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THE (SOCIAL) PIT AND THE PENDULUM:
A Case for Assemblies of God Christian Higher Education
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I. INTRODUCTION
"It's like a social pit out there," I said one
day as a colleague and I were discussing some of the news of the
day, and thus was born my social pit file.
In his address to the University of Michigan, President
George Bush said, "I think it is ironic that one year after the
200th anniversary of our Bill of Rights we find free speech under
assault (on) college campuses....In their own Orwellian way, crusades
that demand correct behavior, crush diversity in the name of diversity."
[1]
Larry King opened one of his television programs
by saying, "The college campus, it's become a crime magnet for the
'90s. No longer the idyllic ivory tower, crime and violence have
turned some colleges into virtual armed camps. Robbery, rape, murder
and hate crimes have our institutions of higher education dealing
with life-and-death issues, not just academics." [2]
Yes, it is like a social pit out there, and secular
higher education is wallowing in the pit with the rest of society.
In his Pit and the Pendulum, Edgar Allan
Poe wrote about the Spanish Inquisition which was an attempt to
force religious conformity upon unwilling people. In the story,
a heretic in prison notices a large pendulum swinging above him,
descending to slice him in half through the heart.
As I have talked with parents, students and administrators,
attended conferences and added to my social pit file, I have come
to the conclusion that many Christian parents do not know what is
happening on secular college campuses. They are sending their children
with the uninformed opinion that secular campuses today are much
like they were when they attended them 20 to 30 years ago.
Christian parents and young people should have the opportunity to
know what is happening on secular college campuses. This paper is
an attempt to provide that information.
Many quotations are included, mostly from secular
sources. They indicate what is happening academically, socially,
and spiritually on secular college and Christian college
campuses. Examples are given from many geographic areas of the country
to show that the issues are not confined to just a few colleges
in a small geographic region.
The term Christian college is used to represent
Assemblies of God Bible colleges and Christian liberal arts colleges.
This paper is about undergraduate education in the U.S. It
does not address graduate education. It is not written to
"bash" secular colleges or those that attend or teach there. Rather
it is written to acquaint Christians with what is happening on secular
college campuses, so an informed choice about college can be made.
I described Poe's victim lying on his bed watching
the pendulum get closer and closer. I believe the Pendulum of another
inquisition, the "Political Correctness Inquisition" on secular
college campuses, is swinging closer and closer to the heart of
the Judeo-Christian traditions that have made this country and its
colleges great. The most visible form of political correctness (PC)
on secular college campuses has been in the speech codes. However,
there are many other evidences of the influence of PC in higher
education: academics, accreditation, curriculum, gay rights, radical
feminism, and sensitivity training, to name a few. These are not
as well publicized, but in many ways are even more pervasive than
speech codes.
Writing in Christianity Today, Charles Colson
says political correctness is much more than silliness and hyper-sensitivity.
It represents a deep-rooted philosophical struggle called Postmodernism,
which Christians critically need to understand. "Postmodernism holds
that individuals are merely constructs of social forces--race, gender,
and ethnic background....You and I need to be aware that postmodernism
is not just one more 'ism' on the intellectual horizon. It has become
a powerful force changing our culture....The PC wars are not just
campus silliness. They are reflections of a battle over fundamental
principles of truth and social morality, which go to the very heart
and soul of our common life." [3]
In response to what is happening on secular college
campuses, this paper gives rationale for why we need a clearly defined
Case for Assemblies of God Christian Higher Education, and some
suggestions for its development.
