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The Briefing with Albert Mohler

Tuesday, December 6, 2022

The Briefing with Albert Mohler

The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

Commentary, Truth, Christianity, Seminary, God, Preach, Jesus, Scripture, Sbts, Albert, Bible, Culture, 881944, Religion & Spirituality, Mohler, Christ

4.88.4K Ratings

🗓️ 6 December 2022

⏱️ ? minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.

Part I (00:13 - 13:19)
Can Government Compel Speech? Is Same-Sex Opposition to Be Equated to Racism?: SCOTUS Hears Oral Arguments for Major Religious Freedom Case

Part II (13:19 - 16:30)
Moral Libertarianism Goes West? Colorado’s Moral Landscape and the 303 Creative Case at the Supreme Court

Part III (16:30 - 22:55)
If You Want to Understand an Individual, Look at His Theology: Reverend Raphael Warnock and the Senate Run-Off in Georgia Today

Part IV (22:55 - 26:06)
How to Spot a Dictator: They Never Laugh at Themselves — The Winnie the Pooh Ban in China Is Yet Another Example of That Reality




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Transcript

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0:00.0

It's Tuesday, December 6, 2022.

0:07.6

I'm Albert Molar, and this is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from

0:11.9

a Christian worldview.

0:13.7

The case is known formally as 303 Creative, versus Aubrey Illinus.

0:18.6

It has to do with the intersection, indeed, the collision between religious liberty and

0:22.6

the LGBTQ revolutionaries, and that case arrived yesterday at the Supreme Court of the

0:27.6

United States in oral arguments.

0:30.2

Just about everyone recognizes this is going to be the big religious liberty case for

0:35.1

this term of the Supreme Court, and both sides are paying very keen attention to what went

0:40.8

on in the oral arguments.

0:42.3

Let me just remind you what the oral arguments are.

0:45.7

The way the Supreme Court of the United States works is that the first question is whether

0:50.8

the court will decide to take a case.

0:52.7

Now there are some cases that basically in constitutional terms almost immediately go

0:58.3

to the Supreme Court.

0:59.7

There are certain cases only the Supreme Court can settle, but in the main, the Supreme

1:04.5

Court is an appeals court.

1:06.5

It is the ultimate court of appeal.

1:08.7

And so very few cases start out at the Supreme Court instead they end up there.

1:13.9

But even as some are almost automatic in terms of reaching the Supreme Court, major doctrines

1:19.2

cases and others involving the other two branches of government, when it comes to many of the

1:24.0

more complicated legal and cultural questions, the court has to decide at least four justices

...

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