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It's Friday, March 6, 2026.
I'm Albert Moeller, and this is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from
a Christian worldview.
I am currently in the Los Angeles area, and there is a big drama unfolding in a courtroom
in downtown LA.
It has to do with the big trial over social media and whether or not social media
are inflicting harm in particular on young people in terms of body image and all the
rest.
So this is a big trial.
It's attracting a lot of attention because this is the first big case, the first big trial
in which you have major social media figures, the heads of some of the biggest platforms
having to testify along with others on their staff in this central question.
So for example, the headline story in the Los Angeles Times tells us, quote, ladies of
the jury, dabbed their eyes, sniffling as the 20-year-old on the witness stand described
the hours she's spent trying to fix her face before appearing in court that morning.
Her view of herself irrepably warped by what she characterized as a decade of addiction
to YouTube and Instagram.
The young woman who goes by the name Kaylee in court said, quote, whenever I got a bunch
of likes, I was really happy, and it made me feel really good about myself.
She went on to say, if I didn't, I would feel insecure like I looked ugly.
End quote.
We are told that some members of the jury wept openly given the testimony and must have
been heart-wrenching testimony.
This young woman spoke of the fact that she came to despise herself because she had
based herself image.
She had based her basic likeability and her worth as a human being upon how persons responded
to her on social media.
And again, in particular, the platforms at stake here are YouTube and Instagram.
The LA Times article tells us, quote, Kaylee's lawsuit is a test case chosen from among hundreds
alleging that social media apps were designed to snare young kids and keep them hooked.
But the story tells us, quote, it's her Los Angeles jury that will set the stakes for thousands
of suits still to come, making this one of the corporate world's most closely watched
legal battles.
Next paragraph, quote, and as the landmark trial closes out its first month, gender
has emerged as a dividing perhaps decisive factor in the case.
End quote.
All right, there is a lot in this coverage and there's a lot to this story.
First of all, we are talking about the fact that social media comes with enormous potential,
perhaps potential to do good, but also potential to do harm.
Furthermore, we understand that social media has created what can only be described as
a massive distortion field and not all persons are equally susceptible to that distortion
field.
The distortion field comes with several harms and several threats.
One of the direct threats is towards self-image, particularly when it comes to young people
and their involvement on social media.
And this can come with devastating consequences.
Now the legal fallout from all of this, that is not mine to predict.
But the fact that this is in a courtroom and that you already know, at least in part
how a jury is responding to this case, that tells you that this is going to be something
big.
The LA Times tells us there are thousands of cases in the funnel coming behind this
one.
But as we think about the dangers of social media, I think a lot of parents have been
sensitized.
And I'm thankful for this.
A lot of parents have been sensitized to some of the direct threats about sexual predation
and the manipulation of young people.
And even some of the scams that are being addressed, particularly at teenage boys, at adolescent
boys, they're being directed at them and they're being used for extortion and other
means.
And now you have a very clear angle in this article about this case in which we're told
that there is a clear gender pattern in terms of this kind of harm and it's disproportionately
girls who are harmed.
All right, that tells us something.
First of all, isn't it interesting?
Let's just back up a moment.
The larger world around us, the cultural elites, Hollywood, the academic community, all
the rest has been telling us there's no difference.
Male and female are basically abstractions.
And by the way, if you're one, you can change to the other, vice versa.
In other words, gender is just plastic.
A biological sex is just an accident.
It shouldn't really matter.
But now we're being told, interestingly, that there is a predictable pattern to this kind
of vulnerability.
That's not to say there are no boys who aren't trapped in this same kind of problem.
It is to say it's overwhelmingly female.
And by overwhelmingly, when you look at the plaintiffs in these cases, that's an understatement.
Overwhelmingly, we're talking about girls and young women.
There's a particular vulnerability here when it comes to self-image, when it comes to
body, when it comes to beauty and all these things.
And most of us as adults understand, number one, that's not right.
It's imbalanced.
That's not godly as unbiblical.
But secondly, it is a massive distortion field anyway.
For one thing, when you get a picture of someone on social media, for that matter, when you
get a picture in terms of Hollywood productions and all the rest, that really doesn't tell
you what this person looks like.
It tells you what kind of image has been cultivated.
