Albert Mohler is an American Southern Baptist theologian best known as the longtime president of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky. He rose to prominence as a leading figure in the conservative resurgence within the Southern Baptist Convention, a decades-long movement that moved the denomination toward strict biblical inerrancy and away from more moderate theological currents. In that role, Mohler became one of the most visible institutional voices of American evangelicalism, and his influence extends well beyond seminary education into the broader currents of religious conservatism.
Mohler's political thought flows directly from his theological commitments. He argues that Christian conviction cannot be walled off from public life, and that questions of law, culture, and governance are ultimately moral and theological questions. He has been an outspoken defender of traditional positions on marriage, sexuality, abortion, and the family, framing these as matters of biblical authority rather than mere political preference. His commentary, delivered through regular writing and broadcasting on current events, consistently interprets news and cultural change through what he presents as a Christian worldview, urging believers to think coherently about politics rather than compartmentalizing faith and citizenship.
A recurring theme in Mohler's public work is the diagnosis of secularization and moral relativism as threats to Western and American order. He frames contemporary cultural conflicts as a contest between competing worldviews, and he has warned that religious liberty and traditional moral norms are under pressure in an increasingly secular society. This posture aligns him broadly with the religious right and with conservative evangelicals who see engagement in electoral and cultural politics as a religious duty. His willingness to comment on presidential politics and to weigh the obligations of Christian voters has made him an influential interpreter for a large evangelical audience.
Mohler's significance lies less in original political theory than in his role as a shaper of how a major American religious constituency understands its relationship to politics. Through seminary leadership, prolific commentary, and denominational influence, he has helped sustain a vision in which orthodox Protestant conviction, cultural conservatism, and civic engagement are tightly bound together.