II. A VIEW OF EDUCATION ON SECULAR COLLEGE AND UNIVERSITY
CAMPUSES
A. Academic Quality on Secular College and
University Campuses
Alexander Astin, one of the top researchers of
higher education in the U.S. writes in What Matters in College?,
"There is a widespread (but seldom publicly stated) belief among
university administrators that some of the funds allocated for undergraduate
education must be siphoned off to support graduate education and
research....The real problem, it seems to me, is that many academic
administrators feel the only way to protect and preserve graduate
education and research is at the expense of undergraduate
education." [4]
1. Faculty Teaching Loads and Advisement
In the book, Impostors in the Temple: American
Intellectuals are Destroying our Universities and Cheating Our Students
of Their Future, Martin Anderson indicates there is declining
concern for teaching, counseling, and evaluating. Professors' courses
are often taught by graduate teaching assistants (TAs), while the
professor is writing articles or doing research. Students and parents
are led to believe that top-notch professors personally teach and
interact with undergraduates. In reality, TAs teach most lower-division
courses. "The amount of teaching done by students (TAs) is now so
large...that it threatens the validity of a university education,"
Anderson says. [5]
A report on the MacNeil Lehrer News Hour indicated
serious questions of academic quality and faculty load are being
raised concerning the University of California-Berkeley, considered
by many to be one of the premier universities in the country. That
program shows the Chancellor of Berkeley talking about the budget
cutbacks they have suffered. There are scenes
from a classroom so full that students are sitting on the floor
in the hallway, looking through the doorway trying to take
notes, see and hear the professor, and see the chalkboard. State
Senator Tom Hayden talks about the "trophy professors" at Berkeley,
most of whom do not teach undergraduates, and some of whom dont
teach anything. Their average teaching load is only three courses
per calendar year. They spend their time with graduate students
or doing research, not teaching undergraduate students. [6]
2. The Cost of Academic Quality
When considering all the factors, the cost of attending
a Christian college is not always higher than attending a
secular college, especially if that secular college is located outside
a student's home state. The average total cost to attend a college
in the Coalition for Christian Colleges and Universities is only
$421 higher than the average total out-of-state cost for Money magazine's
"Ten Best College Buys in America." [7] [8] There are many references
in the literature where secular colleges are telling their students
to expect to take 5 to 6 years to receive a baccalaureate degree.
This adds significantly to the cost of an undergraduate education,
and delays entry of students into the workplace.
Students and parents need to ask another very important
question about the cost of attending college. Given the information
in this paper and what seems to be the higher spiritual risk on
a secular college campus, is a lower cost of tuition worth the
high cost of spiritual decline? A student may pay a high price
in spiritual loss to obtain a low tuition cost.
3. PC and Accreditation
Several accrediting associations are adopting "diversity"
standards that prohibit member colleges from discriminating on the
basis of sexual orientation in admission standards and hiring practices.
This is an attempt of the homosexual community to force accrediting
association member colleges to admit homosexuals as students and
hire homosexual faculty and staff members.
Southern California College (SCC), an Assemblies
of God college and member of the Coalition of Christian Colleges
and Universities, is experiencing the diversity issue first hand.
The Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC), proposed
adding the words "sexual orientation" to a diversity standard. SCC,
in cooperation with other Christian colleges, and several secular
institutions concerned about the diversity requirement, attended
a WASC hearing to register their opposition. The San Francisco Chronicle
reported, "Given a choice between being intellectually consistent
and being politically correct, WASC simply chooses to be politically
correct." [9]
In a memo copied to me, the SCC president Wayne
Kraiss quoted the following statement from a female representative
of the homosexual community who stood at the WASC hearing, and while
waving her finger shouted, "We may not win this battle, but we will
prevail and every religious college will have to accept gays and
lesbians or lose its accreditation!" [10]
4. Radical Feminism and a PC Curriculum
Much of the radical feminism in our country today
is in the college community. Radical feminists have profoundly altered
curriculums, social mores, and attitudes toward Western thought
and Judeo-Christian principles. In essence it amounts to nihilism.
"Our purpose is to revise knowledge itself." This
statement in Alene Graham's keynote address to the conference on
"The Inclusive Curriculum: Setting Our Own Agenda," set the tone
for a growing group of education activists whose goal is the "total
transformation of the curriculum." Feminist critic Christina Hoff
Sommers attended that conference. "The last thing these people really
want is diversity," she said. "Outlandish notions were accepted
as settled fact, and everyone nodded their heads in approval." [11]
PBS aired a program on Political Correctness entitled,
"Campus Culture Wars, Five Stories About PC." One story is about
radical feminism at the University of Washington. A male student,
Pete, enrolled in Women's Studies 200 thinking he would learn something
about famous women, but instead found himself in a class promoting
radical feminism. Exchanges between Pete and the teacher resulted
in him being expelled because he challenged the "facts"
that were being taught. In one case the teacher said lesbians were
better parents than a mom and a dad. Pete's father said one of the
reasons Pete was so upset by the class was that Pete's mother had
been a radical feminist and Pete had experienced first-hand the
problems associated with radical feminism. Pete's reinstatement
to the class led to a riot by the feminists. The coordinator of
the Feminist Studies Program concluded by saying they had taught
the students how to riot and they did. [12]
B. Social Conditions on Secular College
and University Campuses
1. Morality
I interviewed a Christian parent who basically
for financial reasons decided to enroll his son in a state university
close to home. This university is in the Midwest and would be thought
by most people to be in the "Bible belt." "We were told that there
were opportunities for homosexuals on campus. At five o'clock on
Friday the dorms were open for men and women to be together at any
time during the weekend. They told us if your child wasn't sexually
active when they arrived, they would be in 3-4 months. In answer
to a question, 'do you teach abstinence?', the leader looked us
like we were stupid. I got the feeling that as parents we were nothing."