Now basically, of course, there are some structural issues that relate to understandings
of beauty.
But the fact is, it's a massive lie.
It's a massive distortion field.
It is a massive confusion.
And it's also coming with massive damage in the lives of very real human beings and in
particular, girls and young women.
Now the article goes on about the legal complexities.
It goes on about the legal precedent that will be set one way or the other by this verdict
because this case in this LA courtroom is massively important because it is the first
of what will be many.
But beyond that, as Christians we have to understand, as much as the legal consequences
are going to be big, this ought to be a wake-up call for us to understand, well, just
fundamentally, there's a difference between male and female.
There's a difference in terms of the vulnerabilities.
We've already spoken of the vulnerabilities that are overwhelmingly male when you look
at these extortion plots on social media platforms.
But when it comes to this particular issue, body image, again, not exclusively female,
but even as the secular press now understands overwhelmingly female.
Okay.
That's one thing.
But as Christians, we need to take this to a far deeper level.
That means our responsibility.
We need to ask the question, are we making clear that the worth of every single girl and
young woman is not tied to any kind of secular, worldly understandings of beauty.
It is tied to the fact that every single one of them is made in the image of God.
Every single one of them can be beautiful, biblically defined.
I also want to note that the secular world has virtually no way to deal with this.
It has no way to say this is based in an illusion, is based in a distortion.
You can say these are young women who are being victimized, girls who are being preyed
upon.
But it really can't answer the question as to why this is morally wrong.
It's morally wrong because it holds up something that isn't real and says, this is what's
most important.
It holds up a deliberate corruption of the image of God and of a biblical design of what
it means to be human and what it means to be male and female.
And it presents this in such a way that it's causing very real harm to very real girls
and young women.
And the rest of the world, the secular world, I think, is going to have a very difficult
time grounding an argument against this in anything other than documentable harm.
This is something we need to watch.
We're living in a secular age in which many people don't believe it's a harm until some
court says it's a harm.
And frankly, behavior doesn't change until some kind of court decision requires that kind
of change.
My ability exposes a company to a vulnerability that is just not worth it.
The fact is that as Christians, we have to come at this at a far deeper level.
We will never meet a fellow human being who does not bear full dignity and full worth
simply because every single human being male and female is made in the image of God.
The other thing Christians need to think about here is how we need to affirm those who
are in particular need of this affirmation.
Every girl, every daughter, every sister, every friend needs to know that in the body of
Christ, we see the beauty that God has put there.
The beauty that God has declared and created for His glory.
And we need to make very clear that if no one else on earth remains sane on these issues,
the Church of the Lord Jesus Christ must, Christian parents, just please understand this.
And even as you know how much you love your own children, just remember you need to help
them to think biblically about these categories.
And this trial of nothing else is a great wake up call for parents that there are others
who are seeking to get to our own children and to feed them with lies, devastating lies.
All right.
Now let's turn to questions.
I appreciate all questions sent in by listeners and frankly, I'm fascinated by them.
I appreciate the fact that so many listeners and trust me with these questions.
And so many of them, the most interesting of them come from young people.
So this is a question from a 16 year old boy.
Okay.
So just factor that in as you hear this question, quote, I listened to your briefing about gambling
a while back and it made me think of this gambling website called Polymarket.
And he goes on to say that there's a current wager on whether or not Jesus will come back
before 2027.
This young man says it looks like a win-win theoretically because either you win by winning
the bet or you win by Jesus coming back.
He says so it doesn't matter that you lost.
He says, quote, I think this would be a sin, but I wanted to ask you what you think and
you're reasoning for your opinion.
Thanks.
Well, first of all to this young man, I want to say thanks for the question and it's
really helpful.
And by the way, it's clever.
So I didn't see this one coming.
And I especially appreciate questions.
I have a turn in them.
I did not see coming.
I didn't see Jesus coming back in 2027 as a polymarket issue.
It makes perfect sense because defined the way those platforms want to define it, it's
about a wager on how events in real time will unfold.
So let me just say, you know, it is a real fact that Jesus Christ is returning bodily in
space and time and history, but I don't know when.
The wagering issue is the issue and this young man recognizes it.
He says, I think it will be wrong to bet even though in one sense, you can't lose.
