Reflections on a fake graduation (Plus: More thoughts on the LU Dems situation)

Posted by Kevin on May 26th, 2009

gradbannerLast weekend, I took part in the 241st commencement at Brown University.  It was a lovely, joy-filled ceremony, and I was glad to be allowed to walk with my friends in the class of ‘09, despite the fact that I won’t be officially graduating until December.  Still, after donning my cap and gown and passing through the Van Wickle Gates, I can now say that I’m a fake-graduate of Brown (or what my friend called an “alumnot”).

As I sat in the pews of the First Baptist Church in America – a nod to Brown’s Baptist heritage – listening to the Baccalaureate ceremony unfold, I was struck by how many different faiths, traditions, and viewpoints were being successfully incorporated into the same ceremony.  In the course of two hours, I heard a Protestant invocation of Jesus.  A Muslim call to prayer.  A Hindu dance.  A rabbi reciting the Shehechiyanu.  A poem from Emily Dickinson.  A reading (in Hebrew) of Colossians 3:12-15.  Taiko drums.  A reading from The Prophet.  In fact, the ceremony was almost laughably inclusive – Fareed Zakaria, the Newsweek International editor who gave the keynote address, noted that Brown’s Baptist founders “wouldn’t be too happy” with the ceremony’s ecumenicism.

But in that moment, peering down from my balcony pew and seeing a full spectrum of symbolism represented in the service gave the whole occasion a warm glow, a dignified sheen that enriched the meaning of commencement for all 1,443 graduating seniors, even the ones who weren’t Muslims or Hindus or Taiko drummers.

I thought of that warm glow when I read about Liberty’s decision to revoke the official status of its College Democrats chapter, and when I saw the conversations about diversity and inclusiveness that the ensuing PR frenzy inspired.  (For background, check out my earlier post.)  A few random thoughts that have crossed my mind since then: More…

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Liberty’s Democrat Problem — And What It Means

Posted by Kevin on May 26th, 2009

m-no-democrats

(Cross-posted from the Huffington Post.  Regular blog readers, sorry for all the basic background stuff in here.  I’ll be posting some other thoughts on the controversy later today, including actionable tips for the College Dems and more of my own views on the kerfuffle.)

Last week, Liberty University made the national news when, while implementing a new funding scheme for student organizations, it revoked approval for the campus Democratic organization.

Liberty’s College Democrats club - the first in school history - was formed during last fall’s election season, and was given an award for “Up-and-Coming Chapter of the Year” by the Virginia Young Democrats in April. But earlier this month, Liberty VP Mark Hine wrote to club president Brian Diaz that the club’s status was being dropped because it had supported candidates whose views were “contrary to the mission of LU and to Christian doctrine,” even though the club itself was officially pro-life and anti-gay-marriage. Following a maelstrom of criticism, Chancellor Jerry Falwell Jr. offered to reinstate the club, providing it aligns itself with a pro-life, anti-gay Democratic group, and not the Democratic Party in general. (Which is kind of like saying that you’ll allow penguins at your zoo, but not the black-and-white kind that waddle.)

On one level, reading a news story about a fledgling chapter of the Young Democrats having its club status revoked by Liberty University is completely unsurprising. After all, since its founding in 1971, Liberty’s mission has always been to cultivate generations of conservative Christian voters and activists. Before his death, Rev. Falwell often said that he wanted his school to be the “Harvard of the right,” and to this day, Liberty’s official brochure touts the school’s “strong commitment to political conservatism, total rejection of socialism, and firm support for America’s economic system of free enterprise.”

During my semester at Liberty, I learned that much of what skeptical outsiders say about the school is true.

Yes, Liberty is a bastion of arch-conservatism. Yes, I was required to listen to lectures like “Myths Behind the Homosexual Agenda” and answer questions on a science exam about Noah’s Ark. Yes, I heard sermons called “The Myth of Global Warming” and guest speeches by Sean Hannity. Yes, Liberty stifles free speech by censoring its student newspaper, refusing to give tenure to its faculty, and suppressing students who wish to speak out. (This last point is particularly troubling - there’s actually a rule in Liberty’s student handbook that mandates 12 reprimands and a $50 fine for any student found guilty of “participation in an unauthorized petition or demonstration.”) And yes, I’ll add my voice to the chorus of people calling for Chancellor Falwell to reverse his decision and reinstate the Young Democrats’ official club status.

But during my semester there, I learned that Liberty is a much more diverse place than people give it credit for, and that speaking about the Liberty Young Democrats as if they were bizarre outliers (like “Jews for Jesus” or “Skydivers Afraid of Heights”) ignores the fact that Liberty students, like many other young evangelicals across the nation, are rethinking what it means to be a Christian in the 21st century.

When I arrived at Liberty for my semester “abroad,” I expected to find a campus full of ballot-punching Republicans. I found those, but I also met Christian feminists, Christian civil libertarians, Christians opposed to the war in Iraq, Christian gay-rights activists, and other Liberty students who challenged the norms of their parents’ generation. As evidenced by the 32% of evangelicals between the ages of 18-29 who voted for Barack Obama last November, “Christian” and “Republican” are no longer synonymous in America, and Liberty’s pathetic attempt to maintain a unified political stance by silencing dissent shows how out of touch the university is with its own student body.

