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Think Biblically: Conversations on Faith & Culture

Cultural Update: Nick Fuentes and Tucker Carlson; Animal to Human Organ Transplants; Abortion Access

Think Biblically: Conversations on Faith & Culture

Talbot School of Theology at Biola University / Sean McDowell & Scott Rae

Talbot, Church, Christianity, Christian, Culture, Biola, Sean Mcdowell, Religion & Spirituality, Scott Rae, Think Biblically

4.8 • 1.3K Ratings

🗓️ 14 November 2025

⏱️ 57 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Abortion access after Dobbs: Sean and Scott unpack a New York Times editorial on how telehealth and the abortion pill have reshaped the landscape, debate concerns about safety and framing, and address misleading claims around emergency care. Rising antisemitism: The hosts analyze the resurgence of antisemitism across the political spectrum—including Tucker Carlson platforming Nick Fuentes—and distinguish conversation about Israel from violent antisemitic rhetoric. Human–animal org...

Transcript

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0:00.0

Is the constitutional right to abortion and statewide access to it about to change?

0:07.0

Is anti-Semitism growing today and will it fracture the conservative movement?

0:12.0

And scientists at the forefront of animal-human transplantation express considerable optimism

0:19.0

about several clinical trials currently underway.

0:22.8

These are the stories we will discuss, and we will also address some of your excellent questions.

0:27.8

I'm your host Sean McDowell.

0:28.8

I'm your co-host, Scott Ray.

0:30.2

This is the Think Biblically Weekly Cultural Update, brought to by Talbot School Theology, Biola University.

0:36.6

Scott, this article from the editorial board at the New York

0:40.2

Times, not an op-ed, is one we both tagged and independently wanted to talk about. And the title is

0:47.7

abortion has remained mostly accessible. That soon may change. And of course, the editorial board

0:53.4

views that possible change as being negative.

0:57.2

Now, they say after the Supreme Court, when it reversed Roe v. Wade, both supporters and opponents of the court's ruling expected number of abortions to fall. I did.

1:08.4

But after nearly, after all, nearly 40% of U.S. women now live in a state with

1:13.7

severe restrictions. But the number of women who received abortions has increased nationwide,

1:20.4

even in most states with bans. This is a surprising outcome and raises a lot of questions about how the pill has transformed

1:29.5

access to and the abortion debate. Now, it says in this article, one and four abortions in the U.S.

1:35.3

now take place through telehealth with pills that people order online. I was under the impression

1:40.7

it's a lot higher than that, But this article citing one out of four.

1:45.9

Basically, doctor writes a prescription, a male order pharmacy fills it. When the pill arrives,

1:51.3

women including many living in red states, can take them at home to end a pregnancy in its first

1:56.0

few months. Now, they're going on and on here about their concerns about this shift. And one way

...

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