Well, I just want to say there are a couple of very big biblical considerations here.
Number one, when you say you can't lose, when you're talking about something like the
return of the Lord Jesus Christ to judge the nations and to claim his church, I'll just
say that I don't think that should be susceptible to wagering under any circumstances.
And frankly, whether there's money involved or not, but there's also a complexity here.
And so I want to speak to this 16 year old and say, I really appreciate you asking this
question because it points out something and that is that if it's a simple wager, say
something just in your mind, that can be relatively uncomplicated.
But if it is a financial transaction, it involves others and that means a web of complexity.
And so quite frankly, you're going to be playing in a game, you're going to be engaged
in a platform in which speculation about the return of the Lord Jesus Christ is turned
into a wager.
In other words, you would be contributing to the larger problem.
And I guess I would explain that by saying you're facilitating others also involved in
the market, also involved in gambling and that just leads to all kinds of things.
This is almost never a one time event.
That's the big problem with repetitive sin, which is also, and I think this is an overused
word.
I'm going to use the word addictive.
I do not mean that in the way the therapeutic culture always wants to do it, but let's just
say people like it, they get an adrenaline kick from it and they just keep coming back.
There's another issue here and I especially appreciate the fact this young man is a believer
and I want to say believer to believer, heart to heart, it's this.
When the Lord Jesus Christ comes back in glory to judge the nations and to claim his church,
I don't think you're going to want to have to answer for wagering on when the Lord would
return.
I'll just put it that bluntly and you sense that already you've indicated that in the
question.
I want to thank you again for sending the question because it could prompt a lot of
Christians to think more Christianly about the same issue.
Okay.
A senior man wrote to ask me a question about Islam.
He said, quote, our Constitution guarantees us freedom of religion, the right to worship
any person, God or thing we desire.
How do we square that with Islam, a religion that physically threatens every other faith
or belief?
It seems that Islamists are using our constitutional freedom to force others to announce their faith
and convert.
He says that our guaranteed right may have become a catch 22.
Okay.
So I think this raises a host of issues.
So I don't know how to take some of the individual parts separately here.
Let me just look at the big question of our constitutional freedom of religious liberty
and let's also speak of the reality of Islam.
So here is where I appreciate this question because it allows me to say that I think some
clarification and some basic Christian honesty is necessary here.
And that is that there are religious belief systems that would undermine the entire civilization,
the entirety of Western civilization in general and would subvert American constitutional order.
So if you take Orthodox Islam, you just take Quranic Islam.
It very clearly calls for the victory of Islam over all other civilizations because Islam
is a unity.
You don't have a separation of mosque and state.
It is a unity under an umah.
And when you understand that, you see that anything Western has to be provisional.
Any kind to say US Constitution in an Islamic context has to be provisional.
I don't believe the founders of the United States.
I believe the framers of the Constitution had any adequate understanding because I don't
think they had any adequate fear that there would be a sizable number of Muslims or anyone
else for that matter in terms of religions far, far away.
And so for example, historians like Mark John Hall have done a very good job of pointing
out that the vast majority of Americans would have been categorized as Christian, at least
in terms of their historic religious tradition of nothing else.
The vast majority would have been, and by vast majority we're talking about upwards
of 90 percent would have been Protestant Christians at the time of the founding of the nation
and even the framing of the Constitution.
And so the reality that they were facing is this overwhelming Protestant Christian consensus
and majority.
And so quite honestly, they never foresaw a situation in which there would be, for instance,
the imposition of Sharia law in at least some neighborhoods in American cities.
That would have been inconceivable.
And so I think we clearly have a collision here.
I think the political left, it will not admit the nature of this collision because that
would bring so many of its arguments into absolute disaster.
So instead they want to argue in a communitarian basis that all of this can still happen.
But of course the Islam that they want to protect is a liberal Islam that isn't at all
really tied to historic Islam.
And so you look at Mayor Mamdani in New York City and he's declared to be Muslim.
I'm in no position to say he isn't a Muslim.
I can however look at the Quran and say he is not following the dictates of the Quran
in terms of say he's abortion position or his support for same-sex marriage.
But let's just also say that the vast majority of Muslims around the world are not confused
about what they believe the Quran teaches and what kind of civilizational order should
be put in place.