Rolling Stone magazine gives examples of
five colleges where campus "naked events" are held. The article
indicates these are just five of "some of the best" of others that
are available. [13] There is evidence in the literature that indicates
there are several secular campuses with coed bathrooms and showers.
In 1970 male and female housing at the University
of Iowa was on opposite sides of a river, but by 1980 separate housing
was gone and the sexes were unofficially sharing bathrooms. A U.S.
News & World Report article indicates, "When the sexual
revolution was launched at Iowa and campuses throughout America,
there was hope that it would encourage more responsible relationships
between males and females." U.S. News found however, that
casual, unprotected sex is, if anything, increasing on the
campus. One female student changed rooms because her roommate's
boyfriend was in their room so much she couldn't even change her
clothes there. The director of residence services said the liberal
visitation policy was intended for study or for creative purposes,
not for cohabitation. [14]
2. Drugs, Alcohol, Sexually Transmitted Diseases
and Crime
Describing the high rise student dormitories that
many large state universities have, Paul Keegan says, "The incidents
that have taken place in these student ghettos for a quarter-century--rape,
racial violence, alcoholism, drug abuse, dangerous pranks, vandalism,
and suicides--have only recently begun to be talked about. Colleges
have tried for decades to suppress the truth about crime in dorm
life." [15]
"The Campus Crime Wave," by Anne Matthews, gives
some revealing information. "Violence on urban, suburban and rural
campuses has transformed many schools into discreetly armed camps:
electronic passkeys for dormitories, cold-steel mesh on classroom
windows, computer-controlled cameras in stairwells, and alarm strips
in toilet stalls. These messy realities, however, rarely surface
in the glossy catalogues and upbeat recruiting brochures by which
many schools now live or die....At Arizona State University, in
the tidy city of Tempe, serious weekend partying begins on Thursday,
as it does at most American campuses," says Matthews. She observes
that crime and alcohol are linked, but that alcohol is also often
linked with sexual activity that is leading to sexually transmitted
diseases with greater frequency than ever before. "After sundown,
certainly after 10 P.M., the campus, with its night world of wild
drinking and unprotected sex, is almost entirely adultless. One
price of such institutionalized inattention: at least 1 undergraduate
in 12 suffers from a sexually transmitted disease; 1 in 10 becomes
a chronic substance abuser. An increasing number--how many, no one
is sure--are H.I.V. positive." [16] Reports are now indicating the
number one parental concern of what's happening on college campuses,
is safety.
Columbia University's report on substance abuse
states, "Tragically, for many students on our nation's college and
university campuses, "binge drinking" (defined as 5 or more drinks
in one sitting)...is the number one substance abuse problem in American
college life....42% of all students reported
that they had engaged in binge drinking in the last two weeks...95%
of violent crime and 90% of all reported campus rapes are
alcohol related...alcohol is implicated in more than 40% of all
academic problems and 28% of all dropouts; one-third of all
college students drink primarily to get drunk." [17]
3. Homosexuality is PC
What does the gay and lesbian community want to
accomplish on college and university campuses? Ben Hart says, "The
strategy of the gay movement on campuses is very well conceived.
First they pushed for tolerance. Then official recognition as legitimate
campus organizations. Then funding with mandatory student fees.
Then they wanted their own academic departments. Now they want their
material featured and promoted in every part of the college and
university curriculum. Gay and Lesbian Studies is the natural outgrowth
of feminist theory, which tries to obscure and negate the differences
between the sexes." [18] A gay professor writing in Radical Teacher
magazine said, "Whatever action is taken in favor of the homosexual
college community, will never be enough; ask not what we can do
for the academy, but whether it can do anything for lesbian and
gay people." [19]
One of the more graphic homosexual activities on
campus takes place in the bathrooms. "On some campuses, young men
who go to the toilet are likely to be either propositioned there
or to be unwilling witnesses to homosexual activity. After complaints
about this at San Jose State University, a crackdown netted one
of the school's own professors among those hanging out in the toilets
for homosexual purposes." [20] At Stanford University, radical homosexuals
have drilled holes in the walls between toilet stalls to facilitate
"anonymous bathroom sex." "This practice of homosexuals performing
oral and anal sex with complete strangers through so-called 'glory
holes' is documented in Thomas Sowell's Inside American Education."
