A Protestant Christmas: How Protestants Came to Celebrate the Incarnation of Christ as Christmas
How Do We Understand Promise and Fulfillment in Matthew’s Use of Hosea 11:1? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters from Listeners to The Briefing
In Light of Jesus’s Fulfillment of the Law, Are Christians Still Required to Keep the Mosaic Law? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters from Listeners to The Briefing
Why Do We Not Sing More Hymns About the Incarnation Throughout the Year, Like We Do with the Resurrection? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters from Listeners to The Briefing
Can a Baby Fuss Without Sin? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letter from a (Probably Sleep-Deprived) Listener to The Briefing
If Jesus was Born on Christmas, How Was He Around While Adam and Eve Lived? — Dr. Mohler Responds to a Letter from a 6-Year-Old Listener to The Briefing
How Should Christians Celebrate Christmas While Also Separating It From Any Pagan Origins? — Dr. Mohler Responds to Letters from Listeners to The Briefing
PART I What the Miss America Pageant reveals about the jumbled contradictions in America’s cultural landscape
PART II Abortion and the fight for life: Has Northern Ireland redefined or recognized basic human rights?
PART III How eating a chicken sandwich can send an unintended moral message and outrage the cultural warriors
PART I As suicide rates rise, there are basic questions we must ask about why the problem is not getting any better
PART II Why the church’s response to the rising suicide rate must not be one of confusion, but of clarity
PART III Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn goes to Harvard: How one man who didn’t know how not to tell the truth, told the truth in a 1978 speech
PART I New generation celebrates new traditions with the rising popularity of the ‘you be you’ wedding culture
PART II As young Americans postpone marriage, we see the unraveling of marriage and the entire understanding of the family
PART III Why our response to secularization should not be retreat and pessimism, but the preaching of the gospel
PART I History behind the Gallup Poll
PART II Why changing the number of people in a marriage is far easier than changing the definition of marriage
PART III Is it really that shocking that the American Bible Society would align its employment policies with the Bible?
PART I A year of tumult and assassination: Reflecting on the life and legacy of Robert F. Kennedy 50 years after his death
PART II How the biblical worldview helps to explain the presence of both greatness and darkness in a single individual
PART III When liberal ecumenicals have to choose between ecumenism and the sexual revolution, sex wins
PART I Supreme Court sides with Colorado baker, sends very clear signal that religious convictions of American people cannot be trampled upon
PART II Understanding what yesterday’s Supreme Court ruling means, and what it doesn’t mean
PART III Twenty years later, Bill Clinton remains indignant despite a massive moral change in the broader culture
PART I As morality, politics, and pop culture collide, Disney tries to win on both sides of the political street
PART II What the lack of response to Samantha Bee’s comments tells us about the left’s control of the entertainment industry
PART III The redefinition of comedy: Why a society that will laugh at everything doesn’t really understand anything
PART I The smiling president and the scowling dictator: Reflections on President Reagan’s 1988 speech at Moscow State University
PART II A battle for words and their meaning: With monumental cases pending, the Supreme Court experiences a return to textualism
PART III Why it’s problematic that some Australians consider gender labeling problematic
PART IV As gender revolutionaries seek to make French gender-neutral, language purists fight back
PART I Missouri governor’s resignation proves that the combination of sex, money, and power is a dangerous cocktail
PART II Why Christians should reject any deal that holds onto power at the expense of truth, goodness, and morality
PART III A look at what is behind the great moral divide between rural and urban Americans grows deeper
PART I As Roseanne and Starbucks are both in the headlines, national conversation about implicit bias continues
PART II Why a secularized doctrine of original sin is not likely to get much traction
PART III Only a very sick society would sacrifice its own children on the altar of the sexual revolution