So I do see this as a collision.
I think, in other words, I want to say to this listener, I think you understand a crucial
problem.
Long term, given a sufficient number of Muslims, I think there would be inevitably a constitutional
crisis.
I don't think I've ever put it just in those words before, but I will repeat it.
I think if there is a sufficient number or percentage of Muslims in this country and
if they represent historic Quranic Islam, there will be some sort of a constitutional crisis.
I don't see that on the near horizon, but I think it's intellectual dishonesty to say
it's impossible.
Okay.
Next to question from a listener in Indiana, very kind words and then, quote, my question
today is about the use of AI.
How do we decide when it's okay to use AI?
He says, I use it a lot for coding because I'm a chemist and when I have to code, it's
infrequent or frustrating.
He says, he has a couple of different thoughts here.
Number one, I'm being lazy.
Do I need to man up and learn more and never use AI or B?
I'm using the tools of my disposal to accomplish the task.
So there's nothing inherently sinful about using AI as long as it's not for, well, he goes
on to say things that they would be wrong.
He says, he sees these options as two ends of a spectrum and he says, he's wondering if
I can provide some guidance to land in the middle.
Okay.
So really appreciate the question.
I don't intend to land in the middle.
I want to think biblically about this.
And so let me just say something, there were those who made the argument that the invention
of the internal combustion engine was wrong because it meant that some human labor wasn't
as necessary.
There were even some people who argued that the genesis three curse in which human men
are given the assignment to labor that it was a shortcut if you used a truck to carry
the load rather than merely human labor.
I mean, to say, in essence, that's at least part of the radical anabaptist simplicity,
even the amish or someone like that, that indeed there's a dignity to labor and machines
really subvert that dignity.
Okay.
So I'm just going to say that I flew in a plane to beat the conference or I'm speaking
today.
I wrote in the car.
I'm sitting in a building.
There's a lot of machinery going on here.
We don't worship the machinery, but we do use it and consider that a part of the genesis
dominion mandate.
Okay.
So then there were people who said, you know, the use of computers is wrong.
It's like these massive calculations.
And by the way, somewhere what they said wasn't stupid, like, you know, who needs certain
kinds of math anymore?
You have computers to do it.
Well, I think most of us will admit, the computers are doing a lot of the math.
Do I think that it's subverted human dignity?
I don't think so.
But at the same time, every one of these inventions has come with the capacity to do both good
and evil.
And every one of them has come with both good and evil.
You can use a truck, you know, to carry produce to a market.
You can use a truck for nefarious purposes on human trafficking.
You can use the internet.
Well, you already know this already for good, or you can use it to accomplish evil, or
just to dive into evil.
When it comes to artificial intelligence, I do really appreciate this listener sending
the question because AI seems to be different.
I want to tell you why I think you're right to see it as different.
No one's going to confuse a truck with a human being.
No one's going to confuse a personal computer with a human being.
The biggest problem with artificial intelligence is when it poses as a human being, or is treated
as a human being.
And so here's the big danger from AI.
It is the confusion of what it means to be human.
It's not so much the confusion about the machine, it's the confusion about what it means
to be human, human dignity, human moral agency.
And so, you know, using artificial intelligence to do, maintain, calculating tasks, I don't see
that as a theological problem.
I don't see it as a theological problem when it comes to efficiency for certain kinds
of procedures, you know, automation and other things, having to do with, you know, updating
factories and all the rest, I don't see that as a problem.
I see it as a problem when there is a subversion or a confusion between the machine and the
human being.
That's a problem.
And so when you're talking about the kinds of calculations I see you mentioning here,
I'm not sure that's fundamentally a different theological and ethical question than using
a computer in the first place, which might not be that much of a difference between using
a handheld calculator, you know, with just a few keys on it.
But on the other hand, the big danger of artificial intelligence is that there are
people who are confusing human intelligence with machine intelligence.
There are people who are being seduced and manipulated by chatbots thinking they're
human beings.
You have machines posing as human beings, confused as human beings.
You also have many of the prophets and the purveyors of artificial intelligence who
are basically invested in that confusion, furthering that confusion.
And even promising there's going to be a day when these machines are going to replace
human beings and fully replace human labor.