I’ve never met Brian Diaz, the Liberty freshman who started the Young Democrats chapter, or Maria Childress, the club’s faculty adviser who has drawn heat for openly disagreeing with her employer. But I do know that they’re not alone.

A few days ago, I got an e-mail from a longtime Liberty professor who confessed that he’d voted for President Obama last fall, and told me that due to the “the dictatorial atmosphere” at Liberty, he could lose his job if anyone discovered his secret. Since my book came out, I’ve heard similar stories from former and current Liberty students, alumni, and faculty members, many of whom share that professor’s worry. The evangelical world is changing, and regardless of the fate of the Young Democrats club, Liberty is changing with it, becoming less wedded to the GOP and more open to ideological diversity every day.

What Liberty’s administration needs isn’t just a lesson in tolerance - it’s a long, honest look in the mirror.

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Book Tour News: Harvard Coop (PLUS: Media Update)

Posted by Kevin on May 12th, 2009

coopI’m happy to announce that my book tour – my relatively-short-but-just-a-little-soul-deadening book tour – is coming to an end this week, after a final stop at Harvard.  I’ll be speaking at The Coop at 7 PM tomorrow (Wednesday), and would love to see some Boston-area readers there.  Directions are here.

Some highlights from the tour:

  • In Lynchburg, Virginia, getting to catch up with a bunch of my Liberty friends and professors, some of whom I hadn’t seen in many months.  And all of whom, luckily, were at least marginally satisfied with the way I portrayed them in the book.  Although one guy did take issue with the pseudonym I’d given him, saying that it made him sound too metrosexual.  I told him I’d be open to changing it to something manlier for the paperback.  Bubba?  Rambo?  I’ll have to think about that one.
  • At Yale Divinity School, being told about the horrible puns and bits of biblical wordplay that make up YDS life.  Some of the worst ones include “Holy Grounds” (campus coffee shop), the “Paracleats” (intramural soccer team), the “Bible Belters” (men’s a cappella group) and “Left Behind” (the atheist student group).
  • At Oberlin College, learning that my audience included a gay Episcopalian priest, a gay Unitarian Universalist minister, and a gay Baptist seminary grad.  Which sounds like the start of a joke you’d find in Penthouse, but it’s true.

Anyway, big thanks to everyone who hosted, transported, or otherwise helped me over the course of the tour.

A few press hits from last week:

Also, I’m obliged to mention that with two sex-related felony charges, a fallen hero, and a commencement speaker who pandered so hard his audience almost forgot he was Jewish, Liberty University is not having a good month.  Let’s hope the summer vacation restores and renews.  Keep your head in the game, Champions.

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Stop me if you’ve heard this before…

Posted by Kevin on May 5th, 2009

liberty1

Surprises from Liberty University: What I Learned as an Undercover Evangelical

[Cross-posted from The Huffington Post]

When I stepped on to the campus of Liberty University for my first day as a new transfer student, I thought I knew what I was getting myself into.

I knew that Liberty was a Christian college in Lynchburg, Virginia, founded in 1971 by the late Reverend Jerry Falwell to train “Champions for Christ.” I knew it had required courses in Creationist Biology and Evangelism 101, a student body whose political views ranged from conservative to arch-conservative, and a 46-page code of conduct - called “The Liberty Way” - that outlawed drinking, smoking, cursing, dancing, R-rated movies, and hugs that last for longer than three seconds. More…

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Jerry’s Kids: Lara Patterson

Posted by Kevin on May 5th, 2009

n55703831_35381711_7715Meet Lara Patterson, this week’s “Jerry’s Kid.”  She’s from Ohio, likes Death Cab and John Mayer, and works as a writing tutor on campus.  She also lists her Religious Views on Facebook as “YHWH – Shalom,” which is confusing, because she’s not Jewish.  Regardless, Lara’s views on life and doubt at Liberty are well worth hearing. To meet the the two previous “Jerry’s Kids,” click here and here.

Name: Lara Patterson
Class year: Senior
Major: Biblical Studies with a Youth Ministry minor

What’s your favorite thing about Liberty?  Your least favorite?

It is probably cliché, but the people are my favorite thing about LU.  I’ve met my best friends here, been inspired by amazing professors, even become friends with random staff around campus.  People can and will disappoint because they’re human and that’s what humans do best,  but overall the people here are what kept me here.

As to least favorite: I could make jokes about The Liberty Way or the dining hall, but honestly, the most troubling thing at LU for me is the lack of access to quality counseling.  I respect those who run Student Care, but in my half dozen or so visits there, almost all have been negative experiences.  I suspect that SC is intended to be a portal to outside counseling if needed, but so often it seems that they want control.  And in a place where you can be fined $250 just for swearing….yeah, personal self-disclosure isn’t happening. More…

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