are distinctive Christian financial commitments. Our ultimate financial commitment is not to ourselves or to our own investments but to the Kingdom of Christ. Thus, Christians should always be ready to experience upheaval in economic priorities and arrangements because urgent kingdom issues can intervene at any moment.
12. A Christian economic understanding focuses on eschatological judgment and eschatological promise.
This life and its resources cannot deliver ultimate joy. The Christian worldview reminds us that we must live with the recognition that we will give an account to the Lord for our stewardship of our resources. At the same time, Christians must look to the eschatological promise of the New Heavens and New Earth as our ultimate economic hope. We must lay up treasures in heaven and not on earth.
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The Briefing 10-12-16
Colombia, Obama, and the Nobel Peace Prize: Award of moral accomplishment or political aspiration?New York Times (Editorial Board) — The Nobel ‘Give Peace a Chance’ PrizeWall Street Journal (Sohrab Ahmari) — Obama’s Nobel Peace Prize, Seven Years LaterNew York Times (Nicholas Kristof) — ‘I Am Very Afraid I Will Die Tonight’
Why isn't this bigger news? Preeminent secular journal finds link between birth control and depressionNew York Times (Nicholas Bakalar) — Contraceptives Tied to Depression Risk
Marijuana on the ballot ... and in our pet bowlsThe Atlantic (Russell Berman) — Marijuana's MomentNew York Times (Laura M. Holson) — Pets on Pot: The Newest Customer Base for Medical Marijuana
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October 11, 2016
The Briefing 10-11-16
Human Rights Campaign threatens Johns Hopkins over New Atlantis "Sexuality and Gender" reportThe Advocate (Dean Hamer) — New 'Scientific' Study on Sexuality, Gender Is Neither New nor ScientificHuman Rights Campaign (Tari Hanneman) — Johns Hopkins Community Calls for Disavowal of Misleading Anti-LGBTQ “Report”New Atlantis (The Editors) — Lies and Bullying from the Human Rights Campaign
Transparent's transgression: TV series director laments casting trans role with non-trans personThe Federalist (Libby Emmons and David Marcus) — If Jill Soloway Can’t Get Trans Characters Right, Nobody Else Can Hope To, Either
California governor signs law requiring single-user school restrooms to be gender neutralLos Angeles Times (Howard Blume) — Gender-neutral bathrooms, high-quality ethnic studies class and other changes coming to California schools
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