Okay, if that happens, that is a direct attempt to subvert creation order.
By the way, not just as a result of the fall, but even the beginnings of creation order
where human beings are put in the garden and we're told to use it and to exercise dominion
over it.
So it's a huge question.
I think the big issue is the confusion of what it means to be human.
It is the artificial platforms that frankly can pose as human beings to great, great
injury to people.
And it is the subversion of human moral agency.
I think those are the big issues and they're going to continue to be issues.
It doesn't sound to me like they're necessarily issues in AI as you are talking about using
it here.
But I think the fact that you're asking these questions is itself an extremely healthy
sign.
All right.
Finally for today, a question sent in by a homeschool mom of four.
It's just so sweet.
A Christian wife and homeschool mom of four.
She's troubled in her conscience because she says, looking back to the time when she was
20 years old, she said, I didn't vote.
I didn't care.
She said, I couldn't have told you who was the vice president of the secretary of state.
Fourteen years later, she says she's a Christian wife and homeschool mom of four, who
quote, now very much pays attention to politics and the happenings in the world.
She says, ever since the assassination of Charlie Kirk, she's been watching the response,
the madness and the chaos.
And she says, quote, it has left me feeling a bit depressed and at times frustrated.
I feel the temptation to just get rid of the internet.
Forget about it all and focus on my responsibilities at home.
My question is this, how much thought should a Christian wife and mother reasonably give
the events and politics out in the world?
She says, my main mission field is my home.
I know the answer isn't to bury my head in the sand and only be concerned with what's
going on inside my four walls and, quote, well, let me tell you what I love about this
question.
This homeschool mom and wife with such a sweet spirit writes and asks a question and
then answers it accurately.
It's such a sweet thing that she actually does answer the question and asking the question.
She understands that her main mission field is her home, but she says she can't bury
her head in the sand and only be concerned with us going on in those four walls.
You know, that's exactly the answer, putting these things in proportion is not easy.
And so this mom knows she was wrong when she was 20 years old, didn't vote, didn't care,
didn't know much.
But you know what, it also be wrong for a faithful wife and Christian homeschool mom
before to be primarily interested with the things of the world other than the things
writing around home.
And this mom knows it so sweetly and it comes through so clearly.
And I understand how we can be troubled in spirit, how we can be quite fatigued and
disturbed by these events.
And one of the things we have to watch is that kind of fatigue and disturbance, interfering
with the most precious relationships we have, the relationships with a husband and a wife
and parents and children in the household.
But there's another aspect to this and that is that this mom says that she knows the answer
isn't to bury her head in the sand to be only concerned with what's going on inside
your four walls.
I just want to tell you, I think that's absolutely right.
But I want to give you a little ammunition here.
It is because as a Christian mom, a Christian wife and as a homeschool mom before, you are
not raising those children to stay at home.
You're raising those children to be faithful in the world.
And one of the ways you can most teach them how to be faithful in the world is by modeling
what it means to be faithful in the world.
By the way, with all the complexities and all the perplexities and all the steps forward
and the steps back, I think being honest about that is just a great Christian example.
And I am very confident, by the way, I understand how we can be depressed and disillusioned and
how we can grieve even certain events, certainly rightly grieve the assassination of Charlie
Kirk.
We also understand that we're in this battle for the long haul, especially when it comes
to raising children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.
And keeping these things in perspective isn't easy, which is one of the reasons why we
need to have these kinds of conversations.
But I just want to come back to the fact that what encouraged me so much about this letter
is this sweet mom asking the question and basically answering it.
You know, even that, sharing that is a great exercise for us all, it ought to instruct
us all and encourage us all.
Well, that's all we can take for today, but we're always glad to get your letters.
Just write me at mail at AlbertMohler.com.
As always, again, I deeply appreciate the trust invested by listeners in sending these
questions.
You're sending them not only for yourself, by the way, but for us all.
Thanks for listening to the briefing.
For more information, go to my website at AlbertMohler.com.
You can follow me on X or Twitter by going to x.com forward slash AlbertMohler.
For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to spgs.edu.
For information on voice college, just go to voicecollege.com.
I'm speaking to you from Los Angeles, California, and I'll meet you again on Monday for the
briefing.



