Al Mohler condemns Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear for using Bible to affirm LGBT ideology: 'stupid'
Quick Summary
- Al Mohler condemns Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear for using the Bible to support LGBT ideology, calling it 'stupid.'
- Mohler criticizes Beshear's veto of legislation banning body-deforming sex-change procedures for kids.
- Beshear claims his actions are guided by the Golden Rule.

Theologian Al Mohler condemned Democratic Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear's recent use of the Bible on "The View" to presumably explain why he vetoed legislation banning transgender procedures for minors, and warned theological liberalism has become a rival religion to biblical Christianity.
"These days, it's hard to be astounded by something absolutely ridiculous, or worse, coming from an officeholder when it comes to political office," Mohler, the president of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky, said in a Monday X post.
"And frankly, if you're coming up with a catalog of stupid things said on programs like ABC's 'The View,' you'd better get ready for a very long list. But I don't care how long your list is, this one's going to rank at the top of stupid."
"Gov. Beshear doesn't define his faith, except that it includes the Good Samaritan and the Golden Rule.
— Albert Mohler (@albertmohler) February 10, 2026
You are looking here at two different rival religions. You have historic, orthodox, biblical Christianity, and you have theological liberalism and whatever it produces next." pic.twitter.com/td9abkLIOn
Mohler went on to show a clip of Beshear's Monday appearance on "The View," where he claimed his actions as governor are driven by his Christian faith.
"Most of the decisions I make are based on that Golden Rule that says we love our neighbor as ourself, and that parable [of] the Good Samaritan that says everyone is our neighbor," he said.
"And so, when I've taken actions like vetoing the nastiest piece of anti-LGBTQ legislation that ever came through my state, I described it in those terms. I said my faith teaches me that all children are children of God, and I didn't want people picking on those kids," he added to audience applause and approving nods from "The View" co-hosts.
Though Beshear did not specify what legislation he was referring to, Mohler suggested he was likely referring to Senate Bill 150, which banned prescribing puberty blockers and opposite-sex hormones for minors while requiring students in public schools to use the bathroom that aligns with their biological sex. The Kentucky General Assembly overruled Beshear's veto of the bill in 2023.
Last year, the General Assembly also overruled Beshear's veto of House Bill 495, which banned taxpayer-funded transgender procedures and rescinded his executive order restricting so-called "conversion therapy." Beshear accused the legislature at the time of behaving unconstitutionally and promoting "a dangerous and discriminatory practice that has led to the deaths of Kentucky children."
Noting that Beshear is vague in defining his faith apart from the Golden Rule and the Good Samaritan, Mohler noted that the governor epitomizes one of the "two rival religions" that have emerged with opposing views of Scripture and reality.
"You have historic, orthodox biblical Christianity, and you have theological liberalism and whatever it produces next," said Mohler, who discerned the cultural battles over "the LGBTQ+ revolution" have underlined the differences between the competing faiths "perhaps more than anything else in the modern age."
"One of them, Christianity, consistent with creation order and Scripture and the history of the Christian church, and the other one, which, frankly, is a new religion. It's cut the Bible down to size. It doesn't begin with Genesis 1, evidently, just the Golden Rule and the Good Samaritan," Mohler added.
Beshear, who is a member of the liberal mainline Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), has consistently used Christianity to affirm his liberal political positions. During an address to the 2024 Democratic National Convention, he echoed the line he used on "The View" nearly verbatim by appealing to the Golden Rule to suggest those who oppose abortion are lacking "underlying empathy" and not loving their neighbor as themselves.
"How we treat people transcends party lines. It goes right to the heart of who we are. My faith teaches me the Golden Rule — that I am to love my neighbor as myself. And the parable [of] the Good Samaritan says we are all each other's neighbors," Beshear said regarding pro-life policies that he alleged "give rapists more rights than their victims."
The Family Foundation, a Kentucky-based pro-life nonprofit, accused Beshear at the time of "completely twisting the Scripture to advance and support his radical agenda."
"To Biblically love one's neighbor, one must desire and act in ways to see our neighbor flourish. Championing the murderous practice of abortion that does not lead to a flourishing life, but rather to the termination of one's life, is the complete opposite of loving one's neighbor. Misrepresenting Scripture in this manner must be condemned," said the group.
Before abortion was banned in Kentucky in 2022 upon the overturning of Roe v. Wade, Beshear had also vetoed legislation to restrict abortion, including a 2020 Kentucky Senate bill to protect infants born alive during an abortion attempt. A similar bill became law without his signature in January 2021.
In his 2025 State of the Commonwealth address, delivered to what NPR affiliate WUKY called "a notably small audience," Beshear used the Nativity story to admonish Republicans to be "thoughtful" regarding how their legislations might affect the marginalized. He described Mary as "an unwed teenager" whom "people in those days would judge, would look down on, would pass legislation against."
Beshear's implication prompted outrage from Kentucky state Rep. TJ Roberts, who said in an X post at the time that "Beshear using Mary, the Mother of God, to attack pro-life, pro-family, pro-faith, pro-freedom Kentuckians was beyond shameful — outright blasphemous."
Jon Brown is a reporter for The Christian Post. Send news tips to jon.brown@christianpost.com