[21]
Harvard University began as a college to train
ministers. In a second story from the PBS Campus Culture Wars program,
a student says that talking openly about homosexuality is acceptable
at Harvard, but expressing views about your Christian faith is not
acceptable. Responding to a student newspaper that ran articles
opposing homosexuality, gays and lesbians held a rally where a college
dean characterized the newspaper articles as "hate speech," and
the Harvard campus pastor "came out" and announced he was gay. The
video closes with a professor saying that PC is a real fact of life
for professors, particularly those without tenure. [22]
4. Influence of Peers and Faculty Members
The most conclusive data about the influence of
peer groups on college students, has been published by Alexander
Astin of UCLA. Based on a study of more than 20,000 students, 25,000
faculty members, and 200 institutions, one can not ignore a study
of this magnitude from a person of this caliber. Astin's empirical
findings indicate, "The student's peer group is the single most
potent source of influence on growth and development during the
undergraduate years....Students' values, beliefs, and aspirations
tend to change in the direction of the dominant values, beliefs,
and aspirations of the peer group....Next to the peer group, the
faculty represents the most significant aspect of the student's
undergraduate development." [23] If a young person's lifestyle is
going to change because of his or her college experience, it would
seem a Christian would want to go where it is most likely
to move him or her toward God, wholesome living, and Christian
values rather than away from the same.
C. Spiritual Loss on Secular College and
University Campuses
Your first response might be, spirituality isn't
the mission of secular colleges, so it isn't appropriate to raise
the question. In the current climate in our society, that may seem
to be true. However, that has not always been the case, and even
though the mission of secular colleges may not be to encourage the
spiritual development of its students, I believe it should still
stand for moral and ethical values. Unfortunately, in many cases
we find it does not.
It was not that long ago that moral and religious
values were taught on secular college campuses. Evangel College
professor Calvin Holsinger recalled when he was a professor at a
state university in Pennsylvania in the 60's, they still had required
chapel two days a week. He tells of a time when one of their faculty
members took a group of students to New York to see a play. Some
inappropriate activity took place between the faculty member and
a female student while they were there, and upon return to the campus
the professor was summarily dismissed. No faculty protests. No student
protests. It was understood and accepted that the college stood
for important moral values. [24]
I know of several pastors who attempted to follow-up
on Christian students who were attending the university in the city
where they were pastoring. Their estimates range from 50-85% were
lost to the church because of the negative spiritual influence the
university had on them.
1. Religion is not PC
Writing in his newsletter, Bill Bright said, "The
predominantly liberal mindset on American universities has made
it politically incorrect to be a Christian. For many
students, it is unthinkable that Jesus could meet his or her needs."
[25]
There have been several references in newsletters
and magazines that many secular colleges do not allow Christian
students to pass out religious literature. Campus Alert,
a publication of Campus Crusade for Christ has reported that great
pressure is put on Christian professors in secular colleges to say
nothing about their faith in the classroom. Many reported
having their jobs or promotions threatened, and some said they had
even lost their jobs because of their Christian belief.
Marsden, in The Soul of the American University,
says, "There is no soul to the American university." He feels it
has been replaced with an amalgam of special-interest groups that
substitute an eclectic blend of non-Western alternatives in place
of European-based traditions. "It is an odd sort of multiculturalism
that does not recognize that in almost all cultures in history,
religion has been a major factor." [26]
Speaking to the Eighth Annual National Conference
of Accuracy in Academia, Mark Draper said, "Marxism survives in
only two places on the planet: on Castro's island empire and on
the American university campus. With the Soviet Union gone, the
most socialistic, the most Godless, enterprise on earth is America's
educational system. The university has lost its soul..." [27]
2. One Spiritual Bright Light
The above picture of the spiritual condition on
secular college campuses is indeed dark. However, at least one bright
spiritual light does shine, that of the evangelical groups whose
mission it is to evangelize secular college and university campuses.
We are all familiar with Chi Alpha, Campus Crusade for Christ, InterVarsity
Fellowship, the Navigators, and others. As I was conducting this
research I could not escape being burdened with the great need for
Christ on these campuses. Every fact or reason I have given that
may discourage a Christian from attending a secular college, is
also a fact or reason why those campuses desperately need to be
evangelized by Christians. I take this opportunity to make a plea
to you for prayer, understanding, support and encouragement for
these God-called faculty members, students, and campus pastors.
There have been times they felt Christian educators have denigrated
their position or call, or made them feel they were second-class
Christians. This is truly unfortunate and certainly unChristlike.
The missions of both are important in the world-wide harvest field
of the Kingdom. We need to support and appreciate each other, not
cast aspersions in either direction. I lift them up. They often
work in environments that are hostile to them and their message.
It was approximately 35 years ago that the subtle
shift away from religious and moral values began to take place on
secular college campuses. That shift has had 20-30 years to pick
up steam, and is headed down the track at break-neck speed. I believe
the last 3-5 years have been particularly significant in this spiritual
and moral loss.
As I close this View of Education on Secular College
and University Campuses, I need to make it clear that I do not believe
every secular college fits every description I have given. It is
obvious that good education is taking place on some of them, yet
some very disturbing trends have developed. A vast amount of literature
suggests these trends are no longer isolated exceptions. Are they
the rule? That is yours to decide. However, these trends are continuing
with enough frequency they do merit our serious and prayerful concern.
III. A CASE FOR CHRISTIAN HIGHER EDUCATION
In one sense, A Case for Christian Higher Education
has already been made by the preceding View of Secular Education.
However, Christian higher education is much more than a list of
what we do not do. There are many positive things happening
on Christian college campuses, that make the real case for Christian
higher education. I will also suggest some things we need to initiate
or strengthen.
A. Quality Academics on Christian College
Campuses
Research and experience support the view that academic
quality is higher in Christian colleges today than ever before.
Brown's research at UCLA with Alexander Astin as his advisor, found
"Bible colleges are as academically sound and educationally productive
as most other types of colleges or universities in the country.
No evidence was found to support the prevailing folklore that Bible
colleges are inferior institutions." [28] I believe the same can
be said for Christian liberal arts colleges. We know that students
from Christian colleges are doing well in graduate schools and the
marketplace.
Christian colleges also need faculty members who
believe that part of their responsibility is perpetuation of faith.
Our mission is more than education. Colleges from main line denominations
often do not believe that perpetuation of faith is part of their
mission. Most believe their mission is limited to education. Assemblies
of God colleges must be concerned about perpetuation of faith.
We need faculty members who are committed to the
integration of faith and learning. This is more than opening class
with prayer or Scripture and attending chapel, which are good, and
a part of the integration process. However, lasting integration
takes place in the teaching/learning process in and outside the
classroom, and does not come easily. Administrators must be the
leaders in this effort. It will not happen overnight, and not all
faculty members are convinced it needs to be done. However, we must
work at it, and not lose sight of its importance.
Costs for higher education will continue to rise.
The excellent academic advisement at AG schools, and the availability
of courses when they are needed, should in many cases, enable our
students to graduate with a baccalaureate degree in four years.
Thus they will avoid the cost of the fifth or sixth year predicted
for them by secular institutions, get into the workplace one or
two years sooner, and in the long run actually pay less for
a degree. Parents and young people need to check into this important
factor very carefully. Coupled with the idea that a student may
pay a high price of spiritual loss to obtain a low tuition cost
at a secular school, these ideas give cause for serious consideration
and concern for parents and young people before choosing a college.
B. Morality on Christian College Campuses
1. A Stand for Biblical and Traditional Values
Christian colleges have taken, and must continue
to take, an unwavering stand for the Bible and our Judeo-Christian
heritage. Our rules of conduct must be based on traditional, biblical,
moral and spiritual values. The nihilism taking place on secular
college campuses will haunt our society for many years to come.
We know our students encounter social pressures to get involved
with premarital sex, drugs, and alcohol, with the possible consequences
of sexually transmitted diseases. Nor are they totally immune from
the issue of homosexuality. However, unlike secular colleges we
have positive faculty influences, Christian peer groups, and a spiritual
environment that encourages our students to avoid participating
in these activities.
2. Homosexuality Not PC
While there have been a few isolated instances
of homosexuality on Christian college campuses, unlike secular colleges,
Assemblies of God college administrators are strongly opposed to
homosexuality. They are supporting the biblical view that homosexuality
is sin and are taking firm stands against homosexuality on their
campuses.
C. Spiritual Emphasis on Christian College
Campuses
This is where Christian colleges are obviously
different from secular colleges and universities. From time to time
our colleges do face academic, social, and accreditation pressures
to moderate our spiritual emphasis. We must resist those pressures!
The things we all know are important and proven "winners" for us
must continue: required chapel, a required core of Bible and theology
courses for all majors, periodic spiritual emphasis, residence hall
prayers and devotions, emphasis on missions and evangelism, service
to the church, perpetuation of faith, and Christian Service. One
criticism of Christian colleges is that they are a spiritual cocoon
where students do not learn to deal with the real world. There is
a sense where that may be true. However, I believe our Christian
Service programs are one place where our students can get that "real
world" experience. I know some Christian Service activities are
to the "real world," but I also know many are to those already churched.
I am suggesting we adopt a "Christian Service to the world" mentality
where our students will get experience in invading the spiritual
darkness so prevalent around us.
D. Who Should Attend a Christian College?
The transition from home to life, via college,
is a very important one and should be planned with great care. Some
view college as the "finishing school" of the Christian education
program of the church. To them it is a place where students can
"try their wings" under supervision in a supportive environment,
be putting the finishing touches on their moral, spiritual and character
development, and learn their entry level vocational skills before
being thrust into the world of work. To others, however, the above
amounts to a "spiritual hothouse" approach that is an unreal preparation
for life.
Should every Christian young person attend a Christian
college? There is no "pat" answer to this question. It requires
an individual response based on what God's will is for each persons
life. A student may think they can not attend a Christian college
due to finances or because an academic program is not available.
A family should make sure they have looked carefully at their family
financial priorities before giving this as a reason. Some
families have said they couldn't afford a Christian education for
their children, but somehow had the finances for a new car, boat
or home. The availability of a particular academic program can also
be a factor. Obviously, Christian colleges do not offer all majors
that Christian young people may feel called to pursue. However,
Assemblies of God colleges do offer more than 120 academic programs.
(Write to the Gospel Publishing House for an AG College Guide,
item number 746-054, which gives the academic programs for all 17
AG colleges.) In many cases, it is possible to take a year or two
at a Christian college and then transfer to the secular college
that has the major they need, without losing any credits. Dr. James
Dobson feels very strongly that the first two years of undergraduate
school are the most important, and strongly recommends a Christian
college for those two years if at all possible. [29] Whatever the
circumstances, the college decision-making process should include
seriously considering attending a Christian college after,
1) getting accurate information from all colleges in which they
are interested, and visiting the campuses if possible, 2) receiving
counsel from parents, pastors and friends, and 3) seeking God's
wisdom through his Word and prayer. This will lead to an informed
decision regarding God's will in choosing a college.
It is my firm conviction that if a student decides
to attend a secular college or university for whatever reason, he/she
must make a deliberate and intentional decision to
attend a local church and be a part of a Christian support group
on campus (like Chi Alpha) for all four years, before
they ever enroll as a student there. This is true if they attend
a Christian college as well. However, the anecdotal evidence indicates
that there is a very good chance the godless environment of a secular
college campus will suck them in and take them away from God and
the church if they dont make a predetermined, and continuous,
decision to serve Him. The spiritually nurturing environment at
a Christian college makes it less likely to lose out with God there.
As students and parents face the issue of selecting
a college, answers to the following questions will give guidance
to making that decision.
1. What kind of environment will help me develop
my academic skills? A Christian environment where I will
have top professors in my freshmen year, small classes, good academic
advisement, a quality traditional curriculum, and faculty members
who are interested in me personally and will spend time with me
outside the classroom, OR, a secular environment where it is less
likely I will have top professors teaching me, where I will probably
be in large classes with TAs as instructors who will spend little
or no time with me outside the classroom, where I may not get academic
advisement, and where relativism is rampant throughout the curriculum?
Alexander Astin spoke to another aspect of academics
that is important to consider when he reported that universities
today are de-emphasizing undergraduate education by taking money
away from undergraduate education in order to fund research and
graduate education. Christian colleges are undergraduate education
specialists. For most of them that is all they do. Where is a student
most likely to get the best undergraduate education? At a
college that de-emphasizes undergraduate studies, or a college
that specializes in undergraduate education?
2. What kind of environment will encourage me to
develop appropriate social skills? A Christian environment
where traditional values and Judeo-Christian principles are upheld,
activities are planned that produce wholesome social development,
and where it is physically safe, OR, a secular environment that
expects immorality, allows homosexuality, encourages
"responsible drinking," has significant crime and sexually transmitted
disease problems, and enforces sensitivity training?
What could be one of the most important social
reasons to attend a Christian college has nothing to do with education
per se. Many young people find a Christian spouse at a Christian
college. They often say this is one of the best things that happened
to them during their college years. Obviously, it is possible to
find a Christian husband or wife at a secular college as well. However,
what is most likely to happen, given the numbers of Christians
in each environment?
3. What kind of environment will motivate me to
grow spiritually? A Christian environment that has required
chapel and Bible classes, Christian service opportunities, and a
peer group and faculty members who will influence me to stand for
biblical principles and move toward God, OR, a secular environment
that is decidedly anti-God, my spiritual development will be discouraged,
challenged, or ridiculed, and where peers and faculty are most likely
to be non-Christians who will try to lead me away from God?
Is it possible to lose out with God at a Bible
college or Christian college? Yes, just as it is possible to lose
out with God at a secular college, or even in the midst of a revival.
I think the better way to phrase the question is, given the description
of the two campus environments, where are you most likely
to lose out with God? In an environment that nurtures your
faith, or one that attacks and ridicules your faith? Bill
Bright writes, "Because of the current anti-Christian propaganda
dominating college classrooms, many of America's choice young people
who are raised in Christian homes graduate from college as atheists
or agnostics--mocking their Christian upbringing." [30]
The forces of radical feminism, homosexuality,
alcoholism, free sex, and other peer pressures are more concentrated
on a university campus than they are in society at large. The faith
of some young people thrives on that kind of adversity. When their
faith is attacked and challenged, they grow. They may also be the
kind of students who can integrate their faith and learning on their
own without a Christian professor's guidance. These young people
might be called to be spiritual lights on a university campus. If
so, they should go and God will help them bear good spiritual fruit
there. However, if they feel Christian faculty and peers in a nurturing
spiritual environment will best prepare them for life and their
vocation, they should attend a Christian college.
Who should attend a Christian college? Those that
are called to go there. However, one of my concerns is that many
Christian students (or their parents) are not giving God the opportunity
to call them to a Christian college because they never even consider
attending a Christian college in the first place.
IV. CONCLUSION
There has been a commercial on television that
depicts a man interviewing for a job. In the course of the interview,
he rejects the job offer because the car offered "wasn't a
Mercury Sable." The statement is made that the car offered
is the latest to "imitate the Sable."
In a similar sense, Christian colleges have sought
to convince their constituencies that if their young people attend
Christian colleges they will receive "just as good an education
as if they attended a well-known secular college."
Indeed Christian colleges do have beautiful
campuses, very qualified faculties, memberships in the same accrediting
associations, and are getting state-of-the-art buildings and equipment.
These academic resources will always be necessary.
However, the Case for Assemblies of God Higher
Education is not just academic. It is also spiritual. I believe
Christian colleges do compare very favorably with what secular
colleges have and do. However, Assemblies of God colleges have many
important uniquenesses that secular colleges do not have
and never will have. It is these uniquenesses that
I believe Christian students and parents should seriously consider
when choosing a college. Mercury Sable does not try to establish
its market share by telling us how it is like other
cars, but by how it is unique, different, and better
than other cars. Christian parents and students should have similar
questions about how a college is unique, different, and better in
preparing a person spiritually and for the important issues of life,
as well as academically.
The following table illustrates the characteristics
of AG Christian higher education and the uniquenesses that should
be considered when choosing which college to attend and support.
CHARACTERISTICS OF
ASSEMBLIES OF GOD CHRISTIAN HIGHER EDUCATION
|
Similarities with Secular Colleges
|
Uniquenesses of AG Colleges
|
| |
|
|
1. Land
|
1. Christian Service Opportunities
|
|
2. Buildings
|
2. Statement of Faith for Admission
|
|
3. Equipment
|
3. Developing a Servant's Attitude
|
|
4. Faculty
|
4. Pentecostal Faculty
|
|
5. Accreditation
|
5. Christian Students
|
|
6. Academic Quality
|
6. Spiritual Formation
|
|
7. Academic Programs
|
7. Nurturing Spiritual Atmosphere
|
| |
8. Wholesome Social Activities
|
| |
9. Safe Physical Environment
|
| |
10. Integration of Faith and Learning
|
| |
11. Perpetuation of Pentecostal Faith &
Doctrine
|
| |
12. Required Chapel & Bible Classes
|
Assemblies of God young people and their parents
need to be aware that AG colleges are significantly
different from secular colleges in ways that are vital
to Pentecostal Christians. Our colleges have uniquenesses
that are in addition to, and set them apart
from, their similarities with secular colleges. AG colleges
offer a Christian-value-added education that is worth
much more than any cost differential that might exist. In addition
to excellent academics, Assemblies of God colleges offer preparation
for life in critical academic, social, and spiritual ways
that will never be found in secular colleges.
Assemblies of God colleges are not just in the
higher education business, they are in the Christian
higher education business, and I believe it is a calling from God.
Every prayer prayed, every lecture presented, every college board
meeting attended, every dollar raised, and all the spiritual, academic,
personal, and social counsel given on our campuses has lasting value.
It may be a semester, a year, or more before the seeds that are
planted in the lives of our students will come to fruition. However,
we know that as we are all diligent and faithful to support our
schools verbally, prayerfully, and financially, God will honor the
ministry of Assemblies of God higher education and bless our young
people.
ENDNOTES
1. "George Bush on Speech Codes and Political Correctness,"
as quoted in Campus, Fall 1992, p. 9 (from his commencement
address, University of Michigan, May 4, 1991).
2. "Crime on the Campus," Larry King Live, CNN, April
21, 1994, transcript p. 1.
3. Charles Colson, "Postmodern Power Grab," Christianity
Today, June 20, 1994, p. 80.
4. Alexander W. Astin, What Matters in College? (San
Francisco: Jossey-Bass Inc., Publishers, 1993), pp. 414-415.
5. Ed Evans, "Are Students Being Cheated?" Review of Impostors
in the Temple: American Intellectuals Are Destroying Our Universities
and Cheating Our Students of Their Future, by Martin Anderson.
Campus, Spring 1993, p. 21.
6. MacNeil Lehrer Newshour, PBS Video, November 12,
1993.
7. Lani Luciano, "Best College Buys Now," Money Guide,
1994 edition, pp. 12-19.
8. Interview with a representative of the Coalition of Christian
Colleges and Universities, February 1994.
9. Debra J. Saunders, "Thought Police, Diversity Patrol,"
San Francisco Chronicle, November 12, 1993.
10. Wayne Kraiss, memorandum, November 8, 1993.
11. Stephen Goode, "The Total Transformers," Insight,
July 12, 1993, pp. 20-21.
12. "Campus Culture Wars," Direct Cinema Limited, PBS Video,
September 24-October 3, 1993.
13. Michael Rubiner, "Cheeky Monkeys," Rolling Stone,
October 20, 1994, p. 87-89.
14. Betsy Wagner, "Struggling with Sex," U.S. News &
World Report, September 26, 1994, pp. 117-119.
15. Paul Keegan, "Inhuman Architecture, Bad Food, Boredom,
Death By Fun and Games," Esquire, April 1992, p. 94.
16. Anne Matthews, "The Ivory Tower Becomes An Armed Camp,"
New York Times Magazine, March 7, 1993, pp. 38-47.
17. "Rethinking Rites of Passage: Substance Abuse on America's
Campuses," Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia
University, June 1994, pp. i, 2-4.
18. "Gay and Lesbian Studies Becomes Mainstream Curriculum,"
Campus Alert, Vol. 1 #2, p. 4.
19. David Bobb, "Gay Studies Beats Budget Cuts," Campus,
Winter 1995, p. 4.
20. Thomas Sowell, "Boomerang," Forbes, October 12,
1992, p. 62.
21. Dave Sacks, "A Diversity of Perversity at Stanford:
Gays Run Wild in Men's Rooms," Campus Alert, Vol. 1 #4, p.6,
referenced from The Stanford Review.
22. "Campus Culture Wars"
23. Astin, pp. 398, 410-411.
24. J.C. Holsinger, "Some Current Trends in the Academy,"
paper delivered at the AG National Educators Conference, August
10, 1993.
25. Bill Bright, Campus Crusade for Christ Newsletter,
August 1994, p. 3.
26. Joe Loconte, "The Battle to Define America Turns Violent,"
Christianity Today, October 25, 1993, p. 77.
27. Mark Draper, "Take Back the Temple!" Vital Speeches
of the Day, (September 15, 1994), p. 733.
28. Dan Brown, "A Comparative Analysis of Bible College
Quality," Diss., University of California, Los Angeles 1982, p.
261.
29. James Dobson, Focus on the Family Newsletter,
April 1993.
30. Bright, p. 3.
This paper may be reproduced without change and
in its entirety for non-commercial purposes without prior permission
from the author.
Copyright © 1999 Dayton A. Kingsriter
1445 Boonville, Springfield, MO 65802-1894
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